Originally posted by DotComCowboy
The bottom line is that the net is NOT safe for kids without adult supervision. Parents ARE responsible, and if it is not convenient for them to supervise, it is THEIR fault.
This legislation is probably unconstitutional.
You probably dont have kids according to that statement
And obscene acts and language aren't protected by the Constitution.
>Obscenity Convictions Constitutional In 1957, in Roth vs. United States, the Court determined that prosecution for possession or distribution of obscene material is lawful, and that obscene speech is not protected under the Constitution. Sam Roth, a publisher and distributor of magazines and books, had been indicted in 1954 for using the mail to advertise and distribute material with sexual content, notably Aubrey Beardsley's Venus and Tannhäuser. His conviction was upheld.
The "Three-Pronged Test" for Obscenity Established In 1973, in the most important case on freedom of expression, Miller vs. California, the Court established the "three-pronged test" for obscenity, which still applies today. The case concerned bookseller Marvin Miller's conviction under California obscenity laws for distributing illustrated books of a sexual nature.
In Miller, the Court's decision stated that obscene material is not protected by the First Amendment (a reaffirmation of Roth) and that such speech may be regulated by the state under certain circumstances. In order to meet the definition of obscene material articulated in this case, three conditions must be met:
whether the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest
whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law
whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value