Court Realizes Lifetime Internet Ban Is Unreasonable
from the seems-a-bit-extreme,-right? dept
We’ve discussed how ridiculous it is for courts to ban people from the internet entirely just because the crime they committed took place on the internet. You don’t see people getting banned from using the telephone because their crime involved a phone. However, judges keep putting such a ban in place. An appeals court has now overturned such a ban, pointing out how excessive it appeared to be. In this case, the guy was “prohibited from accessing any computer equipment or any ‘online’ computer service at any location, including employment or education. This includes, but is not limited to, any Internet service provider, bulletin board system, or any other public or private computer network.” As the article notes, that would mean he basically couldn’t use a mobile phone (or VoIP phone) these days. And, it’s getting increasingly difficult to find a job or class that doesn’t involve computers and the internet in some manner. To ban it completely, for the rest of this guy’s life, was clearly extreme — and it’s good that the appeals court has agreed. As for the lower court, it sounds like they just were so interested in the “internet” angle to the case, they didn’t quite realize the consequences of a complete ban for life.
Comments on “Court Realizes Lifetime Internet Ban Is Unreasonable”
No Parallels
I have never heard of a bank robber being banned for life from going to the bank.
Re: No Parallels
I have, it’s called prison.
Re: Re: No Parallels
It’s unlikey a bank robber would go to prison for life.
Besides, he can still use a bank account EVEN if he is in prison.
Hey, don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time.
Child molesters are banned from being around kids, I say F this ahole. People bitch about how bad things are but when someone does something about it pansies like you bitch about rights. You reap what you sow.
Re: Re:
Must be nice to be perfect.
Re: Re:
I wish we could ban fags like you.
Re: Hey, don't do the crime if you can't do the t
Your comment about sex offenders makes sense because there is significant evidence that the nature of the crime is such that it is physically violent and it is often repeated. But I think you’re comparing apples and oranges if you think that any non-violent crime committed that involves use of the internet should result in a lifetime ban on the internet. Have you never gotten a parking ticket? Forgot to return a library book on time? By your logic a person should never be allowed to drive a car, or be banned from the library for life. Sometimes common sense does actually work.
To get back to the actual case, there are already laws against child porn, and the man was sentenced to prison. Creating arbitrary and unenforceable additional punishments that won’t get to the root of the problem doesn’t help anybody.
You can’t pull out the “think of the children” card unless you’re willing to actually think it through.
Re: Re:
anyways, that is a very different genre of crime. Child molesters are banned from being near young children, but are not banned from using the restroom ? Using the internet is the equivalent to using the restroom these days, without it, you are essentially living on the fringe of society. anyways, people who you speak of as the saying goes perfectly fits, “don’t do the crime if you can’t do the time” but these people generally are mentally ill to some degree and emotionally disturbed. The major problem in this country is the lack of nut houses, which the US government in it’s infinite wisdom decided to get rid of a while back, now using the prison system as it’s new nut house + violent criminal storage facility.
Wow, I must have offended some child molesters, I am sooooo sorry.
F U
don’t feed the troll
I don’t know, I’ve seen repeat drunk drivers banned from ever getting a drivers license again. Several states ban felons from voting or running for office following their release from prison. I think I’ve seen convited doctors prohibited from ever practicing medicine again. Same goes for lawyers convicted.
Also, it must be pointed out that in the case of internet predators, often part of their sentencing deal is a restriction on internet in exchange for less time in prison. Rarely does a felon get the max time in the clink. They barter off years or decades with exchanges of other liberties.
real quick
I actually molest children, sorry for the confusion.
Perma ban
This verdict is over-reaching and unconstitutional as it directly impacts the mans ability to work for a living.
As the article states, it is extremely difficult to find work that doesnt make you use “computer equipment or any ‘online’ computer service at any location, including employment or education that includes, but is not limited to, any Internet service provider, bulletin board system, or any other public or private computer network.”
So by these guidelines, the guy couldnt even work at a Burger King, McDonalds, Taco Bell, or gas station because the registers are networked to those companies private networks, as are the time clocks, phones, and ordering systems.
He couldnt work at a retail store because the credit card machines are networked, nor could he work at a Best Buy, Circuit City, or even as an auto mechanic because these companies have all of their employees working with computers of one type or another.
Basically this guy was sentenced to be forever on welfare because he wouldnt be able to find a job. Thats overly broad and IMHO, cruel and unusual punishment.
Re: Perma ban
I agree wholeheartedly, Michael Whitetail, and was thinking the same exact thing when I read this article. The idea of not being able to work with or near a computer seems absurd, but the kicker for me was the idea of this guy trying to get an education without being able to use a computer. Where is that going to happen nowadays?
At this point, there are computers everywhere and more and more of them have the ability to access the internet as time goes on. I don’t think we’re far off from seeing internet-enabled computers built into cars.
An internet-enabled car shouldn’t be an issue for this guy, though, because for the reasons you pointed out, he will never be able to get a decent job again in his life to afford one.
Re: Re: Perma ban
Actually, all cars made for quite some time now have on-board computers to control the engine.
Hey, don't do the crime if you can't do t
“You can’t pull out the “think of the children” card unless you’re willing to actually think it through.”
Really? I thought that was the main tactic that politicians use all the time. Think of the Children laws are never thought through when they’re proposed.
Also means you can’t use the ATM, because that is a computer network.
Drunk drivers are banned from the road, but even that isn’t a lifetime ban.
Re: Re:
Well, drunk drivers aren’t even banned from the road, just from driving on it. That analogy would be more like a drunk driver being banned from ever getting in a car for the rest of his life.
o_O Stoopid people shouldn’t be in positions of power.
Sometimes the government will modify a court’s ruling, for example when a convicted hacker is released from prison he/she can be restricted use of a computer for “x” amount of time basically until the FBI or whatever agency says otherwise.
“The state must declare the child to be the most precious treasure of the people. As long as the government is perceived as working for the benefit of the children, the people will happily endure almost any curtailment of liberty and almost any deprivation.” – Adolph Hitler (Mein Kampf)