cs 4001mary jean harrold1 class 23 freedom of speech in cyberspace assign assignment 8—due 11/13...

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Mary Jean Harrold 1 CS 4001 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Page 1: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

Mary Jean Harrold 1 CS 4001

Class 23

Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign

Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

Page 2: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

Mary Jean Harrold 2 CS 4001

Exam Questions 1

1. Completion, fill-in, etc.(5 each)a) Educates non-professionals as to responsibilities of

profession; actions of professional reflects on entire profession, not just individuals; professionals usually have more power and command more trust; usually codified in a domain-specific code of ethics

b) Enthymeme is an incomplete logical structure consisting of a claim and a reason for that claim, in which an unstated assumption is necessary tomake the structure true.

Page 3: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Exam Questions 1

1. Completion, fill-in, etc.(5 each)c) Patents protect an invention or process, copyrights

protect the specific representation of an idea; patents must be registered, copyrights are automatic; patents last a relatively short time, copyrights last a long time

d) Sufficiency

Typicality

Accuracy

Relevance

Page 4: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Exam Questions 2

2. Short answer (10 each)a) Socrates was truth-seeking; believed in universal truth and

used argument as a tool to approach thattruth.Sophists were persuasive; believed that any position was equally valid and there was no real universal truth, so the ideas with the most persuasive proponents should win.

b) Non-consequence based; rules derived from Categorical Imperative (act as if your actions will become universal law); Proponent: Kant

c) Display data so that it makes causality apparent, performs quantitative comparisons, and examines contradictory or alternative evidence; examples of how Snow did this helped with discussion

Page 5: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Exam Questions 2

2. Short answer (10 each)d) Claim, reason, grounds, warrant, backing.e) Students maintain their rights unless (1) the student uses significant

resources or the work was done on a funded project.f) Communication systems must be designed with back-door access for

law enforcement to monitor the communications in real time; before law was passed, law enforcement had to approach each system like a black box and find a way to access it (newer technologies were making this more difficult).Privacy advocates objected—gives government too much power to monitor communications and wiretap at will, and because it forces designers to make their systems vulnerable to exploitation and to malicious hackers (objection both as too much power by government and potential privacy violations by others).

Page 6: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

Mary Jean Harrold 6 CS 4001

Freedom of Speech in Cyberspace

Page 7: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Changing Communications Paradigms

Regulatory Paradigms Communication technologies differ with respect to their

degree of First Amendment protection and government regulation.

Print Media: Strongest First Amendment protection.

Broadcast Media: Less First Amendment protection than print media.

Common Carrier: Content not controlled and the carrier is not responsible for content.

Page 8: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Changing Communications Paradigms

Regulatory Paradigms (cont’d) Internet, bulletin board systems, commercial online

services, and the WWW: Not exactly print media. Not exactly broadcast media. Not exactly common carrier.

Q: Who controls the distribution of news, information, and opinion at the online service you use? at the Web sites you frequent?

Page 9: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Changing Communications Paradigms

The First Amendment Protects Citizens From Government

Prohibits restriction of speech, press, peaceful assembly, and religion.

Subsequent Interpretations Address: Offensive and/or controversial speech and ideas, Spoken and written words, Pictures, art, and other forms of expression and opinion, and Commercial speech (e.g. advertising).

Q: Should all speech be constitutionally protected?

Page 10: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Speech Might Include:

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Speech Might Include: Political or religious speech. Pornography. Sexual or racial slurs. Nazi materials. Libelous statements. Abortion information. Alcohol ads.

Q: Identify other forms of speech found in cyberspace that some consider offensive.

Page 12: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Miller v. California (1973)

Page 13: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Miller v. California (1973) Material is considered obscene if all three parts are met:

1. It depicts sexual (or excretory) acts whose depiction is specifically prohibited by state law, and

2. It depicts these acts in a patently offensive manner, appealing to the prurient interest as judged by a reasonable person using community standards, and

3. It has no serious literary, artistic, social, political, or scientific value.

Q: Historically, how have local “community standards” affected censorship of speech in cyberspace?

Page 14: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Material Inappropriate for Children Technology Changes the Context

On the Web, children have access to the same ‘adult’ text, images, videos, etc. as adults.

Online proprietors don’t know the customer is not an adult.

Protecting ChildrenRegardless of the medium:

• It is illegal to create, possess or distribute child pornography.

• It is illegal to lure children into sexual activity.

Q: How should children be protected from access in cyberspace to adult material?

Page 15: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws Communications Decency Act (CDA, 1996)

Page 16: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws Communications Decency Act (CDA, 1996)

Publicity and public pressure lead Congress to pass this act. Anyone who made available to anyone under 18 any

communication that is obscene or indecent would be subject to a $100,000 fine and two years in prison.

In 1997, the CDA was ruled unconstitutional because it was too vague and too broad in protecting children online and because less restrictive means are available.

Q: Should content on the Internet have as much First Amendment protection as printed material?

Page 17: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws (cont’d) Child Online Protection Act (COPA, 1998)

Page 18: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws (cont’d) Child Online Protection Act (COPA, 1998)

Commercial Web sites that make available to minors materials “harmful to minors”, as judged by community standards would be subject to a $50,000 fine and six months in jail.

In 2000 and 2003, COPA was ruled unconstitutional by a federal court.

Q: How are children protected from “harmful” material outside of Cyberspace?

Page 19: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws (cont’d) Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA)

Page 20: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship Laws (cont’d) Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA)

Any school or library receiving federal Internet funds must install filtering software on all Internet terminals.

Filters must block sites containing child pornography, obscene material, and any material deemed “harmful to minors.”

A federal appeals court ruled a major part of CIPA unconstitutional in 2002 but the Supreme Court upheld the law in 2003.

Q: How does CIPA affect adults accessing online material at a public library that uses filtering software?

Page 21: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Limiting Internet Access in Libraries and Schools Filtering Software

Benefit: prevent access to inappropriate material on the Internet by screening words or phrases, blocking sites according to rating system, or disallowing access to specific sites in a list.

Problems: can be ineffective—kids get around the filters; the words, phrases, rating systems, etc. are subjective; “banned” keywords can be overly restrictive for adult users and for legitimate use by minors.

Q: What has been your experience with filtering software?

Page 22: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Challenging Old Regulatory Paradigms and Special Interests License required:

To practice law. To publish traditional newsletters about commodities and futures

investing (prior to 2000). No license required:

To create downloadable, self-help legal software. To publish newsletters about, developing software for, and

operating Web sites concerning commodities and futures investing (since 2000).

Q: Is online advertising of wine free speech or disregard for the regulatory rights of state governments?

Page 23: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Offensive Speech and Censorship in Cyberspace

Censorship On the Global Net Global Impact

Avoiding censorship: the global nature of the Net allows restrictions (or barriers) in one country to be circumvented by using networks in other, less restrictive countries.

Creating censorship: the global nature of the Net makes it easier for one nation to impose restrictive standards on others.

Q: Why are online gambling sites established offshore?

Page 24: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Anonymity

Common Sense and the Internet Early publications by some of our Founding Fathers were

published under pseudonyms. Today, there are publications on the Net that are posted

anonymously.

Q: What are the drawbacks of anonymous Web postings?

Page 25: CS 4001Mary Jean Harrold1 Class 23 Freedom of speech in cyberspace Assign Assignment 8—due 11/13 Term paper—due 11/20

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Anonymity

Is Anonymity Protected? Conflicts between political freedom of speech and

campaign regulations: Anonymity protects against retaliation and embarrassment. Anonymity violates rules established by the Federal

Elections Commission (FEC)

Q: Should anonymous political speech on the Web be regulated?

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Anonymity

Anonymity vs. Community Supporters of anonymity:

Say it is necessary to protect privacy and free speech.

Opponents of anonymity: Believe it is anti-social and allows criminals to hide from law

enforcement.

Q: How is the practice of anonymity online similar/dissimilar to strong encryption?

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Spam

What Is the Problem? Unsolicited, mass e-mail:

is cheap to senders but may impose costs on the recipient’s time and/or the recipient’s online account.

may contain objectionable content (political, commercial ads, solicitations for funds, pornography, etc.).

may contain a disguised return address. may pass through filters. invades privacy. creates a financial and managerial burden on ISPs.

Q: How do you handle spam?

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Spam

Cases and Free Speech Issues AOL v. Cyber Promotions

AOL and other service providers have successfully sued spammers because of the cost burden imposed.

Disgruntled Intel Employee Initially, a court ruled that non-commercial spam to Intel

employees at their Intel e-mail accounts was a form of trespass.

The CA Supreme Court ruled that it was not.

Q: Is the forwarding of pre-written observations or opinions from human-rights groups spam or expressions of free speech? (Or both?)

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Spam

Solutions Technology: filters that screen out spam. Market Pressure: services that list spammers. Business Policy: at the discretion of the recipient, all e-

mail would be charged a microfee. Law: create restrictions that are consistent with the First

Amendment. Vigilantism: punish spammers by hacking into their phone

or computer systems.

Q: Which solution above, or others, do you support?

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Ensuring Valuable and Diverse Content

Points to Consider: Is there a balance between commercial and educational

information on the Web? Should diverse content on the Web be subsidized with taxes? Should valuable content on the Web be regulated? Do we need to ensure the existence of sites containing civic

information? Are more sites that promote the arts and culture needed?

Q: How do we ensure valuable and diverse content in traditional forms of media?