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INTERNETFREEEXPRESSIONALLIANCE| IFEAMission | Members| News| Resources|The Internet is a powerful and positiveforum for free expression. It is the place where "any person canbecome a town crier with a voice that resonates farther than itcould from any soapbox," as the U.S. Supreme Court recentlyobserved. Internet users, online publishers, library and academicgroups and free speech and journalistic organizations share acommon interest in opposing the adoption of techniques andstandards that could limit the vibrance and openness of theInternet as a communications medium. Indeed, content "filtering"techniques already have been implemented in ways inconsistent withfree speech principles, impeding the ability of Internet users topublish and receive constitutionally protected expression.The Latest NewsUpdated Report Published on "Filters and Freedom." TheElectronic Privacy Information Center has published Filtersand Freedom 2.0: Free Speech Perspectives on Internet ContentControls. The collection contains several articles by membersof the Internet Free Expression Alliance. (Available for sale.)(May 25, 2001)Supreme Court to Review Internet Free Speech Case. TheU.S. SupremeCourt has agreed to hear (PDF)the government's appeal of a federal appeals court decisionfinding the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) to beunconstitutional. Fee speech groups had filed a petition(PDF)opposing the review. For more background, visit the EPIC'sCOPA Litigation Page. (May 23, 2001) Lawsuit Challenges Internet Filtering Mandate. In a complaint filed in federal court in Philadelphia on March 20, the American Civil Liberties Union and other groups are challenging the Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA). The new law mandates that all public schools and libraries that receive federal E-rate funds install Internet filtering technology on their computers. (March 20, 2001) Study Finds Filters Don't Work as Advertised. As schools and libraries begin confronting the federally-mandated filtering requirements contained in the Children's Internet Protection Act, a new study by Consumer Reports finds that filtering products have significant flaws. The report notes that "filters block harmless sites merely because their software does not consider the context in which a word or phrase is used. Far more troubling is when a filter appears to block legitimate sites based on moral or political value judgments." (February 15, 2001) Groups Announce Opposition to Filtering Mandate. A network of concerned organizations (including many IFEA members) and prominent individuals has released a joint statement opposing legislative requirements for school and library Internet blocking technologies. The statement came in response to legislation, signed into law as part of an omnibus appropriations bill on December 21, 2000, which requires all public schools and libraries participating in certain federal programs to install Internet blocking technologies (see below). (January 23, 2001). Congress M
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