Porn News

Ohio court: Online child porn law affects private chat, IMs, e-mail but not public Web sites

Ohio –

The Ohio Supreme Court has narrowly interpreted a state law aimed to protecting children from online pornography and predators, delivering a blow to free-speech advocates who want it thrown out as unconstitutional.

In its unanimous decision, the court said a 2004 law extending the state’s definition of “material harmful to minors” to the Internet is clearly intended to apply only to person-to-person communications — not to generally accessible Web sites and public chat rooms.

“We conclude that a person who posts matter harmful to juveniles on generally accessible websites and in public chat rooms does not violate (the law), because such a posting does not enable that person to ‘prevent a particular recipient from receiving the information,'” Justice Paul Pfeifer wrote in the decision.

The interpretation is a blow to a coalition led by the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression, which has been challenging similar statutes around the country. It argues such protections, when applied too broadly to online material, erode the constitutional free speech rights of online booksellers, newspaper publishers and video game dealers. Technology, they say, can’t always keep the harmful information from children.

The high court’s legal interpretation now goes back to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals based in Cincinnati, which is considering the larger constitutional question.

The lower court had asked justices to resolve two key legal questions before moving forward on the booksellers’ lawsuit. The questions involved what is meant by the technical terms contained in the law: “mass distribution” and “personally directed devices.”

On both questions, the court sided with Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray’s arguments that the law is intended to be narrowly interpreted.

“Based on our understanding of generally acceptable websites and public chat rooms,” Pfeifer wrote, “they are open to all, including juveniles, and current usage and technology do not allow a person who posts thereon to prevent particular recipients, including juveniles, from accessing the information posted.”

A federal district court where the suit originated put enforcement of the law on hold after concluding its wording was overbroad and in violation of the First Amendment. That decision was appealed to the 6th Circuit.

This is the second challenge by booksellers, newspaper publishers and others of the status. State lawmakers specifically amended the initial statute in an attempt to address First Amendment issues and avoid litigation.

380 Views

Related Posts

Rachel Steele Drops New Clip With London River

Jan 1, 2025 4:00 PM PSTLOS ANGELES — Rachel Steele has released a two-part clip through her Red MILF Productions company titled "Pegging the Bully: Rachel Steele and London River’s FemDom Justice." According to a rep, the release is "an…

MFC’s Aubri Toffee Featured in January Issue of CAMStar

When Aubri Toffee isn’t hanging with the Aubrinuts on MyFreeCams, she likes to unwind with a variety of hobbies.

Chloe Wildd Scores XMA Nomination

Dec 31, 2024 4:04 PM PSTLOS ANGELES — Chloe Wildd has landed a nomination for Creator of the Year - Streamer at the 2025 XMA Awards. "It feels amazing to be nominated another time for my shows on Chaturbate," said…

German Proposal to Block Payments to Adult Sites Closer to Ratification

BERLIN — Germany is moving closer to implementing rules that would prohibit financial institutions from providing payment services to adult sites deemed to have inadequate age verification systems and would also make it easier for the government to target websites…

Pineapple Names Natassia Dreams, Josy Black Brand Ambassadors

Pineapple Support, the adult industry’s leading mental health nonprofit, on Monday announced the appointment of Natassia Dreams and Josy Black as brand ambassadors.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.