Words are dangerous. That is why governments sometimes want to suppress speech. The law of free speech reflects a settled decision that, at the time that law was adopted, the dangers were worth tolerating. But people keep dreaming up nasty new things to do with speech. Recently, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and other terrorist organizations have employed a small army of Iagos on the internet to recruit new instruments of destruction. Some of what they have posted is protected speech under present First Amendment law. In response, scholars have suggested that there should be some new exception to the law of free speech. Thus far, no workable exception has been suggested
Constitutional rules of protection cannot be based on purely formal distinctions among modes of utte...
In a recent appearance before the U.S. Senate, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher ...
ISIS\u27s use of social media presents a new challenge for counterterror efforts. The organization a...
The presence of terrorist speech on the internet tests the limits of the First Amendment. Widely ava...
Freedom of expression, as a philosophical and legal problem, has re-emerged in recent debates about ...
Traditional free speech doctrine is inadequate to account for modern terrorist speech. Unprotected t...
If protecting freedom of speech is one of mankind\u27s noblest pursuits, then restricting it is the ...
The Internet is a limitless platform for information and data sharing. It is, in addition, however, ...
Speech is meant to be heard, and social media allows for exaggeration of that fact by providing a po...
Freedom of speech is a civil liberty at the core of democracy but when it comes down to exercising t...
In times of terror and tension, civil liberties are at their greatest peril. Nowadays, no individual...
The crucial point is this: Both liberal, democratic states, and non-state terrorist organizations ne...
The United States government has long wrestled with the link between speech and violence, periodical...
Real or not, we perceive the convergence of several dangers-the physical threat of terrorism, both f...
A wave of attempted domestic terrorism attacks in 2009 and 2010 has sharpened attention to the threa...
Constitutional rules of protection cannot be based on purely formal distinctions among modes of utte...
In a recent appearance before the U.S. Senate, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher ...
ISIS\u27s use of social media presents a new challenge for counterterror efforts. The organization a...
The presence of terrorist speech on the internet tests the limits of the First Amendment. Widely ava...
Freedom of expression, as a philosophical and legal problem, has re-emerged in recent debates about ...
Traditional free speech doctrine is inadequate to account for modern terrorist speech. Unprotected t...
If protecting freedom of speech is one of mankind\u27s noblest pursuits, then restricting it is the ...
The Internet is a limitless platform for information and data sharing. It is, in addition, however, ...
Speech is meant to be heard, and social media allows for exaggeration of that fact by providing a po...
Freedom of speech is a civil liberty at the core of democracy but when it comes down to exercising t...
In times of terror and tension, civil liberties are at their greatest peril. Nowadays, no individual...
The crucial point is this: Both liberal, democratic states, and non-state terrorist organizations ne...
The United States government has long wrestled with the link between speech and violence, periodical...
Real or not, we perceive the convergence of several dangers-the physical threat of terrorism, both f...
A wave of attempted domestic terrorism attacks in 2009 and 2010 has sharpened attention to the threa...
Constitutional rules of protection cannot be based on purely formal distinctions among modes of utte...
In a recent appearance before the U.S. Senate, Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher ...
ISIS\u27s use of social media presents a new challenge for counterterror efforts. The organization a...