Surfing the internet for obscenity just got harder. This
past March, in the case Nitke v. Gonzales, the Supreme Court affirmed the
constitutionality of a federal ban on internet obscenity.
The case involved Barbara Nitke, a photographer whose
sexually explicit photos containing sadomasochistic poses were placed on the
Internet, to supplement a gallery display. Nitke, along with the National
Coalition for Sexual Freedom (NCSF), challenged the obscenity portion of the 1996
Communications Decency Act which, among other things, prohibits the
distribution of obscenity via the Internet to anyone believed to be under the
age of 18.
A special panel of the Second Circuit of Appeals in New York unanimously disagreed with Nitke
and the NCSF. The panel stated that they failed to show that the Act was substantially
overbroad. In other words, Nitke and the NCSF did not successfully show that the
ban was veering towards censorship.
This
ruling seems to indicate a change in course from past Supreme Court rulings. In
1997, the Supreme Court struck down the portion of Communications Decency Act
that prohibited the transmission of indecent material online. Since then, the
Supreme Court has also ruled against the Child Online Protection Act, which
targets commercial Web sites that make sexually explicit material available to
those under 18; and the court nullified portions of the 1996 Child Pornography
Prevention Act, which barred images of children appearing to be under the age
of 18 and engaged in sexually explicit conduct.
In 2003, however,
the Supreme Court did uphold the Children's Internet Protection Act, which
requires public and school libraries that receive government Internet discounts
to install filters on their computers that block pornography.
Is this the beginning of a Supreme Court pattern that
could spell victory for the opponents of Internet obscenity?
What is Obscenity?
Legally, obscenity refers to words, images or actions that
offend the sexual morality of its viewers. This could range from simple
profanity to offensive pictures or videos. Under the U.S. law, the Supreme Court has found
that, when used in the context of the First Amendment and free speech,
obscenity must refer to materials that are of a sexual nature.
The Miller Test
For something to be considered
"obscene," the Supreme Court uses what is known as "The Miller Test."
Developed in 1973 in the case
Miller v. California, the Supreme Court determined
that the following types of works are not protected by the First Amendment and,
therefore, can be prohibited. If the average person finds that when viewed as a
whole, a work:
- Appeals to the "prurient" interest (i.e., an unhealthy and degrading
interest in sex)
- Depicts or describes sexual conduct in a
patently offensive way, and
- Lacks serious literary, artistic, political or
scientific value.
All three parts of the Miller Test must be met before a
material can be found to be obscene under the law. If just one of the parts is
not met, the material would not be considered obscene under law and, in turn,
would be
constitutionally protected under the First Amendment. The most controversial
portion of the test is the question of creative or scientific value. Even
though some pornography may appeal to an average person's prurient interest and
depict sexual conduct in an offensive way, if some contend it holds an artistic
or literary value, it fails the Miller Test and is not deemed obscene.
The Internet
The Internet has made the law of
obscenity much more convoluted. Federal obscenity laws apply to interstate and
foreign issues, such as distribution; intrastate issues are mostly governed by
state law. Today, materials considered "obscene" can be sent from a computer in
California to someone across the U.S. as fast as a click of a button. The
question is: What state governs the issue of obscenity when the Internet can
reach multiple areas?
Interestingly, the Miller Test is
based on what is offensive in a certain "community," not the United States as a whole. For example,
what's offensive to someone from New York City may differ from what offends a person in Topeka, Kansas. But, the Miller Test's basis of
"community" becomes blurred with the advent of the Internet; a state can define
a community as the state as a whole, a county, a city or another geographic
area. The geographic area of the Internet, however, is nonexistent, and
geographic boundaries are essential to the "community" definition for the
Supreme Court's Miller Test.
As technology redefines our communities and our world, the
Internet will more than likely be the source of more obscenity trials landing
in front of the Supreme Court. Many believe the Court may have to challenge
the current state of the Miller Test as
it relates to electronic obscenity. What will happen in the future? Like
Justice Potter Stuart famously said about pornography decades ago, "I'll know
it when I see it."