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Children's Internet Protection Act (CIPA) ruling by the US District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania |
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| Author
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Anonymous
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| Category
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Computers
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| Language
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English
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| Published
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2002
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| Extract
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rgeable with censorship when it filters out offending material. The legal context
in which this extensive factual record is set is complex, implicating a number
of constitutional doctrines, including the constitutional limitations on Congress's
spending clause power, the unconstitutional conditions doctrine, and subsidiary
to these issues, the First Amendment doctrines of prior restraint, vagueness,
and overbreadth. There are a number of potential entry points into the analysis,
but the most logical is the spending clause jurisprudence in which the seminal
case is South Dakota v. Dole, 483 U.S. 203 (1987). Dole outlines four categories
of constraints on Congress's exercise of its power under the Spending Clause,
but the only Dole condition disputed here is the fourth and last, i.e., whether
CIPA requires libraries that receive LSTA funds or E-rate discounts to violate
the constitutional rights of their patrons. As will appear, the question is
not a simple one, and turns on the level of scrutiny applicable
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