Supremes to decide complex 1st Amendment case focused on government speech

The Supreme will decide a free speech case in which a municipality rejected the offer of an obscure religious sect to place a religious sculpture in a public park that was already home to a Judeo-Christian religious symbol: the Ten Commandments. The sect views the park as a public forum to which the sect’s religious symbol must be given equal access. The municipality argues that its own free speech rights are abridged if it is

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Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales meets in China with officials in charge of internet censorship

Rebecca MacKinnon reports on her blog that Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales has met in China with the head of the government agency responsible for censorship of the Internet in China. Although access to Wikipedia has been regularly block by the China censors, the English language version was unblocked in the run-up to the Olympic games, and then remained substantially unblocked after the games were over. Jimmy Wales famously criticized Google for agreeing to censor its

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Google, Yahoo, Microsoft set common approach for dealing with censorship abroad

Google, Yahoo, Microsoft and others have agreed to a common set of principles for dealing with foreign governments that restrict speech, limit privacy protections, and sensor search results. The principles, which spell out “best practices” for American technology companies doing business in China, Vietnam and other foreign countries that censor the Internet, were adopted in the shadow of Congressional threats to impose standards by law. Wall Street Journal By JESSICA E. VASCELLARO Oct. 28–Google Inc.,

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Obama transition head urged withdrawal of Bush administration's FOI policy

Steve Aftergood of Secrecy News predicts Obama administration to be more FOI-friendly. He notes that John Podesta, head of the OBama transition team, testified in Congress in favor of withdrawing a key Bush administration executive order curtailing access under the FOIA. Secrecy News Steve Aftergood The possibilities for significant changes in government secrecy policy are starting to attract official attention as the presidential transition process begins. “I know things are going to change,” one executive

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High school is sued in free speech dispute over student newspaper

Holbrook High School has been sued by journalism students contesting the closure of the student newspaper following school administrators’ efforts to withhold publication of two articles. The suit, filed on behalf of the students by the ACLU, characterizes the school’s actions as censorship. The case will test the impact of a California state law that gives students the same First Amendment rights that adults have in a nonschool environment. North County Times Tuesday, November 11,

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