U.S. Supreme Court To Rule On Online Porn Law 386
froggle2003 writes "Sites like goodfig.org and NEWS.com.au are among the first to report that the U.S. Supreme Court has decided to rule on the constitutionality of the Child Online Protection Act (COPA). The COPA was passed in 1998 in an effort to crack down on sites that don't block porn from children. It calls for 6 months in jail and $50,000 in fines for first-time violaters. Opponents of the COPA led by the ACLU are quick to note that the COPA makes criminals of many individuals using the internet for legitimate purposes such as providing information on anatomy, gynecology, safe-sex advice, etc."
Legitimate purposes? (Score:5, Insightful)
But porn (for adults) is a legitimate purpose. Unsavory, perhaps, but legitimate.
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:4, Insightful)
The point is not that pr0n is not legitimate. Preferences and beliefs aside, drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes, and hanging out in clubs and bars is "legitimate", and legal. But not for children. The point is that there are no safeguards in place to keep minors from accessing it... but the problem with this legislation is that, like some of it's legal predecessors, it seems to fail to properly distinguish pr0n from art, science, etc.
The article quotes the Bush administration as saying that children are unprotected from the harmful effects of the enormous amount of pr0n on the world wide web. And that may be true. But it sounds like this law would be the equivalent of protecting children from cigarettes by prosecuting stores who sold them candy cigarettes or cough syrup. After all, candy cigarettes are *like* real ones, just as discussing sexual technique is *like* sex stories. And cough syrup is *like* beer, because it also contains alcohol. Perhaps the latter is a bad example; I'm not sure if there's an age requirement for purchasing this type of medication, but I think the point stands.
I believe that some kind of safeguards should indeed be in place, even with some of these non-pr0n sites. For example, a parent may not want a child to know the ins and outs (no pun intended) of the birds and the bees as they pertain to disabled adults, until the child is older. That is the parent's decision. Thus, some sort of rating system may be better suited than an all-encompassing "THIS IS UNSUITABLE FOR KIDS, SO IT IS OBSCENE" statement. Sure, require a bit of code for filtering software to pick up. If the code doesn't exist, apply a fine, penalty, etc. But it should fit the instance. Getting pr0n results from a search for prescription drugs is a lot different than stumbling across the reproductive system on a medical site. Simply assessing the same fine for allowing access to any and all types of "inappropriate" material makes no sense. That's like allowing the removal of basic civil rights from a burglar simply by labeling him a "terrorist". Oh, wait a minute...
So Theodore Olson says the main target is commercial pornographers. So what? Since when has the "targeted group of offenders" ever stopped the government from prosecuting anyone it wishes? While I think imprisoning someone who's set up a meth lab is legitimate, prosecuting him for creating "chemical weapons of mass destruction" using a set of guidelines so broad that glue, bleach and motor oil also qualifies for is ridiculous. Let me guess... there's going to be a clause in here somewhere that makes "distribution of non-age-appropriate materials an act of terror, as a method for inciting rebellion in the homeland's children", right? We need to be specific, and our government has already shown that they cannot be trusted to interpret a law for themselves. Either we need to do it beforehand, or we should not pass the law. To do otherwise potentially allows innocent people to be prosecuted, or guilty parties to be punished far in excess of what is appropriate. You only need look at the recent history of the "Patriot" Act to see this.
For sites that contain content of an adult nature, perhaps an "I am over such-and-such age" entry form is appropriate. If so, the wording of said form might be set by the state... but that probably isn't necessary. It's easy enough to word something that says "If x, click here; if y, click here." Also, code might be put in place to warn off filtering software, which the parent is responsible for installing. If the parent fails to do so, that is not the site operator's fault. Perhaps there should indeed be a classification system for ratings... but it is important that we are A) very specific, and B) very understanding of what we are doing when we decide what is considered "adult entertainment", "mature information", etc. And dammit, no more "Oh, I didn't have time to read it properly" legislation! How many times have we read this in the news lately!?
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:3, Insightful)
And besides, what about the responsibility of the parents? I tell you, parents in the US love overbearing legislation, cause it means that someone else can be blamed for their failures as parents.
And on a more constructive note: Why not have a test, like at the start o
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
First of all, I saw porn from as early an age as 13, like either most boys did, or most boys wanted to... Sure it was nowhere near as explicit as the stuff available on the web today, but seriously, if people want to get porn, they will...
And besides, what about the responsibility of the parents? I tell you, parents in the US love overbearing legislation, cause it means that someone else can be blamed for their failures as parents.
And on a more constructive note: Why not have a test, like at the start of
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:4, Insightful)
When did we decide that parents no longer had responsibility to monitor their children?
When did we decide that, so parents could be lazy, we'd limit the right of every adult?
You don't want your kids to download porn? Put the computer in the room where your TV is, and keep an eye on what your kids are downloading.
Don't send Ashcroft into my house because you're unwilling to watch your kids in your house.
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
Educating children is important, too. Exposure to porn isn't bad, in itself, but the main consideration is its effect on a developing mind. There is a difference between the effect of porn on a 2-year-old vs a 5-year-old vs a 16-year-old. I'm sure a child psychologist could provide some opinions about this.
Still, laws are not the answer.
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
Getting your kids to do the right thing when you are there is trivial. Getting your kids to do the right thing when you aren't there is what parenting is all about.
If you can't trust your kids to be left alone, then don't leave them alone.
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
More to the point, do you not trust your children to grow into functioning adults without your iron hand?
Every child misbehaves. Every child is eventually exposed to potentially unsavory things, whether crime or drugs or porn. It's part of becoming socialized into the world in which we live.
If you somehow manage to keep your child in a virtual iron
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
On the contrary! Remember that savory == salty.
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
Some of USA's leaders are so focused on make people see dirt in every single spot where sex is mentioned in a non-educational way. Movies? => DIRTY! Magazines? => DIRTY! Radio shows? => DIRTY! TV content? => "DIRTY!" (not that I'm defending TV content, and so on. When I read or listen to them, I somehow picture them as a bunch of hypocritical, inquisitional judges in S. XXI costumes.
Come on, guys. Sex is part of our lives. It shouldn't be seen as something taboo.
I just came from a tour ar
Re:Legitimate purposes? (Score:2)
There are legitimate reasons to serve anatomy, reproductive, safe-sex etc. information to children, though.
There is no legitimate reason to provide sexually explicit pornography to children -- that's why it's already against the law offline.
Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2, Insightful)
I have to say, with every new ruling of this type that the U.S.A. has to endure, I'm increasingly happy I don't live there.
It sees like the U.S. judicial system has lost any grasp of what's important in society.
No, it's not that important to protect children from pr0n. No it's not that important to protect an overgrown music industry from pirates. Yes it's that important to legalize it.
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2)
Yes, it is. But it is just as important to make sure that it is done properly, instead of letting lazy legislators make ridiculously overbroad laws.
Remember that porn is not all fluffy bunnies from Playboy; there is some very serious hardcore stuff out there that I don't want to run into, much less exposing an extremely impressionable 11-year-old to.
Censorship, when applied properly is not only not always bad, it can be very beneficial. There i
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:3, Insightful)
There is a scene nearing the end where two characters have sex. In the uncut movie they show the breasts of the female character while they are in their tent. The next scene they are attacked by "bugs", and she gets ripped in half. Now, when it was shown on TV, they cut the showing of the breasts, and ha
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2)
Agreed. However there is a historical context for these things. Sex has traditionally been private in the USA, while violence is not only public but a part of family life. My primary example is hunting. Dads would take their teenage sons out to get dinner routinely back in the day. However, we should also compare and contrast this to tribe in other countries where public nudity is perfectly normal and acceptible. Bascially, somewhere along the line, people in the US culturally denounced
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2)
Those movies warranted an 'R' rating because of their violent content, and there are a great many movies which are rated 'R' simply for their sexual content as well. My point
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2, Insightful)
And protecting children from internet porn will allow this to happen? Turn on the television at any given time of day (including the times when Sesame Street is on), and you'll find all sorts of sexual misconduct in Soap Operas, Sitcom reruns, Night time Drama Reruns, Fox Reality shows, etc. None of these are exposing children to sexuality in healthy, positive ways. Just because there's no nudity doesn't make it safe. If parents aren't w
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2)
Do you really think that 40 years ago, when the FCC actually (correctly) enforced the spirit instead of the letter of their guidelines and regulations, that we had this same issue? History tells us that this was not the case. (For instance, we know that the average age at which young pe
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why not 500,000 million? (Score:2)
For adults, I agree with you a thousand percent. But children are not adults! They are simply not capable of processing things the same way we are. It is irresponsible and dangerous to expose children to things they are not prepared to handle; it can severely damage their psyche.
Roberto Benini's "Life is Beautiful" is an excellent movie to introduce pre-teens to the horrors of Nazi concentration camps. OTOH, Schindler'
What about... (Score:2, Interesting)
What about sex toys, dildos et al? IMHO, a picture of a dildo (on it's own...) isn't porn (well, at least, looking at a picture of a dildo in its packaging box doesn't float my boat); are purveyors of such goods criminals? Would such a site require age verification?
Re:What about... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What about... (Score:3, Interesting)
Remeber (sic), all the while, the age of consent in the UK is 16..
So a girl can have the real thing, and get preggers, two years before she can have the consolations of a safe plastic "friend"?
And they say the laws don't make sense.
Nice idea. (Score:5, Insightful)
The main thing is "children" is a very broad term, and while I wouldn't want a 4 year-old viewing information on contraceptives, I would if they are at an age where this information is relevant and important.
I think the definitions need to be tidied more than they are now, and also feel that this could possibly include sites to do with mutilation etc. With some of the horrific things out there, a child could easily see something really traumatic.
I don't know, this just feels a little like all the SPAM legislation, a nice idea but something which is going to take much more than a law to counteract.
I can't help but feel that better parenting would help. After all there are schemes in the UK which are predominantly to educate parents to watch what their children are doing etc.
Re:Nice idea. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Nice idea. (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, wait a minute, I'm a parent. I'm also responsible for my children...hmmm...
Now that I think about it, most of the children in my son's school also appear to have parents or guardians. In fact, I can't think of one child that isn't being cared for by some adult.
Hey, maybe this is a problem that parents can deal with!
Oh, wait, that's right. That would require personal responsibility. We don't hav
Re:Nice idea. (Score:3, Insightful)
If your 4 year-old is reading and understanding information on contraceptives then I suggest you be prepared to start paying college tuition several years early
-
Re: (Score:2)
Random Info (Score:5, Informative)
COPA has its own site [copacommission.org] and a commision that put it together. Interestingly, they link to a bunch of research papers [copacommission.org] (many pdfs) Hearings and meetings too. Just skimming, it appears they made something of at least an attempt at a balanced inqury.
And what karma whoring post would be complete without a link to the statute [copacommission.org]?
This is a typical example... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is a typical example... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This is a typical example... (Score:2)
Re:This is a typical example... (Score:2)
Won't someone protect the children! - The Simpsons (Score:5, Interesting)
1. The actresses make money to support them.
2. Look at other countries and how they deal with porn, and how many rapes they have. I dont think that a sex open society is going to have as many rapes as one that isnt.
3. Its good clean fun...... Admit it, we all know you like porn, dont deny. and if you do deny(and your a man) then likelyhood is that your a liar.
Besides shouldnt we be more busy protecting our kids from voilence than from porn. Whats worse, having sex, or killing people. I would like to have any person prove to me why pornography is morally wrong, and no "they will become a sexual deviant" bullshit.
Ben Barber
pr0n = harmless? (Score:4, Insightful)
Why? Context. I understand that the "freaky weird" stuff is a part of natural human sexuality - hermaphrodites & dwarves need love too after all! As a well-adjusted adult, I understand that group sex is just another sexual option if done safely and sanely. But... a child might not. I think kids need to go through a GOOD "mommy and daddy love each other very much and sometimes..." talk, or a GOOD sex ed program (none of this abstinence-only Jesus bullshiat), before they start seeing the less vanilla stuff that's out there. Kids are really impressionable - it's better for them to develop their own ideas and preferences about sexuality, rather than be heavily influenced by whatever variety of pornography they're first exposed to.
Which is not to say that censorship isn't evil. Parents/teachers have to do their best to guide kids' online activity and that's about the best we can justly expect in our society.
Re:pr0n = harmless? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:pr0n = harmless? (Score:2)
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:4, Interesting)
OK, I'll take the trollbait.
What's worse? Neither, when 'having sex' is in the context of pornography. Both are about the same thing. They are about the objectification of other people.
Murder (notice I did not say killing) is the ultimate act of human objectification. It occurs only after a person has decided that another person is too much of an inconvenience or annoyance to let that other person continue to live. The victim is seen only as a means to an end and the murderer decides the means to his end, in this case, has outlived its usefulness. The victim is objectified.
Pornography (notice I did not say sex) is the ultimate expression of human-as-object. In pornography, we take one or more people and show them treating each other like objects upon which to achieve pleasure...ie, the participants in pornography demonstrate that they believe the other people in the scene are means to an end (the ends being self-gratification).
Under no circumstances should we ever forget that other people are ends in and of themselves and not a means to an end. When someone else annoys us or cuases us problems, we must remind ourselves that unlike a tool or other object in the world, these 'annoyances' or 'roadblocks' are people and are not here to serve us or anyone else. Likewise, when someone entices us or titilates us, we must remind ourselves that unlike a sextoy, these 'titillations' are people. They are someone's daughter or son. Even when they choose to act like a tool for our pleasure, we should never treat them like they are. They are worth more than that. Consensual sex isn't necessarily moral sex. And filming it so that others can also objectify the participants only makes it yet less moral.
Furthermore, even if you totally disregard the idea that other people are exactly as valuable as you and that you are too valuable to demean yourself, you must at least acknowledge that what we see and what we experience does affect who we are and who we become. That, in fact, is how we become who we are. We are an amalgamation of our nature and our experiences, with a dash of human spirit thrown in to offset the mix. When our experiences are pornographic, it affects us. Like it or not, there is no reputable psychiatrist who would suggest otherwise. Watching pornography does change who we are as does everything else we do and experience. The question is not "Does it affect who we are?" but rather "How does it affect who we are?" I hope you aren't going to argue that it affects us in a good way?!?
-Tom
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2, Interesting)
What of those that enjoy being treated like a tool for pleasure? Who are you to deny them their pleasure?
However alien it may be to you, there are people that enjoy being objectified.
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2)
I don't find it alien, I find it sad. Further I don't deny them anything. I simply called it what it is...the objectification of humanity. I never said it should be illegal, only that it is immoral.
-Tom
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2)
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2, Interesting)
This to me is a very real moral argument, and one that I struggle with. This problem is that pornography is not the only way that we objectify people in our society. In fact, our society (in particular the economy) is based on the objectification of many of the people that we deal with every day.
A waitress takes our order, and brings us food for money. I like that,
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2)
If you think that making love is about making treating the other person as a tool for your pleasure, then you've never done it. It also explains a lot of the rest of your argument. You seem unwilling to see that sex could be different from that. For the record, that is one of the bad effects I associate with a society that considers pornography normal and moral.
You say
Re:I guess Miss American is pOrn too, then (Score:2)
I agree. It's not illegal. It's immoral. There's a difference and I never confused the two.
YOU making a law such that someone cannot watch porn DOES impinge on others.
I agree again. I never once said porn should be illegal. As I stated in another post, I was asked a question about why people find porn immoral and I answered it. My answer never even hinted that I thought porn should be made illegal or gave an opinion one way or the other regardin
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2, Insightful)
You start with a valid point - over protecting kids. I agree with that. Someday, they will face a "bad thing" and need to be prepared to deal with it. Overprotecting them prevents them from developing methods for dealing with bad stuff.
Unfortunately, you then moved on and spent the bulk of your message in something completely different - pretending that porn is a good thing in and of itself. It is NOT "good clean fun" for all parties. You may not feel the pain of it - but the woman wh
Re:Won't someone protect the children! - The Simps (Score:2)
What a sack of dumb ass bullshit. So, seeing someone have sex on a
BBC News article... (Score:5, Insightful)
The article also contains some interesting links, to the Internet Watch Foundation, ACLU, etc.
There are huge freedom of speech implications here. I'm not condoning pornographic content where it's likely to be seen by young, impressionable kids but it seems to me that you can't truly have freedom of speech unless you recognise everyone's freedom of speech, and not just freedom for those you deem morally or politically acceptable.
Sometimes you can't have your cake and eat it too. This looks like one of those times.
Re:BBC News article... (Score:5, Insightful)
This is 100% correct, and I applaud you for making this observation.
However, you can strengthen the observation even more. Freedom of speech is arguably only an interesting concept when it comes to the freedom of thos making unpopular (for whatever definition of unpopular) statements of some sort.
After all, if you think about it, popular statements are allowed everywhere. Even in North Korea it is perfectly allowed (indeed, I would imagine encouraged !) to make statements of a certain type that the government likes.
Thus it can be argued that the only sensible measure of our real freedom of speech is how much freedom we extend to those who make statements that we do not like.
Porn. Radical propaganda. Fictious child-porn. Bomb making instructions. Instructions on how to watch DVDs under Linux (sorry, couldn't resist that one). Information on how to grow drug-yielding plants.
I don't think Americans should be nearly as proud of their freedoms as many are.
Re:BBC News article... (Score:2)
Re:BBC News article... (Score:2)
I think the point was less that America is the only country guilty of this (it certainly isn't) but that USA markets itself as the 'land of the free'. Other coutnries are not so vocal about their freedom or lack of it.
Re:BBC News article... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's the bit that I've always had a problem with. British culture being the way it is, I was exposed to porn at around eight from the usual vector of the railway embankment, but I don't think it harmed me any more than the (late) conversation I had with my parents about sex.
If anything I suspect that there's some kind of sociological embarrassment with dealing with the whole subject when little johnny asks what a 'blowjob' is at the dinner table...some people react by trying to cover up, some explain and have a laugh later...
The whole porn issue seems less to be about protecting children than using the excuse of protecting children to remove something distasteful from society, when society, through the media generally, is filled full of images of models, pop stars and actors making close-to-the-knuckle references to sex, dressing provocatively and generally doing the things adults do.
Usually the people who speak loudest about protecting the children get into objectifying children as innocence, when the truth is that at 10-14 you're already pretty aware of the world around you. Hell, girls are getting pregnant at 14 because of the biological imperatives of the hormone whirlwind that slams into gear during puberty, with or without sex education and porn. It's that kind of thing that assured the continuation of the human race before flipcharts and the sex cliff notes came along.
Admittedly I wouldn't be that happy about my kids seeing some of the niche stuff (scat, bestial, etc), but I think I'd make it my duty to explain that some people like that kind of stuff and let them make their minds up if they did see it. Bear in mind that the internet is a convienient transport, there's still cable, video, DVD, R Kelly, magazines and books that aren't legislated.
Protecting the Children... (Score:3, Insightful)
Children do not have the cognitive maturity to understand what it is they're looking at. Exposing them to it when they are too young to understand it warps their perceptions and confuses their understanding of a relationship. This is a fundamental truth.
For example - a 3 to 4 year old believes they can do anything... literally. In thei
Re:Protecting the Children... (Score:2)
Again, although you provide the only decent argument against it, that's not the impression I get from the foam-flecked masses that use words like 'decency' and start talking about moral decay; obviously people who romanticise various 'golden eras' simply because they seemed more 'right or safe'.
The problem is that the things you described don't just stop at imagery of sex and pornography and for p
Re:Protecting the Children... (Score:2)
For example - a 3 to 4 year old believes they can do anything... literally. In their mind they can climb as fast and as high as any world class rock climber. They'll believe this even after they've fallen off a 2 foot high chair 10 times in a row. They'll believe it in the face of every scrap of empirical evidence to the contrary, and if you tell them they can't they'll just try harder.
It was enough to burn my fingers once (nothing serious
Globalisation (Score:3, Interesting)
I am Danish and I am absolutely positive I can put all the porn (using models aged 18 and above)on my web-site that I like (which means zero - but that's besides the point) and I am equally positive that every online person in the US can access that page. Now - this is perfectly legal and acceptable in the country where my web-server is located, so I absolutely fail to understand the relevance of these laws.
Seems like an incredible waste of resources and energy implementing something that won't provide any child protection at all.
Re:Globalisation (Score:2, Interesting)
A local law on a global network doesn't just work at all.
Not legit? (Score:4, Interesting)
Hey! Are you trying to imply that pr0n isn't a legitimate online activity?
Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:4, Interesting)
(C) taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value for minors.
or this:
(A) the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find, taking the material as a whole and with respect to minors, is designed to appeal to, or is designed to pander to, the prurient interest
What is art is certainly debateable. Magazines such as Playboy come across as more artsy to me than pornographic. Although, I'm sure if we apply "contemporary community standards" the law would be in disagreement with me. As for how they are to attain those standards, or whether the opinions of the community should dictate what every kid is exposed to is questionable at best.
Re:Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:2)
Murder is wr... no wait, that'd be legislating morality. Can you tell us how you'd create laws that have no basis on morality?
Re:Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:2)
Re:Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:2)
Ethics/morals (Score:2)
Re:Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:2)
Better yet how about you "prove" morality without mentioning religion?
If my religious beliefs are different from yours I have absolutely no right to abuse government power to impose my religious beliefs on you, and you have absolutely no right to do it to me.
And don't even try "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you". If I happen to enjoy getting whipped that does not mean it's ok for me to whip you.
-
Re:Here's hoping they overturn this act (Score:2)
And let's not forget it's the Federal prosecutor who gets to decide where to prosecute, and thus what community provides the jurors that apply the "standards".
It's no accident that the current Ashcroft prosecution against an "extreme" pornographer is taking place in the Western District of Penn
What about the responsibilities of parents? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about the responsibilities of parents? (Score:2)
I don't think anyone would disag
Re:What about the responsibilities of parents? (Score:2)
We are the Worldwide Leader in Adult and Political Entertainment
Celebrating our 6th Anniversary (1997-2003)
This Website does contain sexually-oriented adult material
which may include visual images, movies and verbal descriptions of nude adults, adults engaging in sexual acts, and other audio and visual content that is sexuall
Re:What about the responsibilities of parents? (Score:2)
Hellooooo! That's exactly what they want to prevent.
This is the THIRD bill they've passed. The first two were struck down as unconstitutional, and even those were watered down versions of what they actually wanted but knew they couldn't get.
They are on a Crusade to Save The Children from the Godless Heathens. They have been soundly defeated on virtually every front except Kiddy Porn. No legislator can ever dare t
MORE PORN NOW (Score:2)
If getting rid of this law means that Isabella [isabellacam.com], Michelle7 [michelle7.com], SDG [stevedietgoedde.com], and Mea Culpa [mea-culpa.com] will have more content, I will kill to make it happen.
(don't click any of those links at work, dummy!)
The Internet is NOT a babysitter (Score:4, Insightful)
Just because some parents start to let their kids freely roam the web, doesn't mean we can prevent people from freeely posting whatever they want (ass long as copyrights are respected). It is their responsibiliry to supervise their children, not the web's. Like Mark Twain said: Censorship is like telling a man cannot have a steak because a baby cannot chew it.
Its Censorship (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Its Censorship (Score:2)
Better Idea Innit (Score:5, Insightful)
There are many districts in many cities where all sorts of stuff goes on that you wouldn't want young kids being around. Solution? Don't let your kids go there, at least, not on their own.
We live in an adult world. The Internet is an adult invention. Nobody ever intended it to be suitable for children. Deal with it. For crying out loud! You can't watch certain films till you're 12 or 15; you can't buy fags or have sex till you're 16; you can't drink booze, bet on sporting events or watch other people having sex till you're 18. Anybody complaining about adults smoking, drinking, gambling, having sex and watching certain kinds of films is rightly denounced. What's to complain about? Sooner or later you'll be old enough.
Re:Better Idea Innit (Score:2, Insightful)
It might also encourage kids to be more active and play outside more. There's growing concern, at least in the US, about the health of children who are spending too much time in sedentary activities.
There's a movement these days to child-proof the world and people need to understand that it's simply not possible, nor desirable, to restrict fundamental adult rights for the sake of chil
Re:Better Idea Innit (Score:2)
I believe the Supreme Court rejected an earlier broader attempt by the Government to censor adult content on the Internet (at least in the US), based upon the "think of the children" argument. Supreme Court rejected it on the basis that it was unacceptable to reduce content on the Internet to the lowest common denominator (rated G stuff) simply because some child might see something naughty.
Re:Better Idea Innit (Score:2)
Actually COPA is the THIRD law, with the first two getting smacked down as unconstitutional. There's something seriously wrong when legislators REPEATEDLY pass the same damn unconstitutional crud.
COPA was the compromise
"Compromise", heh. With COPA they are stooping to stealing money away from libraries because every other tactic has failed.
Local libraries have always been free to provide as much or as little internet access as they see fi
Re:Better Idea Innit (Score:2)
I assume you mean you can't buy cigarettes. That means something completely different in the USA.
Re:Better Idea Innit (Score:2)
Anybody complaining about adults smoking...
At least in the US.
Though to be fair, the Cops don't usually want to be involved.
Re:It's the adults I'm worried about (Score:2)
Motives? Morbid curiosity, I guess. Having participated in the raising of a family, I already know what a naked child looks like. Maybe some people haven't. Or, maybe they just know when to stop. Not everyone who sees adver
Re:It's the adults I'm worried about (Score:2)
Not to mention that definitions of child pornography are extremely vague. Here are some pictures - can you determine whether they are child porn or not?
1 [zapcom.net],
2 [blueriver.net],
3 [allaboutfaces.com],
4 [writhe.net] and
5 [corbis.com].
And did you know that
In Japan child erotica was legal all the way until 1999.
U
Danger! (Score:2, Insightful)
Get rid of it! (Score:2)
They're not my fucking kids... (Score:2)
simple solution (Score:2)
It's your job... (Score:2)
Not the world's job to be "safe for kids".
The world is not safe for children. I don't want a world that's safe for children. It would be unproductive and dull.
Too many don't want to be responsible for their own children? Why? Takes too much effort to teach them? Just yell louder when they don't understand what you want them to do. Works when the waiter doesn't speak your native language, right?
Get real, people. They're
That's a heck of a harsh sentence (Score:2)
To hit a first offender kiddie with. It's probably just youthful curiosity.
What's that? You mean it's supposed to apply to the adults providing services to other adults because they didn't telepathically detect a kiddie browsing their site?
While we're at it, why not just jail librarians for failing to stop kiddies peeking at anatomy books?
Hell, why not just burn the books? It's the only way to be sure.
Don't censor the porn....Label the child-safe stuf (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe we need to disciminate more (Score:2)
Re:Click through is fine by me (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Click through is fine by me (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But of course (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:the ACLU is evil (Score:2, Funny)
Re:the ACLU is evil (Score:2)
Re:the ACLU is evil (Score:2)
Imagine a country where you are held liable for the consequences of everything you say, and can be sued if someone thinks
Re:the ACLU is evil (Score:2)
Summary: Pedophile rapes/kills 10-year-old boy. Turns out he was a fan of NAMBLA. So, family of boy decides to sue NAMBLA.
Personally, while I obviouly agree that NAMBLA is sick and twisted, I think the ACLU was completely right in defending them here. It's not NAMBLA's fault if someone who reads their page goes out and commits murder. NAMBLA may avocate things which are illegal and immoral (note that murder is not among them), but it wasn't NAMBLA that committed t
Re:simple question: why is sex bad? (Score:2)
Re:Lock Up (Score:2)
There's no "magic" universally-agreed-upon scheme for transliterating Arabic words into European languages. The short vowels in question can be transliterated as u and o, and as i and e. Partly this is due to the relatively lesser role short vowels play in Semitic languages as compared to European ones; it's also partly due to differences in the vowels' values in different European languages.
For American English, the closest phonetic transliteration (from Gulf Arabic) might be "mwislamun" with some indicat
Re:Idea : Red light district for the web. (Score:2)
Who the hell is defining porn??
Presumably, in the scenario you want to see we'd get a corporation or a federal entity defining porn. I think we can all see that this would not be a good thing for the Web as a whole.
Besides which, how do you expect to compel overseas companies to obey? And what about US
Re:On the Internet No One Knows You're a Dog (Score:2)
Of course, you should make sure that kids can't look up the answers on the internet, by protecting all topics that only adults would know about, from access by minors. ;-)
I can see it now: a lil' one wants to look at some porn, but it asks him to describe a hangover. So he googles "hangover symptoms" and the web page, just to make sure he's not trying to learn The Great Secret of Adults, asks him if he remembers "New Cok