3,935 research outputs found
Sex, Lies, and the Internet: Balancing First Amendment Interests, Reputational Harm, and Privacy in the Age of Blogs and Social Networking Sites
Resurrecting the Fairness Doctrine: The Quandary of Enforcement Continues
Despite its repeal in 1987, the fairness doctrine remains one of the most controversial issues in broadcast regulation today. Since the doctrine\u27s demise, Congress has tried twice unsuccessfully to revive this content-specific regulation which required broadcasters to actively search for controversial issues of importance and present a balance of viewpoints in programming exploring those issues. This article suggests a new standard of reviewing fairness complaints at renewal time which creates a strong presumption in favor of the broadcaster. Part I of the article focuses on the development of the fairness doctrine throughout its short history. In particular, it traces the historical underpinnings of broadcast regulation examining the intent and purpose of the fairness provision. Part II analyzes the judicial and quasi-judicial enforcement of this regulation, particularly with respect to political broadcasting. Part III traces the demise of the Doctrine and the attempts to revive it. Part IV outlines the presumption in favor of the broadcaster at license renewal time and concludes that this alternative essentially frees broadcasters from defending their records, yet still provides a window of opportunity for groups validly claiming biased broadcasting
A SLAPP in the Facebook: Assessing the Impact of Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation on Social Networks, Blogs and Consumer Gripe Sites
Gay Labeling and Defamation Law: Have Attitudes Toward Homosexuality Changed Enough to Modify Reputational Torts?
Untangling Child Pornography From the Adult Entertainment Industry: An Inside Look at the Industry\u27s Efforts to Protect Minors
Journalism, Libel Law and a Reputation Tarnished: A Dialogue with Richard Jewell and His Attorney, L. Lin Wood
Free Speech & the Entertainment Software Association: An Inside Look at the Censorship Assault on the Video Game Industry
From Falwell to Obama and Everyone (and Everything) in Between: Larry Flynt Unfiltered in Chapel Hill
A Pyrrhic Press Victory: Why Holding Richard Jewell Is a Public Figure Is Wrong and Harms Journalism
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