Since the
Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) was implemented on July 1, 2004, schools and libraries that opt to
accept federal funding for internet access have had to march to the tune of the
United States government. CIPA requires as a
condition of receiving such funding that schools and libraries install "internet
filtering software." These software programs, like Net Nanny, are designed
to filter websites and to block content that is deemed obscene or harmful to
children, such as child pornography or sexually explicit material.
CIPA,
signed into law in 2000, requires that schools "adopt a policy to monitor
online activities of minors," and that schools and libraries address
issues including "access by minors to inappropriate matter on the Internet"and "restricting minors' access to materials harmful to them."
The
problem with internet filtering systems is that they are not infallible. They
operate by searching for particular words, phrases and criteria and blocking
any website that meets their filtering criteria. Quite often, the filter blocks
websites that are harmless or even educational. For example, there are a number
of widely used internet filtering programs that routinely block human rights
organizations' sites, health information sites and even the official website of
the classic rock band, The Rolling Stones.
Prior to
the enactment of CIPA, a 1998 Consumer Reports magazine article on internet
filtering software noted 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."
In 2001, a
number of organizations, among them the American Library Association (ALA), the
American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Privacy Information
Center (EPIC), filed a federal lawsuit challenging CIPA on numerous grounds,
including charges that it requires libraries to violate the First Amendment
Constitutional right to freedom of speech.
The First
Amendment to the Constitution provides as follows: "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of
the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress
of grievances."
Groups
like the ACLU, the EPIC and the ALA charge
that the Children's Internet Protection Act, regardless of its noble
objectives, has the unwanted side effect of "abridging the freedom of
speech" because it blocks websites that are not offensive or
harmful to children and that are, in some cases, educational and informative.
Even the Congressional
committee assigned to evaluate the proposed CIPA legislation before it was
signed into law rejected it, citing the possibility that, "protected,
harmless, or innocent speech would be accidentally or inappropriately
blocked." The EPIC has gone even further, questioning whether internet filtering
software not only abridges freedom of speech, but facilitates government
censorship.
In 2002,
the United States Third Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that CIPA was
unconstitutional and enjoined enforcement of the law, holding that: "[W]e
are constrained to conclude that the library plaintiffs must prevail in their
contention that CIPA requires them to violate the First Amendment rights of
their patrons, and accordingly is facially invalid."
The
following year, however, in U.S. v. American Library Association, the Supreme
Court overturned the lower court ruling and upheld CIPA as constitutional. The
Supreme Court based its ruling on the fact that internet filters can easily be
turned on and off, and noted that adult library patrons should be allowed to
ask the librarian to disable the filter, without giving any reason for the
request.
The ALA has expressed disappointment with what they hold is
a narrow decision in U.S. v. American Library Association. In the wake
of the Supreme Court's decision, the ALA
has urged individual libraries accepting federal funding under the constraints
of CIPA to advise patrons of the option to disable the internet filters. The ALA and other organizations are also continuing efforts
to require internet filtering software companies to disclose a list of blocked
websites, as well as their filtering criteria. This effort continues in light
of evidence that some companies are using their own subjective criteria, rather
than using the legal definitions of terms such as "obscenity" and
"harmful to minors."
Another
concern of the ALA is that filtering software may lull
parents "into a false sense of security." According to the ALA, parents should be aware that the filters not only
routinely block harmless content, but may also allow illegal content to get through.
As more
and more Americans in every single age group rely on the Internet for
information and communication, rules which govern the Web become increasingly
important and affect us in our daily lives. While the Supreme Court grapples to
fit very old laws with very new technology, true exercise of the bill of rights
again falls into the lap of the average American. Ask your librarian to turn
off your computer's filter and you're turning on your government guaranteed
rights to freedom of speech.