AlterNet: E-mail this story
To:

Use commas to separate up to five addresses
From:

Your e-mail address
Optional Message:

E-mail addresses are not recorded.   Privacy Policy »
 

Your recipient will receive an e-mail like this:

This has been forwarded to you from http://www.alternet.org by Your Address.

Your Message

-------------------------------------
Internet Decency and the First Amendment
http://www.alternet.org/story/7429/

Now that a federal appeals court has blocked the part of the Telecommunications Act concerned with indecent material on the Internet, First Amendment advocates can all breathe a sigh of relief. Or can we? The parts of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 that remain are far more damaging to the First Amendment than the sub-section known as the Communications Decency Act (CDA). Taken as a whole, the Telecommunications Act is a kind of "free trade" agreement for the corporate media. So, before we celebrate too wildly the federal appeals court's acceptance of an anti-censorship argument to strike down the CDA, we better ask ourselves: have we won the battle only to inadvertently contribute to losing the war?
-------------------------------------