How much can one say with confidence about what constitutes “the freedom of speech” that Congress shall not abridge? In this Article, I address that question in the context of the transmission of speech—specifically, the regulation of Internet access known as net neutrality. This question has implications both for the future of economic regulation, as more and more activity involves the transmission of bits, and for First Amendment interpretation. As for the latter, the question is what a lawyer or judge can conclude without having to choose among competing conceptions of speech. How far can a basic legal toolkit go? Using that toolkit, I find that bare transmission is not speech under the First Amendment, and that most forms of manipulatio...
The explosive growth in the number of people communicating from computers around the world via the I...
To determine whether punishing the disclosure of illegally obtained information violates the First A...
To what extent does the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment bar the adoption of “open access” ...
How much can one say with confidence about what constitutes “the freedom of speech” that Congress sh...
How much can one say with confidence about what constitutes the freedom of speech that Congress sh...
I. Introduction II. Communications Regulation and Net Neutrality ... A. Regulation of Plain Old Tele...
Scholarship on the network neutrality debate has focused primarily on economic and technological arg...
First Amendment analysis has historically depended on whether a party is a speaker, an editor, or a ...
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recently proposed an Internet nondiscrimination rule: S...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
What the First Amendment status of electronic information should be is a fundamental question which ...
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the expression of diverse viewpoints in virtua...
In an increasingly globalized marketplace of ideas, First Amendment law and theory must recognize th...
This Article examines the degree to which open Internet access raises free speech concerns for the c...
One of the central questions in free speech jurisprudence is what activities the First Amendment enc...
The explosive growth in the number of people communicating from computers around the world via the I...
To determine whether punishing the disclosure of illegally obtained information violates the First A...
To what extent does the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment bar the adoption of “open access” ...
How much can one say with confidence about what constitutes “the freedom of speech” that Congress sh...
How much can one say with confidence about what constitutes the freedom of speech that Congress sh...
I. Introduction II. Communications Regulation and Net Neutrality ... A. Regulation of Plain Old Tele...
Scholarship on the network neutrality debate has focused primarily on economic and technological arg...
First Amendment analysis has historically depended on whether a party is a speaker, an editor, or a ...
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) recently proposed an Internet nondiscrimination rule: S...
In recent years, a large number of disputes have arisen in which parties invoke the First Amendment,...
What the First Amendment status of electronic information should be is a fundamental question which ...
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the expression of diverse viewpoints in virtua...
In an increasingly globalized marketplace of ideas, First Amendment law and theory must recognize th...
This Article examines the degree to which open Internet access raises free speech concerns for the c...
One of the central questions in free speech jurisprudence is what activities the First Amendment enc...
The explosive growth in the number of people communicating from computers around the world via the I...
To determine whether punishing the disclosure of illegally obtained information violates the First A...
To what extent does the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment bar the adoption of “open access” ...