Indecent proposals a legal analysis of "indecency" applied to broadcasting and the Internet /
Abstract (Summary)
The purpose of the dissertation was to analyze indecency policy and identify valid
arguments and approaches from which one can find a viable model or approach of
content regulation for both broadcast media and the Internet. Broadcast media and the
Internet are both under scrutiny by the federal government for increased content
regulation; therefore, both media are facing threatened First Amendments rights.
This dissertation explored whether the public interest could be best served through the
marketplace approach to content regulation of indecent speech on broadcast radio and
television and the Internet. The dissertation explored, compared, and contrasted
indecency regulation on broadcast radio and television with indecency regulation on the
Internet. It attempted to find trends, patterns, similarities, and differences in the
mandated and suggested policies centering on regulating indecency on commercial
broadcast radio and television and the Internet. The study also looked at the direction the
legislative and judicial branches are going concerning policies on regulating indecent
content on the Internet.
The dissertation found that the marketplace approach to indecency regulation has so
far prevailed on the Internet, with the exception of CIPA. With emerging technologies
such as Internet filters and V-Chips, further government regulation of indecent content on
the Internet or on broadcast television and radio would be not be useful. A receiver-based
content control approach proposed in the dissertation suggested that the marketplace
approach to content regulation would better serve the public interest because the public’s
interest would be defined by the public itself.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Location:USA - Tennessee
Source Type:Master's Thesis
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