Once Again: Court Says That COPA Anti-Porn Law Is Unconstitutional
from the and-again-and-again-and-again dept
After the Supreme Court rejected most of the Communications Decency Act as being unconstitutional, Congress tried again with the more friendly sounding Child Online Protection Act. It sounds nice. Who doesn’t want to “protect the children,” right? But it was basically the same thing as the CDA, and court after court has struck it down as unconstitutional. The Supreme Court has already weighed in on some aspects of the law, kicking the case back down to the district level, where the judge noted the law was unconstitutional. The government appealed (of course), and subpoenaed data from just about everyone. You may recall the legal fuss over the government’s demand that pretty much every search engine hand over their logs? That was part of the case the government was trying to make — and about the best they could do was to prove that (gasp!) there’s some porn online.
Of course, since porn is legal, proving that there’s porn online is hardly a rationale for restricting free speech — which is what COPA would do. It would require sites to make sure that either no adult content showed up anywhere on their site, or verify the age of everyone who visited their site. That is quite an extreme limitation on free speech, which is exactly what court after court after court has said. And, now we can add to that the Appeals Court who has now struck down COPA yet again, pointing out that it’s a clear violation of the First Amendment and chilling to freedom of speech. It also noted that there’s simply no reason that parents can’t deal with themselves through the use of filters:
“It is apparent that COPA, like the Communications Decency Act before it, ‘effectively suppresses a large amount of speech that adults have a constitutional right to receive and to address to one another,’… and thus is overbroad. For this reason, COPA violates the First Amendment. These burdens would chill protected speech.”
Interesting that this comes at the same time that Andrew Cuomo and NY State are bullying ISPs to effectively do what COPA would have demanded. Hopefully Comcast will send Andrew Cuomo a copy of the Appeals Court decision. In the meantime, the Justice Department is indicating that it will appeal to the Supreme Court — so this case is still not over.
Filed Under: appeals court, cda, copa, first amendment, free speech
Comments on “Once Again: Court Says That COPA Anti-Porn Law Is Unconstitutional”
I like a salad.
Just a note of sarcasm...
How dare the courts tell me that I have to be the one to raise my kid. Why else do we have a government? They should make it illegal to post anything that would be offensive to my 5 year old.
I don’t care about anyone else’s “free speech”: I just the want the government to hide anything I don’t want my child to see!
– – – –
Again, this was meant as sarcasm… unfortunately, way too many people actually think this way.
and when it goes to the Supreme Court and gets rejected we’ll all hear about runaway judicial oversight and renegade liberal judges.
mmmmmm….porn…..
ROAR! GOVERNMENT CONTROL MY CHILDREN! I AM BAD PARENT WHO NO CAN DO GOOD!
Seems pretty much like half of the moms and dads in this country. Too damn stupid to actually be parents for once and do something themselves about controlling their kids. *sigh* but this is America after all, land of the lazy, home of the fat.
There is a technical issue here
How do you prove someone’s age on the Internet? One of my children had a credit card at age 16, as an authorized buyer. There is no reliable criteria available.
I just wish there was a minimum IQ for all three branches of government.
Does anyone know which lobby was behind the bill? And how they were going to profit from this venture?
news to me...
There’s porn online?? WHERE?!?
Judiciary Computers Investigation
I havea team that will be conducting an investigation of all Judicial side of government computers for the viewing of porn and then sharing that info with the general public.
Good result from bad legislation?
There’s always the possibility that the Supreme Court will end up broadening current free speech protections in the process of overturning this law. Otherwise, this is a huge waste of tax dollars to pander to a small narrow-minded group.
this is a huge waste of tax dollars to pander to a small narrow-minded group