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Federal Judge Strikes Down COPA
March 22, 2007
On Thursday, March 22, a federal judge in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia
struck down the Child Online Protection Act (COPA), legislation that would make
it a crime for any commercial website to distribute to a minor material that
is "harmful to minors." The judge's ruling said that parents can
protect their children through software filters and other less restrictive means that do not limit the free speech rights of others.
COPA, which was signed into law in 1998, has never been enforced because it
was immediately challenged in the courts. Opponents of COPA, including the American
Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression and the American Civil Liberties
Union, have argued that the law violates the free expression rights of adults.
"The fight against the Child Online Protection Act is nine years old,
but ABFFE and the other plaintiffs remain undefeated," said Chris Finan,
president of ABFFE. Noting that the government is expected to appeal the ruling,
he added, "When the case reaches the Supreme Court for the third time,
the record will show an unbroken string of lower court decisions declaring it
unconstitutional. We are confident that when the Supreme Court issues its final
decision, it will join in rejecting this latest effort to censor the Internet."
ABFFE, ACLU, and other free expression groups contend that since minors can
access any material that is posted on the Web, it means that an online bookstore
could be prosecuted for merely displaying a book excerpt or picture of a book
jacket that could be judged "harmful to minors." Under COPA, harmfulness
is to be weighed by "community standards," and, therefore, a bookstore
would have to assume that it would be judged by the standards of the most conservative
community in the country. (Read
more about COPA.)
Topics: News - Bookselling, Free Expression,
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