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Judge Bows to ACLU; Blocks Child Porn Protect Act | Print |  E-mail
Thursday, 22 March 2007

 

((I will always contend if you strip off the shoes and socks of any card-carrying member of the

ACLU, you'd find cloven hooves....Ron))

 

 

Fox News

Washington

 

Congress must try again if it wants the federal government to police the Internet on behalf of the nation's children.

 

A federal judge on Thursday blocked a 1998 federal law that makes it a crime for commercial Web site operators to let children access "harmful" material.

The judge said parents can protect their children through software filters and other less restrictive means that do not limit the rights of others to free speech.

"Perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection," wrote Senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr., who presided over a four-week trial on the issue last fall.

The law would criminalize Web sites that allow children to 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.

Sexual health sites, the online magazine Salon.com and other Web publishers backed by the American Civil Liberties Union challenged the law. They argued that the Child Online Protection Act was unconstitutionally vague and would have a chilling effect on speech.

The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a temporary injunction in 2004 on grounds the law was likely to be struck down and was perhaps outdated.

Critics have noted, for example, that the law does not address e-mail, streaming video or social networking sites. Technology experts say parents now have more serious concerns about Internet safety, such as the threat of online predators.

Discovery in the case sparked a legal firestorm last year when Google challenged a Justice Department subpoena over what kind of information people seek online. Justice lawyers had asked Google to turn over 1 million random Web addresses and a week's worth of Google search queries.

A judge sharply limited the scope of the subpoena, which Google had fought on trade secret, not privacy, grounds.

To defend the nine-year-old Child Online Protection Act, government lawyers attacked software filters as burdensome and less effective, even though they have previously defended their use in public schools and libraries.

"It is not reasonable for the government to expect all parents to shoulder the burden to cut off every possible source of adult content for their children, rather than the government's addressing the problem at its source," a government attorney, Peter D. Keisler, argued in a post-trial brief.

The plaintiffs argued that filters work best because they let parents set limits based on their own values and their child's age.

The law addresses material accessed by children under 17, but only applies to content hosted in the United States.

The Web sites who challenged the law said fear of prosecution might lead them to shut down or move their operations offshore, beyond the reach of the U.S. law. They also said the Justice Department could do more to enforce obscenity laws already on the books.

The 1998 law followed Congress' unsuccessful 1996 effort to ban online pornography. The Supreme Court in 1997 deemed key portions of that law unconstitutional because it was too vague and trampled on adults' rights.

The newer law narrowed the restrictions to commercial Web sites and defined indecency more specifically.

In 2000, Congress passed a law requiring schools and libraries to use software filters if they receive certain federal funds. The high court upheld that law in 2003.

Comments (4)add feed
WAPERTH1: ...
And people want to know whats wrong with the country.its the ACLU, thats helping to bring this country down. Anything thats good they destroy, Anything bad they fight to keep it....
1

March 23, 2007
88pdx: Hypocrites!
It does not seem that the ACLU is concerned for the "greater good" at all. Unbelievable!! What about the Child's rights? Good gracious. I need an Advil.
2

March 23, 2007
BlueBrother: ...
If parents monitored their childrens usage of the computer and their internet usage there would be no need for any of this bullshit. We keep the family computer in the living room. There is almost always somebody around when the computer is in use. I even have to be careful about some of the emails I open from certain people, because I never know if my daughter might be standing behind me. I can watch her and who she is "talking" with on My Space and even have an account of my own on My Space just to keep tabs on her, to keep her safe. Most people ignore their kids and buy them a personal computer that the have hidden away in their bedrooms so their parents don't have to deal with them. As to all these people that claim they do all this crap to protect children from porn they are full of shit. They like almost everyone have an agenda. They don't like porn and want it done away with. So they find what on the face of it seems like reasonable excuses for banning it, or making it illegal and work to get rid of it completely. I mean who after all doesn't want to protect our children? It's just like the gun control freaks excuses about getting rid of all the guns. They make the claim/question/pitch on, "How could this be unreasonable if we saved one childs life doing so." Reality is it's just baby steps in the big picture agenda. Take it away a little bit at a time and eventually it's all gone, WE WIN, Yeah Team, RAH RAH RAH. And s its all the same, guns, porn, what ever. I watch my kids usage of the computer and I taught them to shoot and firearms safety. For the rest of the world there is Darwin to fix it.
3

March 24, 2007
pros: ...
Amen to that, WAPERTH1.
4

March 24, 2007
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