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Cyber rights : defending free speech in the digital age / Mike Godwin.

By: Godwin, Mike, 1956-.
Contributor(s): IEEE Xplore (Online Service) [distributor.] | MIT Press [publisher.] | NetLibrary, Inc.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Cambridge, Massachusetts : MIT Press, c2003Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [2003]Edition: Rev. and updated ed.Description: 1 PDF (xxiii, 402 pages).Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780262286978.Subject(s): Freedom of speech -- United States | Internet -- Law and legislation -- United StatesGenre/Form: Electronic books.DDC classification: 342.73/0853 Online resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.
Contents:
A new frontier for free speech and society -- Where the "virtual" meets the "real" : free speech, community, and ethics on the Net -- The Net backlash : fear of freedom -- Libel on the Net -- When words hurt : two hard cases about online speech -- Privacy versus society? -- The battle over copyright on the Net (and other intellectual property encounters) -- A bad spin and a cyberporn primer -- Fighting a cyberporn panic -- Courting the future : the Communications Decency Act of 1996 -- Free speech and communities : what the lawyers know.
Summary: Lawyer and writer Mike Godwin has been at the forefront of the struggle to preserve freedom of speech on the Internet. In Cyber Rights he recounts the major cases and issues in which he was involved and offers his views on free speech and other constitutional rights in the digital age. Godwin shows how the law and the Constitution apply, or should apply, in cyberspace and defends the Net against those who would damage it for their own purposes.Godwin details events and phenomena that have shaped our understanding of rights in cyberspace--including early antihacker fears that colored law enforcement activities in the early 1990s, the struggle between the Church of Scientology and its critics on the Net, disputes about protecting copyrighted works on the Net, and what he calls "the great cyberporn panic." That panic, he shows, laid bare the plans of those hoping to use our children in an effort to impose a new censorship regime on what otherwise could be the most liberating communications medium the world has seen. Most important, Godwin shows how anyone--not just lawyers, journalists, policy makers, and the rich and well connected--can use the Net to hold media and political institutions accountable and to ensure that the truth is known.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. [369]-385) and index.

A new frontier for free speech and society -- Where the "virtual" meets the "real" : free speech, community, and ethics on the Net -- The Net backlash : fear of freedom -- Libel on the Net -- When words hurt : two hard cases about online speech -- Privacy versus society? -- The battle over copyright on the Net (and other intellectual property encounters) -- A bad spin and a cyberporn primer -- Fighting a cyberporn panic -- Courting the future : the Communications Decency Act of 1996 -- Free speech and communities : what the lawyers know.

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Lawyer and writer Mike Godwin has been at the forefront of the struggle to preserve freedom of speech on the Internet. In Cyber Rights he recounts the major cases and issues in which he was involved and offers his views on free speech and other constitutional rights in the digital age. Godwin shows how the law and the Constitution apply, or should apply, in cyberspace and defends the Net against those who would damage it for their own purposes.Godwin details events and phenomena that have shaped our understanding of rights in cyberspace--including early antihacker fears that colored law enforcement activities in the early 1990s, the struggle between the Church of Scientology and its critics on the Net, disputes about protecting copyrighted works on the Net, and what he calls "the great cyberporn panic." That panic, he shows, laid bare the plans of those hoping to use our children in an effort to impose a new censorship regime on what otherwise could be the most liberating communications medium the world has seen. Most important, Godwin shows how anyone--not just lawyers, journalists, policy makers, and the rich and well connected--can use the Net to hold media and political institutions accountable and to ensure that the truth is known.

Also available in print.

Mode of access: World Wide Web

Description based on PDF viewed 12/23/2015.

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