Online Hate and Harmful Content
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The First Amendment, the Public-Private Distinction, and Nongovernmental Suppression of Wartime Political Debate Gregory P
Working Paper Series Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Year 2004 The First Amendment, The Public-Private Distinction, and Nongovernmental Suppression of Wartime Political Debate Gregory P. Magarian Villanova University School of Law, [email protected] This paper is posted at Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law Digital Repository. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/wps/art6 THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THE PUBLIC -PRIVA TE DISTINCTION, AND NONGOVERNMENTAL SUPPRESSION OF WARTIME POLITICAL DEBATE 1 BY GREGORY P. MAGARIAN DRAFT 5-12-04 TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................... 1 I. CONFRONTING NONGOVERNMENTAL CENSORSHIP OF POLITICAL DEBATE IN WARTIME .................. 5 A. The Value and Vulnerability of Wartime Political Debate ........................................................................... 5 1. The Historical Vulnerability of Wartime Political Debate to Nongovernmental Suppression ....................................................................... 5 2. The Public Rights Theory of Expressive Freedom and the Necessity of Robust Political Debate for Democratic Self -Government........................ 11 B. Nongovernmental Censorship of Political Speech During the “War on Terrorism” ............................................... 18 1. Misinformation and Suppression of Information by News Media ............................................ 19 2. Exclusions of Political Speakers from Privately Owned Public Spaces. -
Trolling & the First Amendment
TROLLING & THE FIRST AMENDMENT: PROTECTING INTERNET SPEECH IN THE ERA OF CYBERBULLIES & INTERNET DEFAMATION Fernando L. Diaz TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Introduction ......................................................................................... 136 II. Background ......................................................................................... 139 A. Levels of Scrutiny as Applied to Different Types of Speech ...... 139 B. The Supreme Court’s Protection of Anonymous Speech in Traditional Forums ...................................................................... 140 III. Analysis ............................................................................................... 143 A. Using Elonis v. United States as a Case Study in Consideration of the Incompatibility of Traditional First Amendment Jurisprudence with Internet Speech. ...................... 143 B. Court Decisions Regarding Anonymous Speech on the Internet ................................................................................... 147 C. Legislative Overreach .................................................................. 154 IV. Recommendation ................................................................................ 156 V. Conclusion .......................................................................................... 158 “Just as the strength of the Internet is chaos, so the strength of our liberty depends upon the chaos and cacophony of the unfettered speech the First Amendment protects.”1 - Judge Dalzell Fernando L. Diaz has a B.A., -
Decl. of Alexandra Robert Gordon (2:17-Cv-00903-WBS-KJN) Exhibit 29
1 XAVIER BECERRA, State Bar No. 118517 Attorney General of California 2 TAMAR PACHTER, State Bar No. 146083 Supervising Deputy Attorney General 3 ALEXANDRA ROBERT GORDON, State Bar No. 207650 JOHN D. ECHEVERRIA, State Bar No. 268843 4 Deputy Attorneys General 455 Golden Gate Avenue, Suite 11000 5 San Francisco, CA 94102-7004 Telephone: (415) 703-5509 6 Fax: (415) 703-5480 E-mail: [email protected] 7 Attorneys for Defendants 8 IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 12 13 WILLIAM WIESE, et al., 2:17-cv-00903-WBS-KJN 14 Plaintiff, EXHIBITS 29 THROUGH 34 TO THE DECLARATION OF ALEXANDRA 15 v. ROBERT GORDON IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR 16 TEMPORARY RESTRAINING ORDER XAVIER BECERRA, et al., AND PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION 17 Defendant. Date: June 16, 2017 18 Time: 10:00 a.m. Courtroom: 5 19 Judge: The Honorable William B. Shubb Action Filed: April 28, 2017 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Decl. of Alexandra Robert Gordon (2:17-cv-00903-WBS-KJN) Exhibit 29 Gordon Declaration 00856 Mass Shootings at Virginia Tech April 16, 2007 Report of the Review Panel Presented to Governor Kaine Commonwealth of Virginia AUGUST 2007 Gordon Declaration 00857 Chapter III TIMELINE OF EVENTS he following timeline provides an overview of family. He has serious health problems from Tthe events leading up to the tragedy on April 9 months to 3 years old, is frail, and after 16, and then the actions taken on April 16. The unpleasant medical procedures does not time scale switches from years to months to days want to be touched. -
Newsletter 20 3 V2.Indd
Newsletter of The Independent Institute Volume 20, Number 3 Fall 2010 Can We Finally Give Free Markets a Chance? by Mary L. G. Theroux* theory of “market failure” worse schools with fewer graduates, at a massively is widely touted as the higher cost. The Department of Defense’s failure cause of our current econom- to provide for the common defense resulted only in ic woes, despite the theory’s the addition of more bureaucracy in the form of the own failure and the inherent Department of Homeland shortcomings of its various in- Security. And, most recently, carnations, as revealed in the we have the inept response Independent Institute’s book, Market Failure or of the Environmental Pro- Success. Rather, systemic government tection Agency—tasked by failure is the far more consistent expla- law since 1994 to plan for nation for disasters such as the 2008 and be first responder to oil fi nancial crash, as detailed spills—and other federal in “Anatomy of a Train agencies to the BP blowout. Wreck: Causes of the Mort- And the list goes on. gage Meltdown”—a chap- Such continued acceptance of govern- ter in our recent book, ment failure must result from a false Housing America—which assumption that since government pro- shows the role of govern- vides a service now, government must be ment failure in creating the necessary for that service’s provision—i.e., these are fi nancial bubble that misdi- “public goods” that a market would not provide— rected resources into inher- or at least, not sufficiently—if government did not ently unsustainable activities. -
Art As Communication: Y the Impact of Art As a Catalyst for Social Change Cm
capa e contra capa.pdf 1 03/06/2019 10:57:34 POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE OF LISBON . PORTUGAL C M ART AS COMMUNICATION: Y THE IMPACT OF ART AS A CATALYST FOR SOCIAL CHANGE CM MY CY CMY K Fifteenth International Conference on The Arts in Society Against the Grain: Arts and the Crisis of Democracy NUI Galway Galway, Ireland 24–26 June 2020 Call for Papers We invite proposals for paper presentations, workshops/interactive sessions, posters/exhibits, colloquia, creative practice showcases, virtual posters, or virtual lightning talks. Returning Member Registration We are pleased to oer a Returning Member Registration Discount to delegates who have attended The Arts in Society Conference in the past. Returning research network members receive a discount o the full conference registration rate. ArtsInSociety.com/2020-Conference Conference Partner Fourteenth International Conference on The Arts in Society “Art as Communication: The Impact of Art as a Catalyst for Social Change” 19–21 June 2019 | Polytechnic Institute of Lisbon | Lisbon, Portugal www.artsinsociety.com www.facebook.com/ArtsInSociety @artsinsociety | #ICAIS19 Fourteenth International Conference on the Arts in Society www.artsinsociety.com First published in 2019 in Champaign, Illinois, USA by Common Ground Research Networks, NFP www.cgnetworks.org © 2019 Common Ground Research Networks All rights reserved. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the applicable copyright legislation, no part of this work may be reproduced by any process without written permission from the publisher. For permissions and other inquiries, please visit the CGScholar Knowledge Base (https://cgscholar.com/cg_support/en). -
Editura MARTOR (MARTOR Publishing House), Muzeul Țăranului Român (The
Title: “Un siècle de singularité, un an d’hospitalité” Author: Ioana Popescu How to cite this article: Popescu, Ioana. 2006. “Un siècle de singularité, un an d’hospitalité”. Martor 11: 9‐12. Published by: Editura MARTOR (MARTOR Publishing House), Muzeul Țăranului Român (The Museum of the Romanian Peasant) URL: http://martor.muzeultaranuluiroman.ro/archive/martor‐11‐2006/ Martor (The Museum of the Romanian Peasant Anthropology Review) is a peer‐reviewed academic journal established in 1996, with a focus on cultural and visual anthropology, ethnology, museum studies and the dialogue among these disciplines. Martor review is published by the Museum of the Romanian Peasant. Its aim is to provide, as widely as possible, a rich content at the highest academic and editorial standards for scientific, educational and (in)formational goals. Any use aside from these purposes and without mentioning the source of the article(s) is prohibited and will be considered an infringement of copyright. Martor (Revue d’Anthropologie du Musée du Paysan Roumain) est un journal académique en système peer‐review fondé en 1996, qui se concentre sur l’anthropologie visuelle et culturelle, l’ethnologie, la muséologie et sur le dialogue entre ces disciplines. La revue Martor est publiée par le Musée du Paysan Roumain. Son aspiration est de généraliser l’accès vers un riche contenu au plus haut niveau du point de vue académique et éditorial pour des objectifs scientifiques, éducatifs et informationnels. Toute utilisation au‐delà de ces buts et sans mentionner la source des articles est interdite et sera considérée une violation des droits de l’auteur. -
But[T]... the Federal Communications Commission Will Not Let
WLR45-2_QUALE_EIC2_SAC_12_16_08_CQ_FINAL_REVIEW 12/18/2008 11:35:12 AM HEAR AN [EXPLETIVE], THERE AN [EXPLETIVE], BUT[T] . THE FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION WILL NOT LET YOU SAY AN [EXPLETIVE] COURTNEY LIVINGSTON QUALE∗ I. AN OVERVIEW Broadcast television and broadcast radio2 are integral parts of American society. So integral, in fact, that often these mediums are taken for granted. To many Americans, broadcast television and broadcast radio are one of the few free things left in life. Anyone who owns a ten dollar radio or a fifty dollar television can watch their favorite new episode of Grey’s Anatomy, Sixty Minutes, or Lost and listen to their favorite songs or commentary on KNRK, Z100, or NPR. Because broadcast television and broadcast radio are typically taken for granted, hardly anyone questions the conditions that a regulatory governmental agency places upon the organizations that ∗ J.D. Willamette University College of Law, May 2008; B.S. University of Miami, May 2005. I would like to thank those who not only have helped me with this article, but also those who have helped me reach this point in my life—a point at which my thoughts are of a publishable quality. I thank you all most kindly. From the University of Miami I want to thank Professors S.L. Harrison and Robert Stahr Hosmon, who initially cultivated any writing talent I may have. Also from Miami, I would like to thank Professors Cynthia Cordes and Danny Paskin, who have unabashedly encouraged me over years. From Willamette University College of Law I want to thank Professor Ed Harri and Rachael Rogers, again for helping me learn how to write, think, and analyze. -
Queerying Homophily 2018
Repositorium für die Medienwissenschaft Wendy Hui Kyong Chun Queerying Homophily 2018 https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/12350 Veröffentlichungsversion / published version Sammelbandbeitrag / collection article Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Chun, Wendy Hui Kyong: Queerying Homophily. In: Clemens Apprich, Wendy Hui Kyong Chun, Florian Cramer u.a. (Hg.): Pattern Discrimination. Lüneburg: meson press 2018, S. 59–97. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/12350. Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter einer Creative Commons - This document is made available under a creative commons - Namensnennung - Nicht kommerziell 4.0 Lizenz zur Verfügung Attribution - Non Commercial 4.0 License. For more information gestellt. Nähere Auskünfte zu dieser Lizenz finden Sie hier: see: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 [ 3 ] Queerying Homophily Wendy Hui Kyong Chun To recap, in Pattern Discrimination: 1. YOU is always singular plural: • Recognition is never at the level of the individual • You = YOUS value 2. Machines engage in deep dreaming, creating patterns from noise. • Crab in = crap out • As with the gibbering muses, interpretation and herme- neutics enter through pattern discrimination, but now through the “back door” • We live in mythic times, but without knowing we do 3. The singularity of the market = the crapularity of the world: • the dumbing down of humans • the integration of subjectivity into information technologies • the reality of paranoia 60 4. To come out, we have to come in: • we are inside when we think we are outside. • Open societies need enemies to be “open” This chapter continues these points by examining homophily—the axiom that similarity breeds connection—which grounds contem- porary network science. -
Heavy Metal Under Scrutiny: the Controversial Battle for the Protection of America’S Youth
Heavy Metal under Scrutiny: The Controversial Battle for the Protection of America’s Youth Master’s Thesis in North American Studies Leiden University Chrysanthi Papazoglou s1588419 Supervisor: Dr. Eduard van de Bilt 1 Contents Introduction ........................................................................................................... 2 Heavy Metal: Origins, Imagery and Values ......................................................... 6 The 1985 PMRC Senate Hearing & Aftermath .................................................. 20 Heavy Metal on Trial: The Cases of Ozzy Osbourne and Judas Priest .............. 41 Conclusion .......................................................................................................... 53 Bibliography ....................................................................................................... 57 2 Introduction During the 1980s, following the steady rise of neo-conservatism, several political and religious groups were formed to fight for what they deemed the loss of true American values. Among their targets was a music genre called heavy metal. Ever since its emergence, the genre met with serious opposition. Accused of promoting violence, suicide, drug and alcohol abuse and distorted images of sex, heavy metal music was considered a threat to the well-being of America’s youth. These accusations were major arguments in the 1980s religious conservatives’ crusade to establish family values. Trying to raise parents’ awareness of the music’s ostensible catastrophic effects on adolescents, -
The Symbolic Rape of Representation: a Rhetorical Analysis of Black Musical Expression on Billboard's Hot 100 Charts
THE SYMBOLIC RAPE OF REPRESENTATION: A RHETORICAL ANALYSIS OF BLACK MUSICAL EXPRESSION ON BILLBOARD'S HOT 100 CHARTS Richard Sheldon Koonce A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY December 2006 Committee: John Makay, Advisor William Coggin Graduate Faculty Representative Lynda Dee Dixon Radhika Gajjala ii ABSTRACT John J. Makay, Advisor The purpose of this study is to use rhetorical criticism as a means of examining how Blacks are depicted in the lyrics of popular songs, particularly hip-hop music. This study provides a rhetorical analysis of 40 popular songs on Billboard’s Hot 100 Singles Charts from 1999 to 2006. The songs were selected from the Billboard charts, which were accessible to me as a paid subscriber of Napster. The rhetorical analysis of these songs will be bolstered through the use of Black feminist/critical theories. This study will extend previous research regarding the rhetoric of song. It also will identify some of the shared themes in music produced by Blacks, particularly the genre commonly referred to as hip-hop music. This analysis builds upon the idea that the majority of hip-hop music produced and performed by Black recording artists reinforces racial stereotypes, and thus, hegemony. The study supports the concept of which bell hooks (1981) frequently refers to as white supremacist capitalist patriarchy and what Hill-Collins (2000) refers to as the hegemonic domain. The analysis also provides a framework for analyzing the themes of popular songs across genres. The genres ultimately are viewed through the gaze of race and gender because Black male recording artists perform the majority of hip-hop songs. -
Active Shooter: Recommendations and Analysis for Risk Mitigation
. James P. O’Neill . Police Commissioner . John J. Miller . Deputy Commissioner of . Intelligence and . Counterterrorism ACTIVE SHOOTER James R. Waters RECOMMENDATIONS AND ANALYSIS Chief of Counterterrorism FOR RISK MITIGATION 2016 EDITION AS RELEASED BY THE NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ................................................................................................................2 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................................................3 RECENT TRENDS ........................................................................................................................6 TRAINING & AWARENESS CHALLENGE RESPONSE .................................................................................... 6 THE TARGETING OF LAW ENFORCEMENT & MILITARY PERSONNEL: IMPLICATIONS FOR PRIVATE SECURITY ........ 7 ATTACKERS INSPIRED BY A RANGE OF IDEOLOGIES PROMOTING VIOLENCE ................................................... 8 SOCIAL MEDIA PROVIDES POTENTIAL INDICATORS, SUPPORTS RESPONSE .................................................... 9 THE POPULARITY OF HANDGUNS, RIFLES, AND BODY ARMOR NECESSITATES SPECIALIZED TRAINING .............. 10 BARRICADE AND HOSTAGE-TAKING REMAIN RARE OCCURRENCES IN ACTIVE SHOOTER EVENTS .................... 10 RECOMMENDATIONS ................................................................................................................11 POLICY ......................................................................................................................................... -
Review of the Status of Cyberbullying and Cyberbullying Prevention
Journal of Information Systems Education, Vol. 25(1) Spring 2014 Review of the Status of Cyberbullying and Cyberbullying Prevention June F. Chisholm, Ph.D. Department of Psychology Pace University New York, 10038, U.S.A. [email protected] ABSTRACT Cyberbullying may be one of the “diseases” of the 21th Century. Despite efforts to curtail its incidence and prevalence over the past 20 years, its direct and indirect harmful effects have made it a public concern about the wellbeing of children, adolescents, and adults. Empirical studies as well as psychological theories have addressed different aspects of cyberbullying (e.g. characteristics of victims, bullies, and bystanders, prevalence rates, specific types of cyberbullying behavior, gender differences, intervention/prevention strategies, legal/legislative measures, etc.). While consensus is evident in some areas researched, significant findings in other areas are inconsistent, indicative of the inherent complexities of this phenomenon and the methodological problems hampering insight into the nature of this problem and its possible solutions. The purpose of this review is to provide an overview of the current status of the research and theoretical perspectives on cyberbullying in hopes of encouraging good scholarship, improved methodologies and thoughtful inquiries to better inform educators, parents, mental health service providers, policy makers and others so that they can more effectively promote healthy online and offline behaviors among digital users. This discussion reviews the definition and characteristics of cyberbullying, its prevalence, populations affected, gender differences, theoretical perspectives and issues of intervention and prevention. Keywords: Ethics, Information & communication technologies (ICT), Interpersonal skills, Online programming, Social Networking, Student expectations, Student perceptions, Student responsibility, Virtual reality 1.