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-   -   COPA back in the courts (http://www.greenguysboard.com/board/showthread.php?t=47474)

tickler 2008-06-11 06:52 PM

COPA back in the courts
 
The government just don't seem to get the ideal!|banghead|

The American Civil Liberties Union is in court today, once again urging the courts to uphold a ban on a law that criminalizes constitutionally protected speech on the Internet.
http://www.aclu.org/freespeech/inter...s20080610.html

spacemanspiff 2008-06-12 09:44 AM

|deadhorse

xxxjay 2008-06-12 04:11 PM

Gov't tries to revive Web porn law called outdated
 
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Government lawyers tried Tuesday to revive a 1998 law designed to keep online pornography from children, amid questions that it is significantly outdated and blocks too much legal speech while having no effect on content posted from overseas.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit judges hearing the case questioned the law's effectiveness, given estimates that half of all online porn is posted overseas, beyond the reach of U.S. law.

Free speech groups say the Child Online Protection Act misses the mark today, because it does not cover chat rooms, You Tube and other interactive sites that emerged in the last decade.

Lawyers with the American Civil Liberties Union, representing Salon.com and other sites that challenged the law, argue that Internet filters block 95 percent of the offensive content, and can be set to match a child's age or a parent's judgment.

But only half of all families use them, Justice Department lawyer Charles Scarborough countered.

"If there is nothing that works perfectly here, why not go with the thing that least offends the Constitution?" Judge Thomas L. Ambro asked.

Scarborough argued that the nation needs "a belt and suspenders approach" to the complex problem.

The three-judge panel did not indicate when it would rule. Last year, a federal judge who held a monthlong trial on the law deemed it an unconstitutional infringement on the First Amendment.

The Justice Department is hoping to overturn that ruling. The law has never been enforced because sexual health sites, Salon.com and other Web publishers sued and won a temporary injunction that the U.S. Supreme Court later upheld.

The law would make it a crime for Web publishers to let children access material deemed "harmful to minors" by "contemporary community standards." The sites would be expected to require a credit card number or other proof of age. Penalties include a $50,000 fine and up to six months in prison.

ACLU lawyer Chris Hansen said the government was trying to override the role of parents, who deploy various ways to monitor their children's computer use.

"I'm not here to say COPA's perfect. But filters aren't perfect either," Scarborough argued.

Bill 2008-06-12 05:01 PM

What a surprise - an election year - why not trot out a failed law to try to pretend your doing something.

DangerDave 2008-06-12 05:22 PM

http://www.greenguysboard.com/board/...highlight=copa

StaceyJo 2008-06-16 12:46 AM

We all deserved freedom of speech

spacemanspiff 2008-06-16 11:21 AM

Quote:

Lawyers with the American Civil Liberties Union, representing Salon.com and other sites that challenged the law, argue that Internet filters block 95 percent of the offensive content, and can be set to match a child's age or a parent's judgment.

But only half of all families use them, Justice Department lawyer Charles Scarborough countered.
|banghead||banghead||banghead|

Using this logic, anything that parents are too lazy to keep their kiddies from doing should be illegal. Sorry adults, no more alcohol, cigarettes, driving (or owning a car for that matter), R rated movies....

We have to protect the children.


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