Derek Bambauer on censorship

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On the podcast this week, Derek Bambauer, associate professor of law at Brooklyn Law School, discusses his forthcoming University of Chicago Law Review article entitled Orwell's Armchair. In the paper, Bambuer writes that America has begun to censor the Internet, and he distinguishes two forms of censorship: hard and soft. He defines hard censorship as open and transparent, and where the government directly controls what information can and cannot be transmitted. Soft censorship, says Bambauer, is indirect, where government tells third parties to prevent users from accessing information, and it's not clear what is being censored. He submits that if America is going to censor the Internet, it should do so through hard censorship. Indirect censorship strategies, he writes, are less legitimate than direct regulation.





Related Links

Orwell's Armchair , by Bambauer"Filtering On The March", Info/Law"Revised 'Net censorship bill requires search engines to block sites, too", ARS TechnicaOpen Net Initiative

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Published on October 04, 2011 13:24
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