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Should libraries filter out Internet porn?
By Warren Richey
WASHINGTON
- Congressional efforts to protect children from pornography on
the
Internet have met less than an enthusiastic response from the US
Supreme
Court in recent years.
The justices struck down the 1996 Communications Decency Act and
remanded to a lower court a case challenging the 1998 Child Online
Protection Act.
Both cases highlighted the difficulty of striking the proper
constitutional balance in a society that seeks to protect its children
from
offensive, sexually explicit material while at the same time upholding
core
principles of free speech.
Wednesday, the high court begins examining whether Congress's
latest
attempt in this area, the Children's Internet Protection Act, is
impermissible censorship or a justifiable attempt to shield American
youths
from harm.
"It is called the Children's Internet Protection Act, but what
most
people fail to realize is that it applies to every computer terminal in
the
library," says Maurice Freedman, president of the American Library
Association, which is challenging the constitutionality of the
law.
"Everybody who wants to use a computer terminal in a library is
forced to lose access to constitutionally protected speech," Mr.
Freedman
says. "That is not what the public library is about in the United
States."
The law requires that any public library receiving federal aid
must
install Internet- filtering software on their public-access computers
to
prevent the display of obscene content, child pornography, or other
materials that might be harmful to minors.
Rather than simply mandating the use of Internet filters,
Congress
passed the law under its spending-clause power. In effect, the law
gives
public libraries a choice: accept the federal aid and enact the
Internet-filter provision, or forfeit the aid.
Drawbacks of filters
A group of libraries, library associations, patrons, and Web
publishers are challenging the law, saying that Internet filters censor
more
than just illegal pornography and material harmful to minors. They
block
constitutionally protected forms of speech, while frequently failing to
screen out some of the most offensive forms of Internet smut.
A special panel of three federal judges struck down the law last
May,
saying it forced libraries to violate the First Amendment rights of
their
patrons.
In urging the US Supreme Court to reverse the decision,
Solicitor
General Theodore Olson says librarians have the authority to prevent
the
public library from becoming an adult bookstore.
"Just as public libraries have broad discretion to exclude
pornography from their print collections, they have broad discretion to
exclude pornography from their Internet collections," he writes in his
brief
to the court.
The three-judge panel disagreed with this view. They ruled that
there
is a fundamental difference between a limited body of printed material
housed in a library and a computer terminal capable of gaining access
to
virtually unlimited information and materials over the
Internet.
The panel said the government does not have the power to broadly
censor speech in a way that will almost certainly block some
constitutionally protected information.
Freedman of the American Library Association says the proper
role for
libraries and librarians is to help their patrons become responsible
users
of the Internet. "Ultimately, it is the individual's responsibility
because
filters don't work," he says.
There are many examples, Freedman says. Information about NASA's
Mars
explorer program was deleted from library Internet access because when
the
two words Mars and explorer are merged, they form the word
"sex."
Likewise, library computer searches for information about Super
Bowl
XXX are often fruitless because the filtering technology cannot
differentiate between the use of Roman numerals to specify a
championship
football game and the use of three X's to designate a pornographic
video.
Reasonably effective?
Solicitor General Olson says that despite the apparent
over-inclusiveness of many filter programs, they remain an effective
means
to screen out pornography.
"Public libraries may reasonably conclude that it best furthers
their
missions to use a resource that is effective in keeping out
pornography,
even if that resource keeps out some material that is not
pornographic,"
Olson says.
He says only a very small percentage of all websites are
erroneously
blocked, and that such information can often be found on other sites or
by
obtaining access to the Internet via other (non-public library)
computers.
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