On the eve of a legislative panel beginning dialogue on how to regulate sexually transmitted diseases in the porn industry, Free Speech Coalition lawyer Jeffrey Douglas blasted a bill that could crimp the industry. “This bill has nothing good to say,” he said.
A Senate subcommittee revised a bill this week that broadly targets several aspects of the Internet that lawmakers consider "noxious and harmful." At the top of the committee's list of targets is spyware and adware, which lawmakers believe are becoming the next big scourge on the Internet.
The Senate Commerce Committee approved a measure that would make it more expensive for broadcasters to air something indecent. The bill raises fines and requires regulators to consider each indecent utterance a violation, which could sharply boost penalties.
The U.S. Senate Commerce Committee plans to finish work on a broadcast indecency bill on Tuesday and send it to the Senate floor, where it is expected to pass overwhelmingly.
Congress is currently reviewing legislation that would outlaw spyware and adware. According to reports, the bill was scribed by the threesome that first introduced the Can-Spam Act of 2004.
On Friday, The Colorado State House of Representatives narrowly defeated a proposal to ban pornographic displays that could be viewed by minors, such as ‘adult’ magazine covers on a newsstand
Many members of Free Speech Coalition have asked what prompted Bill Lyon's departure from the Executive Directorship of an organization whose free speech goals he so strongly believe in. This statement will serve to clarify
The U.S. Supreme Court is returning to the drawing board to resolve the longstanding argument on how to protect children from exposure to online pornography while not infringing on First Amendment rights
On a whim, Detective Sgt. Paul Gillespie of the Toronto Police Sex Crimes Unit sent a cry for help to multi-billionaire Bill Gates via email. He never expected to hear back.