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100 Days: Supreme Court Kills Final Attempt To Revive Online Content Law

MARK SHERMAN   01/21/09 02:51 PM ET   AP

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WASHINGTON — A federal law intended to restrict children's access to Internet pornography died quietly Wednesday at the Supreme Court, more than 10 years after Congress overwhelmingly approved it.

The Child Online Protection Act would have barred Web sites from making harmful content available to minors over the Internet. The law had been embroiled in challenges to its constitutionality since it passed in 1998 and never took effect.

Also Wednesday, the court ruled unanimously in favor of a Massachusetts schoolgirl and her parents in their effort to sue a local school district under both a 1972 law against sex discrimination in education and a post-Civil War civil rights law.

Federal courts had said that the newer law, Title IX, barring sex discrimination at schools that receive federal money, was the only avenue open to the parents.

The high court disagreed, although several justices commented when they heard arguments in December that the family probably would lose their lawsuit, even if they won the right to pursue it.

Their daughter was a 5-year-old kindergarten student when she told them said she was subjected to repeated harassment by a third-grade boy on their school bus.

The Internet blocking law did not make it as far as a high court hearing. The justices rejected the government's final attempt to revive the law, turning away the appeal without comment.

The American Civil Liberties Union led the challenge to the law on behalf of writers, artists and health educators. "For over a decade the government has been trying to thwart freedom of speech on the Internet, and for years the courts have been finding the attempts unconstitutional," said Chris Hansen, the ACLU's lead attorney on the case. "It is not the role of the government to decide what people can see and do on the Internet. Those are personal decisions that should be made by individuals and their families."

A federal appeals court in Philadelphia earlier ruled that the law would violate the First Amendment, saying filtering technologies and other parental control tools are a less restrictive way to protect children from inappropriate content online.

The act was passed the year after the Supreme Court ruled that another law intended to protect children from explicit material online _ the Communications Decency Act _ was unconstitutional.

The Bush administration had fought hard to have the law take effect.

In 2006, the Justice Department subpoenaed internal files from dozens of Internet service providers and other technology firms, including AT&T Inc., Comcast Corp., Cox Communications Inc., EarthLink Inc., Symantec Corp. and Verizon Communications Inc. as part of its defense of the law.

But senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr. ruled in 2007 that software filters work much better than the law would. Reed also said the law failed to address threats that have emerged since it was written _ including online predators on social-networking sites _ because it targets only commercial Web publishers.

The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia upheld Reed's ruling.

Critics also said that pornographers and others could simply base their operations offshore, beyond the reach of U.S. authorities.

In an earlier test of the law, the Supreme Court in 2004 upheld an order blocking its enforcement on the grounds that the law probably was unconstitutional. The five justices who made that ruling remain on the court.

Still, it was unusual for the court to kill a major federal law that had an administration's backing, without a hearing.

The case is Mukasey v. ACLU. 08-565.

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WASHINGTON — A federal law intended to restrict children's access to Internet pornography died quietly Wednesday at the Supreme Court, more than 10 years after Congress overwhelmingly approved i...
WASHINGTON — A federal law intended to restrict children's access to Internet pornography died quietly Wednesday at the Supreme Court, more than 10 years after Congress overwhelmingly approved i...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ozwald888
This photo is a VERY early shot of me....
06:13 PM on 01/21/2009
Welcome back to the United States of America.

You may remember this place.....

The USA is once again a place where all citizens have the right to freedom of speech and of expression without fear of government restriction nor it's intervention.

We missed this incredible place for EIGHT LONG YEARS. They were eight years of intense fear mongering, wars, restrictions on personal freedoms but no restrictions were placed on corporations. These corporation have been able to make unreasonable profits on the war, they were able to gouge the public with $5.00 per gallon gas, and they even were allowed to sink our economy.

This decision shows us all that even though our last president used our glorious constitution in much the same way a cat uses a litter box, our rights are now being protected, some will even be returned.

So, welcome back. Welcome back to the USA!!
11:19 AM on 01/22/2009
This has nothing to do with Obama. He just took over!!!!!!!!!!!

This was done by an INDEPENDENT judiciary. I have no clue why it's listed on the "100 days" section! This whole thing has been in the courts for about 10 years, again nothing to do with Obama!
01:04 PM on 01/21/2009
Principals must stand & common sense MUST be used by all.
Educate your Children to the perils of the world. Educate them on how to make healthy choices.
Yes we all agree that people push the limits on decency everywhere. We have the choice of turning it off & tuning it out. Principals are what we have...
07:00 PM on 01/21/2009
I concur!
11:40 AM on 01/21/2009
Conservative bench on porn side ? :P
01:05 PM on 01/21/2009
I totally get the irony. But in the end this decision protects correct principals...
02:49 PM on 01/21/2009
On the side of the 1st Amendment; as the Court has ruled consistently for 50 years
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
ChiGuy
Just an earthbound misfit, I
11:36 AM on 01/21/2009
This won't be the last we hear from the thought police wackos
But with Obama in office it will be virtually impossible to get any kind of legislation remotely resembling this passed. Ever.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Okieborn
Equal Rights For All !
12:30 PM on 01/21/2009
Yeah !!!
Bush Is Great Obama is Not !!
"WRONG" !!!!
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Horus45
Liberal Activist, anti-Fascist
12:35 PM on 01/21/2009
Amen!