Trial Begins Over Library Censorship
Justen writes: "CBS has a story on the Philadelphia trial over the Children's Internet Protection Act, signed by President Clinton in 2000. This is the first challenge to come to trial, challenging the act which aimed to censor pornography and other "inappropriate" websites in libraries and other government-subsidized public Internet access-points. The big shocker? The challenge has the support of a large number (3,000) of libraries, librarians, and library patrons."
I agree. While the standard for "obscene" has been hammered out (though still a hot potato), "harmful to minors" could mean anything.
Anyway, bottom line -- this is Yet Another Totally Unconstitutional Load of Bull-Plop that even the lizards on the current Supreme Court will probably strike down.
Is the right to access speech protected by the 1st? I know the right to produce speech is, but I'm uncertain of the other. It's a no-brainer that I can produce objectionable material, but as a consumer, do I have a right to access it at the public library? Not that I agree with the law, mind you. However, I'm not sure it'll be a slam dunk to get it struck down.
Method of processing duck feet
* 2002-03-25 16:30:16 First Challenge to CIPA (yro,censorship) (rejected)
From the NY Times article:
"The coalition of plaintiffs includes the American Library Association, the American Civil Liberties Union and Jeffrey L. Pollock, a Republican Congressional candidate who favored mandatory filtering until he discovered that his own campaign's Web site was blocked by one of the most popular filtering programs."
Using your sig line to advertise for friends is lame.