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Seattle Library Lets Man Watch Porn On Computers Despite Complaints

The Lake City library is making news for their staunch position on the First Amendment, censorship, and the right to watch porn in the library. The problem started when library patron Julie Howe found a man watching some questionable material and asked him to move to another computer. The man refused and the librarian also refused to intervene when asked saying that the library doesn't censor content. "We're a library, so we facilitate access to constitutionally protected information. We don't tell people what they can view and check out," Seattle Public Library spokeswoman Andra Addison told Seattle PI. "Filters compromise freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment. We're not in the business of censoring information."

35 of 584 comments (clear)

  1. I like their position by HBI · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unfortunately, some politician is going to smell opportunity and make them regret it.

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    1. Re:I like their position by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Funny

      Unfortunately, some politician is going to smell opportunity and make them regret it.

      How do you know the man in question isn't one?

      Seems better than even odds to me...

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    2. Re:I like their position by X0563511 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Because allowing him to watch it is an exercise in free speech or something, that can be argued to be protected (what the whole story is about). Whipping it out and going "to work" would run afoul of indecent exposure or other such statutes.

      I guess? IANAL and all that.

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    3. Re:I like their position by bonch · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They should regret it. The position is stupid. As noted in the article, librarians shush you if you talk too loudly. When obsession with unrealistic libertarian free speech ideas go so far as to reward insensitive, self-absorbed weirdos and punish normal people who are genuinely being distracted in a setting that's supposed to be quiet and conducive to research, it becomes a stupidly idealistic position with no practical applicability.

      If anything goes because OMG-MY-FREE-SPEECH-RIGHTS, then I can just stroll into the library screaming "Fuck! Fuck! Fuck!" for three hours straight, and those prudes shouldn't be able to stop me. And as a real-world troll, I'll successfully drive away library visitors and ruin the whole purpose of the damn place. All in the name of some head-in-the-cloud ideal of freedom.

      If you don't have any enforcement of civility, the jerks in society will ruin all good things. Please let's not allow weirdos to watch scat porn in the library just because you read Ayn Rand last week.

    4. Re:I like their position by DurendalMac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, there is. Porn is age-restricted by law. A public library is not. Do you not see the disconnect here? The government can't (well, shouldn't) legislate what happens at home in regard to filtering, child access to computers, etc, but they sure as hell can control it at a public library. There ARE restrictions on use of public facilities, you know, and I think porn at the library counts. Any material that is age-restricted like that should not be accessible at public facilities unless they are also age-restricted. I like porn as much as the next guy, but really, digging it up at a public library? Come on.

    5. Re:I like their position by DurendalMac · · Score: 4, Informative

      There may be a legal issue, though. Libraries are not restricted by age. Porn is legally restricted by age.

    6. Re:I like their position by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Except the complaint is less about his right to view pornography and more about his lack of a right to subject others to it. If the library doesn't washer to stop him, OK but make him go some place in the library where others don't have to see it. There is plenty of precedent and common sense that makes it clear that our first amendment rights have limitations when they infringe on the rights of others. I would say it's a fair argument to say this infringes on this woman's right to use the Library in peace.

    7. Re:I like their position by kenh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The write up (above) says he asked the patron to change computers, not stop exercising his first amendment rights... The librarian took the request to change computers to be the same as censorship, which it is not.

      If the patron was watching porn in the kids section (only computer he could find), can we all agree that asking the patron to change computers doesn't infringe his constitutional rights?

      Asking the patron to move to a (presumably) more remote location is more about manners, not censorship.

      Wonder what this Constitutional Crusader Librarian feels about a patron's ability to exercise their second amendment rights?

      If it's OK to watch a video of a man masturbating on a library computer, is it also OK for a man to masturbate while sitting at the computer?

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      Ken
    8. Re:I like their position by omfgnosis · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There isn't any sound precedent I'm aware of that establishes any kind of freedom from speech. There are certainly limits on what circumstances you are entitled to subject others to your speech (you are not entitled to hold an audience hostage), but there are no "free from speech zones" in public. If a person is in a public space voluntarily, they do not have the right to operate in a bubble and be shielded from speech.

      That's the principle of the law. Whether watching porn is a speech act is another question, but if it is, it is absolutely protected.

    9. Re:I like their position by whoever57 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The write up (above) says he asked the patron to change computers, not stop exercising his first amendment rights... The librarian took the request to change computers to be the same as censorship, which it is not.

      And when there is only one computer available for watching objectional meterial and it is in constant use? Hey, I know, why don't we set up "Free Speech Zones"?

      Seriously, though, once you accept the principle of requiring the library patron to move to another computer, it can easily become a free speech issue. As other have pointed out, it might start with porn, but what about academic books on human anatomy? Who gets to decide what is objectionable?

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    10. Re:I like their position by omfgnosis · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The legal restriction on "fire in a crowded room" is not due to a "clear negative effect", it's due to a "clear and present danger", which certainly hasn't been proven in the case of viewing pornography in public, and I think we can agree it'd be laughable to try.

    11. Re:I like their position by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And showing kids porn is also quite illegal, which if the librarian has already been warned about that guy watching porn in a high traffic area and some kids end up being shown porn not only will she go to jail but the parents will be able to sue their asses off. your freedom ends when it infringes others rights and we have plenty of legal precedent that you can't show porn to minors, no matter how much you claim free speech. if that city has a brain they'll fire that librarian and tell the next one that next time somebody wants to do that put them in a corner or tell them to use the free wifi in a non high traffic area.

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    12. Re:I like their position by Alsee · · Score: 4, Insightful

      censorship arguments are ludicrous

      Fuck you.

      Libraries absolutely need to filter this kind of content

      Fuck no.

      Librarians tend to have extremely strong views on the subject of censorship. The American Library Association actively promotes books that are targeted for censorship. Most librarians would happily stock Playboy magazine if it didn't cut into their budget for buying other materials.

      How about I quote the American Library Association:

      Library policies and procedures that effectively deny minors equal and equitable access to all library resources and services available to other users violate the Library Bill of Rights. The American Library Association opposes all attempts to restrict access to library services, materials, and facilities based on the age of library users.

      Article V of the Library Bill of Rights states, "A person's right to use a library should not be denied or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views." The "right to use a library" includes free access to, and unrestricted use of, all the services, materials, and facilities the library has to offer. Every restriction on access to, and use of, library resources, based solely on the chronological age, educational level, literacy skills, or legal emancipation of users violates Article V.
      []
      Libraries should not limit the selection and development of library resources simply because minors will have access to them. Institutional self-censorship diminishes the credibility of the library in the community, and restricts access for all library users.

      Children and young adults unquestionably possess First Amendment rights, including the right to receive information through the library in print, nonprint, or digital format. Constitutionally protected speech cannot be suppressed solely to protect children or young adults from ideas or images a legislative body believes to be unsuitable for them. Librarians and library governing bodies should not resort to age restrictions in an effort to avoid actual or anticipated objections, because only a court of law can determine whether material is not constitutionally protected.

      The mission, goals, and objectives of libraries cannot authorize librarians or library governing bodies to assume, abrogate, or overrule the rights and responsibilities of parents and guardians. As Libraries: An American Value states, "We affirm the responsibility and the right of all parents and guardians to guide their own children's use of the library and its resources and services." Librarians and library governing bodies cannot assume the role of parents or the functions of parental authority in the private relationship between parent and child. Librarians and governing bodies should maintain that only parents and guardians have the right and the responsibility to determine their children's - and only their children's - access to library resources. Parents and guardians who do not want their children to have access to specific library services, materials, or facilities should so advise their children.

      Lack of access to information can be harmful to minors.

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    13. Re:I like their position by alzoron · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No where is an inalienable right denied by moving someone elsewhere to watch their material. That this is a tax-funded organization does not change that.

      That's a nice position. While we're at it let's just set up a bunch of new zones for all of our rights. Zone A is for religion. Zone B is for speech. Zone C is for the press. Zone D is for petition. Oh, and by the way you're going to have submit to an intrusive and degrading search before entering these zones because your right against unreasonable searches and seizures is handled in Zone E and doesn't apply anywhere else.

      Don't mind the guard towers and barb wire fences, they're there to protect your rights, provided you're in the right zone.

    14. Re:I like their position by 2fuf · · Score: 4, Funny

      That's exactly what the library will regret: a room full of politicians

    15. Re:I like their position by ArcherB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A well-stocked library contains plenty of pornographic books, so it's kind of a slippery slope for the library. And unless you yell "gather round children" while using the computer you aren't really "showing" porn to minors. I agree that the library could encourage people to be discreet, but really kids should be in segregated areas anyway.

      Wait a minute here. Are you saying the kids should be in segregated areas but the guy looking at porn should be allowed to view it wherever he wants?

      Damn! Your priorities are fucked up.

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  2. First Amendment isn't relevant here by bonch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The commitment to information access is admirable, but the article says that the Washington State Supreme Court ruled that libraries can filter content. Besides, I would want to make as many of my library patrons as comfortable as possible, as well as make it as family-friendly as possible, so I'd probably prohibit jerkin' it to the pr0n. Making people, potentially children, inadvertent viewers of pornography isn't something most governments are keen on supporting, and I suspect the library's policies will change after this media coverage.

    This part made me laugh:

    The dilemma was summed up by another library patron, Jessica Christensen, who told Seattle PI, "What I find ironic is that you can't talk too loudly at the Seattle Public Libraries or you'll be asked to keep it down so as not to distract the other patrons. You know, the patrons viewing pornography."

    1. Re:First Amendment isn't relevant here by Dredd13 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They CAN choose to filter content, but they've taken the stance of NOT being the morality police to decide what content is "acceptable" and what content isn't. Which is admirable.

    2. Re:First Amendment isn't relevant here by mlts · · Score: 5, Informative

      Best thing is a compromise. Austin's libraries have some unfiltered machines where the monitor is located in the desk. This provides privacy, and keeps someone's hunt for pr0n from annoying the nearby patrons. There are machines with standard monitors, but those are filtered.

    3. Re:First Amendment isn't relevant here by Dredd13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The library isn't choosing what content to PROVIDE when they say someone has to be quiet and orderly.

      By saying "you can view this but not that", or whatever, they're making a judgement call on the actual material they provide (albeit virtually) to their patrons, and to many librarians, that's the third-rail. You DON'T censor the material you provide to the patrons. You might have to prioritize some content over others when it comes time to buy them (what books are most in demand, etc., etc.), but if there's no cost difference involved to "serve porn versus not serve porn" to the patrons, then almost every librarian I know will choose to allow access to it, rather than be the censor.

      And, to be honest, I don't care "what someone wants to see". You don't have some Constitutional right to not be offended.

    4. Re:First Amendment isn't relevant here by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Holy shit, is it "I refuse to understand the point being made and will continue to whip out completely irrelevant analogies" day?

      No one is fucking on the tables. This is about what people are allowed to look at on the computer. That's it. Now, if someone wants to file indecency complaints against the patron in question for showing them or a child some people doing dirty deeds, then fine. But that's not what anyone is complaining about - they're all complaining that the library isn't playing morality cop, and for that, they can all go DIAF.

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    5. Re:First Amendment isn't relevant here by Killall+-9+Bash · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I have never seen a family in a library, and of the hundreds (possibly thousands) of times I have visited a library, I was never there with family members.

      Furthermore, the Library is an important place for sex ed. I read "Everything you ever wanted to know about sex (but were afraid to ask)" from cover to cover in the library, as I was afraid to try checking it out and taking it home. That book was in the children's section, by the way, and GOD BLESS the librarian who put it there.

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  3. Provocative, but the right thing by bobdinkel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Librarians are really unsung heroes. Well, maybe not unsung, but they should be sung more. They're doing the right thing even if it seems creepy. Of course the second he starts tugging it, they need to haul him off.

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    1. Re:Provocative, but the right thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My sister was a public librarian. Mild mannered, serious, studious, introverted, and a quiet, but ardent radical when it came to access to information. It is a libraries duty to provide information, of all kinds, to anyone.* She was not atypical. Her libraries position on patrons viewing pr0n was to require them to use a privacy screen so the content was not viewable without some effort on the part of other patrons, and perhaps have them move to a more private location.

      Whacking it in the library, however, was subject to arrest for indecency.

      *okay, when the eight year old kid came in looking for information on leukemia, they usually would try to get a sense of why they were asking, and provide them with suggestions as to someone who could put it in context. But the high school kids looking for advice on cultivating cannabis, or bomb making? No problem. When the Patriot Act came out and said that library circulation records would be subject to search without warrant, many libraries destroyed their circulation records.

    2. Re:Provocative, but the right thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Word. The Seattle Public Library stopped keeping tabs on what you had previously checked out after the Patriot Act became law. Now you can opt-in to keep a list of your previously-read books.

      I remember when the Patriot Act passed, the librarians would hand out pamphlets on the Patriot Act when people asked why they didn't have their previously checked-out list.

      Librarians are bad ass.

  4. This is not about porn, specifically by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If porn is filtered for being objectionable today, tomorrow it will be sexual education sites, LGBT rights websites, Erowid, a violent kickboxing site, fringe political sites, conspiracy theorists, supposedly "racist" material, gun sites, men's mags, Fark, or who knows what else.

    The problem with trying to block "offensive" content is determining who gets to set the standard for offense and who gets to interpret it. This discretion will always be abused.

    Content creators will almost always be unaware of these blocks and will certainly have little financial incentive to challenge them. Patrons will evade the blocks by going somewhere else. The result is a cabal of petty tyrants whose discretion goes unchallenged because nobody has sufficient motive for doing so.

  5. I thought this is the reason we had libraries. by trout007 · · Score: 4, Funny

    So it would give homeless a place to watch porn.

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  6. Re:Voters Filter Library Funding by pscottdv · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are other things to think about as well. Often, having visible pornography in the workplace falls afoul federal sexual harrasment rules. What is the library going to do when they get sued by their own staff?

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  7. Re:Oh won't someone think of the children! by Cosgrach · · Score: 4, Funny

    Bugger the children!!!

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  8. Re:Oh won't someone think of the children! by metacell · · Score: 5, Funny

    No! No! Don't think of the children!

  9. FFS by GauteL · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the library had a little adult section where people could go borrow their first amendment supported material, fine.

    But watching porn in public with non-interested people around you is inconsiderate, off-putting and a really creepy thing to do.

    I'm all for free speech, but that doesn't mean the public have to help you being an asshole. If you want to shout insults to people on the streets, then perhaps that has to be allowed, but that doesn't mean you have to buy them a box to stand on and a megaphone.

  10. Re:Why does the library need to be "family-friendl by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When I lived in Switzerland I observed people, for lack of a better term, fucking at the bus stop in the middle of the day (hands down the pants, moaning, fucking). I saw lesbians fucking (the naked kind) on the public beach that was filled with everyone, including families, having their weekend fun in the sun. People just don't care. If you avoid the crazy mindfuck of creationism and the idea that we somehow aren't animals, you'll simply realize that human children have been subjected to sex and reproduction from early ages for 10,000s of years at the very least (800,000 or so, depending on what you consider human).

    Libraries exist to provide information privately and equally to all people. What they are doing is pretty admirable, imo, just as admirable as refusing to remove books because of some uptight jackasses 2 decades ago.

    Yes, I have kids.

  11. Re:Oh won't someone think of the children! by rts008 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect sarcasm, but I can't be sure...does not change my reply.

    They are thinking of the children!
    1. This is an example of the 1st Amendment in real life. It reinforces some of what they are being taught in civics class.
    2. Helps disabuse the notion that procreation is taboo, instead of natural and even necessary for the survival of our species.

    See, it's all for the good of the children and their education...civics lesson and biology lesson, all rolled into one!

    This seems to be perfect for a library role...education, easy access to knowledge, and preservation of knowledge.
       

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  12. Total Logical Disconnect by RobinEggs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This story couldn't be more idiotic, nor could all of these responses about the bill of rights, 'thinking of the children', etc.

    When the library spokeswoman says "We don't tell people what they can view and check out", you'd think someone demanded they revoke the man's library card. No one asked that the man be censured in any way; they didn't even ask that he stop watching porn. All they ever asked was that he do it at another computer.

    This woman's objection is polite and respectful to a fault. She doesn't want him to stop watching porn; she doesn't pass moral judgment on it in any way whatsoever. She just doesn't want to see it herself. Does that really make her some kind of First Amendment stomping jackboot? Sheesh...

    And as for your tired 'think of the children' responses, sometimes 'think of the children' is a valid concern. Not everything that can be a slippery slope fallacy or pillar of convervative moral imperialism is always such. Not every request that people show some respect for your morals amounts to demanding that the entire world bend over backwards for them. With children and libraries, it would be one thing to demand that content depicting sex, drugs, etc. not even exist in the library because you don't want your precious snookums to visit in a place containing those things, but it's quite another to simply request that people show discretion with such content, especially in publicly owned places explicitly warranted as fit for children. Is it really censorship to ask that people watching porn simply do it at a terminal which isn't in full view of the information desk? Do parents in your world have any rights at all in determining what their children should be easily exposed to?

  13. Re:Children's section? by Alsee · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Don't most libraries already enforce age restriction and segregation

    Hell no, not any library I've ever seen.

    Sure most libraries have a children's section and an "adult" section, but when I was in elementary school the children's section got too damn boring after about a half hour. I spent all my time in the very same section of the library that holds the Marquis de Sade books. Several times I went to the librarian requesting assistance finding stuff from the adult section. I took out lots of books, and probably every single one came from the adult section.

    Never once did any any librarian tell me I wasn't supposed to be there. They were all extremely helpful.

    As long as a kid isn't running and screaming, any good librarian is pleased to see a young person with the interest and ability to utilize the adult section. I dunno, maybe your community library was different. Did you grow up in some repressive fundie backwater?

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