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community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
How can it work? There is a huge difference between community standards in different communities. Does this law restrict itself to only apply the standards of the community where the site is hosted? If not, justice Stevens argument is exactly right - a web site that is fully within the community standards
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
For starters, you need to look at how similar cases have been handled, where the distributed content was not specific to a particular community. From the current decision, in re a decision about a national mailing (Hamling):
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
Some speech regarding the "swinger" lifestyle would be seen as immoral porn by some communities and as protected speech by others. Few communities would claim that "swinging" education belongs in a sex ed curriculum.
I've sent a more detailed sketch to the ACLU...
-matt
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
I included more detail for the ACLU... maybe they'll see something useful to extract from the example. Maybe not.
-matt
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
> communities is not so great with respect to the
> narrow category of speech covered by COPA as to,
> alone, render the statute substantially overbroad
OK, so OC is saying that variation is not so great. The swinger example is intended to be a possible instance where variation might be greater.
> I agree, given respondents' failure to provide
> examples of materials that lack literary, artistic,
> political, and scientific value for minors,
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
A swinging web site could not, even if it were found to appeal to prurient interest and found to have no serious $foo value, be found to violate this law unless it had graphic depiction of sexual acts. I admit I don't look at swinging web sites very often, but the point here is that the fact that it is swinging has nothing to do with it. The lifestyle is not in question here, it is whether or not sexual acts are graphically depicted, in a patently offensive manner. If a swinging web site -- or any web site -- wants to put up such material, it would just need to put it in a section that has some barrier to children. This would also hold true for a web site catering to singles that had similar content.
Maybe you are trying to make the argument that some people would find the swinging web site's depiction of sexual acts to be more patently offensive than a singles' web site's similar depictions by virtue of the swinging nature. I frankly find that unrealistic; few people are going to say, "that picture of a blowjob would be OK if it weren't swingers doing it." I just don't see that happening.
Frankly, most of this will merely hinge on whether or not the material is pornographic, and while "pornographic" is not a legal term, you know it when you see it, and that's always been, when you get down to it, what most juries in Miller cases have decided on.
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Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)
> people would find the swinging web site's depiction
> of sexual acts to be more patently offensive than a
> singles' web site's similar depictions by virtue of
> the swinging nature
well, I'm trying to provide an interesting case... not really to make an argument. However, part of *why* I think it is an interesting case is related to your comment above. You say "more patently offensive" above, while I think that I mean to say that some membe
Re:community standard do vary too much (Score:1)