We've had this same argument before. You can read my previous answer here: https://f6ffb3fa-34ce-43c1-939d-77e64deb3c0c.atarimworker.io/comments....
Guess what, the internet runs on recommendation algorithms.
Slashdot has a recommendation engine. Stack Overflow has a recommendation engine. Patreon has a recommendation engine. GitHub has a recommendation engine. SourceForge has a recommendation engine.
All of these things have user-generated content, and all of these things, beyond showing you what you specifically ask for, show you what they think they should show you. Sure, you can use the site without that engine, but a large chunk of functionality will go away if they can't suggest new content to you.
And if this lawsuit goes through, sites will start shutting down because they cannot afford to slip up even once. There will always be a Karen/Kevin just waiting to pounce with a lawsuit. These sites have better things to do than monitor, tag, collate, and curate every bit of user-generated content that comes in. That includes not just the initial content submission, but comments to that content, plus double checking when someone edits any of their content.
As an example, GitHub would need to:
* Inspect every binary uploaded
* Review every code commit
* Preemptively review every Pull Request (including updates based on feedback)
* Review the feedback on every Pull Request (including future updates)
* Review every bug report (including future edits)
* Review every comment on that bug (including future edits)
* Review any policy or action documentation (including future edits)
* Review every wiki entry (including future edits)
* Oh, and make sure their own content is also okay
Even a mom and pop site would need to hire a number of employees just for all of this monitoring. This doesn't mean we're suddenly creating new jobs. This means that most small to medium websites would so much in paying unitask employees, keeping lawyers on retainer, and paying for frivolous lawsuits, that it's easier to just not have a business in the first place. Then all that is left will be the Google and Amazon giants you think this lawsuit is hurting.
How about this... YOU are a recommendation engine! YOU take in other user-generated content (watching movies/tv, reading books, input from other people, your own experiences, etc).
So what if you tell someone they should try this curry dish. But guess what, there are peanuts in that dish and the person you recommended it to has a severe nut allergy. Because of YOUR recommendation, they now get to sue you for hospital bills, the ambulance ride, pain and suffering, and anything else their lawyer can tack on. It was your responsibility to filter what foods your recommend. You should have known that this person had an undisclosed allergy and would act upon your opinion.
That is the feeling all website owners will feel. Any move you make puts the bullseye of a lawsuit on your back and you can lose everything. I know because I wear that bullseye every day as it is. I've already drafted a "closing up shop" letter just in case something like this passes.