Saturday, August 3, 2019
Censorship Of The Internet And The Tyranny Of Our Government :: essays research papers fc
 Censorship of the Internet and the Tyranny of Our Government           "To curtail free expression strikes twice at intellectual freedom, for  whoever deprives another of the right to state unpopular views also deprives  others of the right to listen to those views," said Oliver Wendell Holmes,  Jr(Censorship and the U.S. Government 1). I completely agree with Mr. Holmes,  and when the question of censoring the Internet arises, I cringe. Governing the  Internet dominates many debates, censorship leading the fight. The Internet is  the largest and most accessible form of mass media available today. It allows  anyone with a few simple tools to consume, and produce, information and ideas to  hundreds of people at a practically non-existent cost. Numerous factors  indicate censorship of this force is not possible, and not the government's  place. It should be left up to the users to decide what is broadcast. Most  importantly, censorship of the Internet impairs the expression of ideas and  infringes against the First Amendment of the Constitution.       First of all, censoring the Internet as a whole is not possible, so why  even try? Cyberspace is the most decentralized form of communication today  making policing the Internet a virtually futile task. Unlike television or  radio, the Internet consists of thousands of individual computers and networks,  with thousands of speakers, information providers and information users, and no  centralized distribution point (ACLU vs. Reno Brief 1). No guards watch to see  who goes where and if that place is appropriate. The Internet has grown to be a  global network. Just because one country deems something inappropriate does not  mean that another will comply with the decision and follow the ruling. If  posting pictures of bestiality was banned in China, for example, someone in  Switzerland could post those pictures and the Chinese would have access to every  single bit of data. Another example, this being completely factual, occurred in  Ontario concerning the Karla Homolka/Paul Bernado trial. The courts decided  that in order not to influence the jurors outside of the courtroom that a gag  order would be put on media coverage of the trial. Conventional media complied,  but an Internet site appeared. This was in turn shut down by the police, but  still another appeared (Censorship and the Internet 1). There exists today no  way of effectively tracking and determining from where a bulletin was posted,  especially with the automatic dialing and encryption technology available. Thus  even trying to censor the Internet as a whole would be only an exercise in  futility.       Although pornography and potentially destructive material exist on the  Internet, not all potentially offensive material shows violent sex acts with    					    
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