A look at Counterman v. Colorado, a cyberstalking case the SCOTUS will hear on April 19 and that could have sweeping consequences for online speech writ large (Issie Lapowsky/Fast Company)

A look at Counterman v. Colorado, a cyberstalking case the SCOTUS will hear on April 19 and that could have sweeping consequences for online speech writ large (Issie Lapowsky/Fast Company)

Issie Lapowsky / Fast Company:
A look at Counterman v. Colorado, a cyberstalking case the SCOTUS will hear on April 19 and that could have sweeping consequences for online speech writ large  —  In 2014, a man named Billy Raymond Counterman began sending a string of creepy Facebook messages to a female musician he’d never met.