This note was written in response to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals\u27 2009 decision in United States v. Kilbride. The Court\u27s opinion called for the application of a national obscenity standard when evaluating speech transmitted online or through e-mail. This note seeks to address some of the practical issues raised by a national standard, including identifying the relevant national community, the need for empirical research on community standards for obscenity, implications for free speech under a national standard and mechanisms to ensure consistent application of a national standard in a diverse country
The Internet, or ARPAnet, was originally developed by the U.S. Defense Department to support militar...
Interest in obscenity laws, in the reason and purpose for their being, their efficacy in achieving t...
Part I of this Note will canvas popular opinions and perceptions about First Amendment rights on the...
This note was written in response to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals\u27 2009 decision in United ...
This note concurs with the decision reached by the Third Circuit. The federal obscenity law, which i...
This timely Article examines the ramifications of the Ninth Circuit’s groundbreaking adoption of a n...
This note examines tensions between the community standards doctrine in First Amendment obscenity la...
This article addresses one of the greatest challenges to intel-lectual freedom as the new millennium...
(Excerpt) This Note argues for an objective approach to international comparative law using the Hofs...
Obscenity is one of the narrow categories of speech that has historically been divested of First Ame...
This comment explores the constitutionality of federal regulations as applied to Internet content an...
This paper covers Internet communication and the ability of consenting adults to freely and openly e...
“In its latest attempt to define a workable standard for obscenity rulings, the United States Suprem...
Challengers of the Child Online Protection Act, a recently enacted federal law prohibiting the posti...
Using an airing of the Victoria Secret fashion show as an example, the author explores the definitio...
The Internet, or ARPAnet, was originally developed by the U.S. Defense Department to support militar...
Interest in obscenity laws, in the reason and purpose for their being, their efficacy in achieving t...
Part I of this Note will canvas popular opinions and perceptions about First Amendment rights on the...
This note was written in response to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals\u27 2009 decision in United ...
This note concurs with the decision reached by the Third Circuit. The federal obscenity law, which i...
This timely Article examines the ramifications of the Ninth Circuit’s groundbreaking adoption of a n...
This note examines tensions between the community standards doctrine in First Amendment obscenity la...
This article addresses one of the greatest challenges to intel-lectual freedom as the new millennium...
(Excerpt) This Note argues for an objective approach to international comparative law using the Hofs...
Obscenity is one of the narrow categories of speech that has historically been divested of First Ame...
This comment explores the constitutionality of federal regulations as applied to Internet content an...
This paper covers Internet communication and the ability of consenting adults to freely and openly e...
“In its latest attempt to define a workable standard for obscenity rulings, the United States Suprem...
Challengers of the Child Online Protection Act, a recently enacted federal law prohibiting the posti...
Using an airing of the Victoria Secret fashion show as an example, the author explores the definitio...
The Internet, or ARPAnet, was originally developed by the U.S. Defense Department to support militar...
Interest in obscenity laws, in the reason and purpose for their being, their efficacy in achieving t...
Part I of this Note will canvas popular opinions and perceptions about First Amendment rights on the...