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-   -   US Supreme Court issues ruling on anti-porn filters (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=146067)

KRL 06-23-2003 09:54 AM

US Supreme Court issues ruling on anti-porn filters
 
Court OKs Anti-Porn Filters in Libraries

WASHINGTON - A divided Supreme Court ruled Monday that Congress can force the nation's public libraries to equip computers with anti-pornography filters.

The blocking technology, intended to keep smut from children, does not violate the First Amendment even though it shuts off some legitimate, informational Web sites, the court held.

The 6-3 ruling reinstates a law that told libraries to install filters or surrender federal money. Four justices said the law was constitutional, and two others said it was allowable as long as libraries disable the filters for patrons who ask. The court described pornography in libraries as a serious problem.

Emily Sheketoff, executive director of the American Library Association, said the ruling "forces libraries to choose between federal funding and censorship."

It was victory for Congress, which has struggled to find ways to shield children from pornographic Internet sites. Congress has passed three laws since 1996; the first was struck down by the Supreme Court and the second was blocked by the court from taking effect.

The first two laws dealt with regulations on Web site operators. The latest approach, in the 2000 law, mandated that public libraries put blocking technology on computers as a condition for receiving federal money. Libraries have received about $1 billion since 1999 in technologies subsidies, including tax money and telecommunications industry fees.

Rep. Ernest Istook (news, bio, voting record), R-Okla., the principle author of the law, said the government has spent millions of dollars to improve Internet access for public libraries, "and now the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web sites) has ruled that we don't have to subsidize everything that might come in."

The government had argued that libraries don't have X-rated movies and magazines on their shelves and shouldn't have to offer access to pornography on their computers.

Librarians and civil liberties groups countered that filters are censorship and that they block valuable information. Filter operators must review millions of Web sites to decide which ones to block.

Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist said the law, the Children's Internet Protection Act, does not turn librarians into censors.

A three-judge federal panel in Pennsylvania ruled last year that the law was unconstitutional because it caused libraries to violate the First Amendment. The filtering programs block too much nonpornographic material, the panel found.

The Supreme Court disagreed. Rehnquist's opinion was joined by Justices Sandra Day O'Connor (news - web sites), Antonin Scalia (news - web sites) and Clarence Thomas (news - web sites).

Justices Anthony M. Kennedy and Stephen Breyer (news - web sites), in separate opinions, said the government's interest in protecting young library users from inappropriate material outweighs the burden on library users having to ask staff to disconnect filters.

Justice John Paul Stevens (news - web sites), David H. Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg (news - web sites) said the law went too far in restricting material in public libraries, which are used by more than 14 million people annually.

"A statutory blunderbuss that mandates this vast amount of overblocking abridges the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment," Stevens wrote.

Even without the law in place, some libraries use filtering software on their computers, with varying degrees of success in screening out objectionable material. Other libraries have varying policies that encourage parents to monitor their children's Internet use.

"We challenged this law because filters are very blunt instruments that block more than illegal speech, including a great deal of speech that is not even sexual in nature at all," said Paul M. Smith, the Washington attorney who represented the American Library Association. "We're disappointed that the court said that this one-size fits-all answer is the way to handle this problem of sexual content on the Internet in the library setting."

The case is United States v. American Library Association, 02-361.

Brown Bear 06-23-2003 09:57 AM

Flush! <--- thats the sound of freedom going down the shitter!

Censorship sucks donkey penis.

Brown Bear 06-23-2003 10:07 AM

Quote:

two others said it was allowable as long as libraries disable the filters for patrons who ask
hahaha....could you imagine that?

"ummm....excuse me miss librarian lady, but could you please disable the porn filtering on this computer so I can look at porn?"

Wizzo 06-23-2003 10:15 AM

I'm sure there's a ton of guys, that are to cheap to buy a computer, but are whipping out the CC to porn memberships...








Yea Right!








If they aren't buying, they should quit wasting our BW... So, I don't have a problem with it!:)

directfiesta 06-23-2003 10:16 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Brown Bear


hahaha....could you imagine that?

"ummm....excuse me miss librarian lady, but could you please disable the porn filtering on this computer so I can look at porn?"

"and while I am here, could you hand me that box of kleenex."

:Graucho

snipah7 06-23-2003 10:19 AM

re-tar-ded!


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