The Author describes how libraries electronically bar access to objectionable Internet sites and the legal trouble encountered with this policy by free-speech advocates. The ALA, the American Civil Liberties Union, and other free-speech advocates have strongly resisted having libraries play the role of lnternet censor. But parents and patrons who use the libraries on a regular basis have pressured libraries in a growing number of communities to devise some kind of barrier to viewing sexually explicit material from the Internet on library PCs
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
Where do we stand as educators on the debate involving Internet filtering vs. unrestricted access? T...
The Author describes how libraries electronically bar access to objectionable Internet sites and the...
The use of filters to block those Internet sites that some public libraries and/or communities deem ...
Traditionally, whenever the government has sought to regulate speech, analysis of its action focused...
Drawing on and expanding previous graduate course research, this paper investigated and analyzed pub...
Public libraries in the United States are under a great deal of pressure from community groups and o...
The Author discusses the public pressure on libraries to find acceptable solutions that balance inte...
Brief article about the opposition of librarians to the Children\u27s Internet Protection Act (CIPA...
Brief article about the opposition of librarians to the Children\u27s Internet Protection Act (CIPA...
With the recent passage of the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA), and its constitutionality ...
This Note will examine the constitutional issues raised by installing Internet filtering software in...
The only federal court (at the time of this writing) to consider the question ruled unconstitutional...
Will Internet filters deliver us from evil or are they a necessary evil? Are Christian colleges usin...
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
Where do we stand as educators on the debate involving Internet filtering vs. unrestricted access? T...
The Author describes how libraries electronically bar access to objectionable Internet sites and the...
The use of filters to block those Internet sites that some public libraries and/or communities deem ...
Traditionally, whenever the government has sought to regulate speech, analysis of its action focused...
Drawing on and expanding previous graduate course research, this paper investigated and analyzed pub...
Public libraries in the United States are under a great deal of pressure from community groups and o...
The Author discusses the public pressure on libraries to find acceptable solutions that balance inte...
Brief article about the opposition of librarians to the Children\u27s Internet Protection Act (CIPA...
Brief article about the opposition of librarians to the Children\u27s Internet Protection Act (CIPA...
With the recent passage of the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA), and its constitutionality ...
This Note will examine the constitutional issues raised by installing Internet filtering software in...
The only federal court (at the time of this writing) to consider the question ruled unconstitutional...
Will Internet filters deliver us from evil or are they a necessary evil? Are Christian colleges usin...
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
The focus of this work is to study whether public libraries should offer their patrons unlimited ac...
Where do we stand as educators on the debate involving Internet filtering vs. unrestricted access? T...