Do not be lulled into inaction by the pornographic profiteers who say that to remove obscenity is to deny people the rights of free choice. Do not let them masquerade licentiousness as liberty.
—President Spencer W. Kimball1
I have often wondered what words the ancient prophets who were shown our day would have used to describe iPhones and portable video game systems. With a similar concern, after quoting Isaiah 5:26–29, Elder LeGrand Richards of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles observed:
Since there were no such things as trains and airplanes in that day, Isaiah could hardly have mentioned them by name, but he seems to have described them in unmistakable words. How better could “their horses’ hoofs be counted like flint, and their wheel like a whirlwind” than in the modern train? How better could “Their roaring . . . be like a lion” than in the roar of the airplane? Trains and airplanes do not stop for night. Therefore, was not Isaiah justified in saying “none shall slumber nor sleep; neither shall the girdle of their loins be loosed, nor the latchet of their shoes be broken”? With this manner of transportation the Lord can really “hiss unto them from the end of the earth,” that “they shall come with speed swiftly.”2
Many scriptures have multiple meanings and, as I do research on the law and Internet regulation, I have thought many times of the possible meanings of this scriptural warning: “I say unto you that the enemy in the secret chambers seeketh your lives” (D&C 38:28). As a youth I could not have comprehended the advent of the Internet, but I am confident that the prophets saw ahead to both the vast benefits and enormous risks that would come into our homes with a small electronic box, an always-available cheap and easy portal into “secret chambers.” The next verse reminds us that the biggest risks may not be from terrorists and nuclear threats. We may be underestimating the extent to which pornographers, most of whom publish from the United States,3 are stealing our souls. “You say that there will soon be great wars in far countries, but ye know not the hearts of men in your own land” (D&C 38:29).
Certainly, we have always been warned about the harms of pornography. Jesus said, “Ye have heard that it was said by them of old time, Thou shalt not commit adultery: But I say unto you, That whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart” (Matt. 5:27–28). But the prophets have become increasingly insistent in their warnings during the last several decades.4 This spike in prophetic warning corresponds to the development of technology.
Perhaps President Kimball was thinking of our time when, in 1974, he referred to “inventions of which we laymen have hardly had a glimpse.”5 He then referred back to a speech by President David O. McKay in the October 1966 conference in which he said, of the scientific discoveries that will make possible the preaching of the gospel to every kindred, tongue, and people, that they “stagger the imagination.”6 As wonderful as modern technological discoveries are, President McKay warned that they were “discoveries latent with such potent power, either for the blessing or the destruction of human beings, as to make men’s responsibility in controlling them the most gigantic ever placed in human hands. . . . This age is fraught with limitless perils, as well as untold possibilities.”7
One such peril is undoubtedly the easy availability of pornography on the Internet. Among the tools available to us in our “responsibility to control” these powers is the law. In this article, after briefly discussing the scope of the Internet pornography problem—the amount and the consequences—I will explain three aspects of the law as it relates to Internet pornography. First, I will review the often-misunderstood scope of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment protections on speech. Second, I will describe the history of attempts to fill the gap in the law as it relates to Internet pornography. Third, I will suggest some possibilities for how law and technology can be harnessed to provide at least some protections, and I will recommend some nonlaw efforts as well. At this point the battle is political more than legal. Constitutional parameters can be crafted, but Congress has not yet felt sufficient pressure to continue to explore them.
How Much?
Although pornography has been around in various forms for centuries,8 the nature and availability of this vice changed dramatically with the advent of the Internet. Although everyone seems to know that Internet pornography is rampant, very few comprehend the true scope of the problem, in terms both of increased amount and increased access.9 These images are now available in the privacy of one’s home or office (or by Wi-Fi in a public park), at any time of the day or night, frequently for free, and in astonishingly intense digital displays. As recently as the mid-1990s, such access could be had only by those willing to take the time, effort, and risk of traveling to and being seen in suspicious neighborhoods, hiding hard copies, paying high prices, and either proving an appropriate age or violating the law. The natural barriers to use, especially impulsive or exploratory use, are gone.
While no one is sure how much porn is actually being published online, one expert has estimated 275 million to 700 million pages of sexually explicit material are available at any one time.10 Even if an Internet filter were 95 percent effective at blocking porn, this would still leave up to 35 million unblocked pages. The rate of growth is remarkable. In 1998, there were 14 million identified pages of pornography,11 and by 2006, that number had increased by 3,000 percent to 420 million.12 Additionally, the Internet has increased the volume of hard-core pornography available to the average viewer, and “the percentage of degrading, violent, misogynistic pornography continues to increase,” including child pornography.13
Experienced mental health professionals are seeing an increase in patients seeking help for pornography addiction.14 Researcher Dr. Thomas Kalman determined, after conducting a study of clinical cases involving pornography, that the fundamental content of pornography has not changed so much. Rather, Kalman concludes that the results seen in his and others’ studies “relate to the medium of delivery, and the particular technological attributes of the Internet. . . . Never before, in the history of pornography, has so much been so cheaply available to so many.”15
In 1998, Al Cooper coined the phrase “Triple-A Engine” to describe the three main factors that “combin[e] to make the Internet such a powerful force in the area of sexuality . . . Access, Affordability, and Anonymity.”16
The Triple-A Engine effect, in particular, is widely accepted as the primary reason why many pre-existing problems with other forms of pornography have been exacerbated in the last decade, and why many individuals who would not have been involved with this material prior to the advent of the Internet, have been drawn into problematic pornography consumption.17
In addition, Pamela Paul adds “Acceptable” to the triple-A engine described above.18 Although the Church’s stance on pornography has not changed over the years, members no longer have the additional deterrent of the strong social stigma that once attached to pornography use in secular communities.19
Teens are not only viewing pornography; they are creating pornography of their own. “The practice of ‘sexting’—sending nude pictures via text message—is not unusual, especially for high schoolers around the country.”20 The purveyors of this practice include minors in junior highs and high schools in Davis County, Utah,21 where the population is predominantly LDS.22
Among the many incentives for proliferating the amount and reach of pornography is, of course, money. In 2006, U.S. pornography industry revenues were estimated to be $13.3 billion, with about $2.84 billion coming from Internet pornography alone.23 The $2.84 billion figure represents a 14 percent increase in a single year24 and does not include the explosion of free pornography.25 In 2008, the adult entertainment industry was estimated at $57 billion globally.26
Professionals in the lucrative adult entertainment industry are not the only ones making money off of Internet pornography. Amateur photographers and filmmakers now have the technology to easily upload pictures and videos of themselves and others to the Internet in order to turn a profit.27 “Reputable” websites, such as eHow.com and ecommerce-journal.com, have articles on how to become an amateur porn star,28 and sites such as Voyeurweb offer cash prizes in categories such as “newcomer of the month,” and “best lingerie shot.”29 Other sites, such as SexBankRoll, provide services that set up websites with suggestive names and advertisers who will pay “per hit” to put ads and links on the page. All the purchaser or “affiliate” has to do is keep the site stocked with pornographic images of themselves, their friends, or anyone else willing to pose, to attract viewers to the site. The Web service and the purchaser then split the profits that come from the advertisers.30
In addition to those who create the images and sell them, many others have significant economic stake in online pornography. Search engines, such as Yahoo!, have shopping sites through which they sell pornography.31 In addition, Google’s AdWords allows online businesses to pay extra to assure that their sites and ads appear in response to keyword searches. Then, Google collects a fee each time someone clicks on the ad.32 Such links to pornography sites are highly profitable. Similarly, Yahoo! charges a flat fee for the privilege of being listed in its directory, as well as a percentage of each sale made through Yahoo! online shops.33 Neither Google nor Yahoo! will release specific numbers for profits from pornography advertisements. One analyst estimated that “no more than 10 percent of [Google’s] total revenue comes from adult material,”34 but with revenues coming in “at the rate of more than $2 million an hour,”35 that is no small amount.
Investors are increasingly buying stock in companies that once would have been a hiss and a byword. The porn production industry is facing some downturn in profit caused by the recession that began in 2008 and by competition from pirated copies, free content, and materials on social network sites. Nonetheless, it may still be the “‘most reliable bull market in the world.’”36 According to Francis Koenig, who created AdultVest (now Adult Entertainment Capital Corporation) and woos “brokerages interested in syndicating deals to sell to their Main Street investors[,] ‘People just need to get less shy, . . . and they’ll realize that there’s silly money to be made’” in the adult industry.37 And some “mainstream” businesses have indeed become less shy. For instance, the sale of commonplace devices that access porn is a thriving business. Nationwide, “parents are buying their children the tools necessary to access astonishingly degrading and violent sexually explicit materials. For instance, innocent looking gaming systems, i.e., PlayStation Portable, X-Box 360, and Nintendo Wii, can access the Internet and are available everywhere from around $130 to $500.”38 In addition to browser-enabled game players, one recent study reports that 72 percent of minors between ages thirteen and seventeen have a mobile phone,39 and another study found that one in five of these teens access the Internet with their phone. Of these, one in five report that their parents are not aware that they go online via their phone.40 These systems do not come with a built-in browsing content filter and cannot be modified by software to add any protections.41 While a parent can sign up the device with an Internet service provider that offers a filter,42 a child can find another unsecured WiFi server to use instead.
These tools, as well as laptop computers, can pick up wireless Internet signals in “hotspots” all over the country, including in cafes and restaurants. In Utah, for instance, many businesses and public entities provide free unsecured wireless Internet access,43 and proposals are in the works for more, including citywide access. In addition, thousands of homes in Utah are set up with unsecured wireless routers. These electromagnetic signals cannot be stopped at property lines, and when not secured with a password or otherwise, they can be used by anyone on the street or in the house next door. While free wireless access is an important economic development, unsecured community access to the Internet makes home computer filters and other barriers to accessing pornography ineffective.
Along with the increased availability of the Internet comes the increased availability of the full range of pornography. Simply putting the family computer in a visible area of the home is not a sufficient resolution to the problem. Wherever people work, play, and live, it is becoming easier and cheaper to be instantly online with various devices.
How Serious?
The deluge of pornography over the Internet is a relatively new phenomenon. It is reaching a broader and younger audience than ever before. It will take some time for the long-range studies to be published. Although not every extant study provides unambiguous support for the harmful consequences of pornography use and addiction, modern prophets have been unequivocal. Pornography, as “compounded by the Internet,”44 is “destructive,”45 “corrosive,”46 “corrupting,”47 “overpoweringly addictive and severely damaging,”48 an “avalanche of evil,”49 “a great disease,”50 “vicious . . . and habit-forming,”51 a “pernicious contemporary plague,”52 “as addictive as cocaine,”53 and “one of the most damning influences on earth, one that has caused uncountable grief, suffering, heartache, and destroyed marriages.”54
Internet pornography poses dangers other than addiction.55 Anyone familiar with the Internet now knows that it has become a marketing miracle for commercial pornographers and a tool for sexual predators.56 The FBI claims that “pornography is often used in the sexual victimization of children.”57 Pornography is an effective tool for seduction because it “is used to lower the natural, innate resistance of children to performing sexual acts, thus functioning as a primer for child sexual abuse.”58 A study reported in the New York Times in 2007 suggested a direct link between the use of pornography and actual acts of sexual abuse against children. It showed that as many as 85 percent of those convicted for trafficking in child pornography admitted also to inappropriately touching or raping children.59
Pornography attacks the very heart of the plan of salvation—the sanctity of the marriage relationship and our agency. By separating satisfaction from mutual giving and sex from intimacy, it feeds selfishness and erodes relationships. Some addictions, including “unworthy sexual behavior, and viewing pornography, . . . can control us to the point where they take away our God-given agency. One of Satan’s great tools is to find ways to control us.”60
As the battle continues against the devastating consequences of pornography, we see how many attempt to “masquerade licentiousness as liberty.”61 Under the banner of free speech, pornographers seek the protection of the Constitution in continuing to make their products available on the Internet, even to children.
The Law and Freedom of Speech
Many advocates of unfettered license on the Internet claim that the First Amendment gives a blanket free expression right to publish what they will without any accountability or restrictions. But the First Amendment, although deeply cherished, has never been interpreted as permitting speech rights to trump every other constitutional value. The leading legal treatise on free speech provides this overview: “Although absolutism is attractive for its intense commitment to freedom of speech, it proves to be too brittle and simplistic a methodology, and is simply not viable as a general working approach to free speech problems.”62 The Supreme Court has regularly iterated this need for balance. For instance:
Although accommodations between the values protected by [the First, Fifth and Fourteenth] Amendments are sometimes necessary, and the courts properly have shown a special solicitude for the guarantees of the First Amendment, this Court has never held that . . . an uninvited guest may exercise general rights of free speech on property privately owned.63
Although the Court does apply “heightened scrutiny” to enactments that impinge on the First Amendment,64 “the complexity of modern First Amendment law comes from the fact that the Court does not always apply the same level of judicial scrutiny to all conflicts involving freedom of speech.”65 Moreover, “modern First Amendment law abounds in three-part and four-part tests of various kinds.”66
Thus, while Congress must handle First Amendment issues very thoughtfully and the Court will subject statutes to one of the doctrinal levels of scrutiny,67 it is simply untrue to assume that statutes cannot be drafted that will satisfy the demands of freedom of speech. Simply put, “Modern First Amendment jurisprudence permits speech to be penalized when it causes harm.”68 The Supreme Court upholds regulations on (1) commercial speech, such as advertisements, solicitations, and labels;69 (2) content-neutral time, place, and manner restrictions,70 such as limitations on the location of sexually oriented businesses;71 (3) speech on private property and on government property that is not a public forum;72 (4) speech that defames or libels another person;73 (5) speech that invades the privacy of another person;74 (6) speech that dilutes a trademark,75 infringes on a copyright,76 or reveals a trade secret;77 and (7) speech that involves otherwise criminal or fraudulent activities.78
Without much stir, we accept the Do-Not-Call-Registry Act79 and the Pandering Mail Act,80 which permit regulation on speech to give listeners the option to keep it out of their (electronic and real-world) mailboxes. Congress’s stated objective for enacting the Pandering Mail Act “was to protect minors and the privacy of homes from [sexually explicit] material.”81 The Court then recognized that, if the Pandering Mail Act did “impede the flow of even valid ideas” into a home, “no one has a right to press even ‘good’ ideas on an unwilling recipient.”82 Under the rationale of the Pandering Mail Act, positioning a mailbox in our yard (or opening a browser) to receive what we desire (or what we want delivered in response to an innocent search request) does not mean it is our duty to take all solicitations and then sift through and throw out the material we find offensive. We have an option to block delivery.
Further, the Supreme Court has ruled that some forms of speech are not protected at all by the First Amendment and thus can be regulated by the government. This includes “obscenity,” which is a technical term for a very limited amount of hard-core material, and “child pornography,” which involves sexually explicit images produced using an actual child. In addition, only limited scrutiny is given to regulation of “indecent” material on broadcast media during prime time and to sales to minors of hard-copy sexual material, even if not obscene or harmful for adults.
Although the term “obscene,” sometimes gets used casually, for legal purposes it includes only a small category of extreme speech. In 1973, the Supreme Court established in Miller v. California that material is obscene, and thus without First Amendment protection, only if it meets all three of the following tests: (1) “whether ‘the average person, applying contemporary community standards,’ would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest”; (2) “whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct”; and (3) “whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.”83 Although most speech escapes characterization as obscenity because of this last prong, it is also increasingly challenging to characterize speech as “patently offensive” now that “contemporary community standards” have become more lax.
New York v. Ferber (1982) held that states may prohibit child pornography, in addition to obscenity, even if it does not meet the Miller guidelines, because of the states’ compelling interest “in ‘safeguarding the physical and psychological well-being of a minor.’”84 A statute prohibiting child pornography will not run afoul of the First Amendment as long as the statute suitably limits and describes the proscribed conduct and applies only to depictions of children below age eighteen.85
The states’ ability to regulate child pornography does not extend, however, to what has become known as “simulated” child pornography. Simulated child pornography is produced using computer-generated images, youthful looking adult models, or other means of creating what appears to be a sexually explicit image of a child, without the involvement of a real child.86 This type of child pornography is protected by the First Amendment and must meet the legal definition of “obscene” to be prohibited.87 In 2002, the Court determined in Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition that possible harms were insufficient to warrant regulation of simulated child pornography, including feeding the market for real child porn, encouraging pedophiles, and using the images to acclimate child victims of sexual abuse.88 Later, in 2008, the Court found that the pandering or solicitation (but not production or possession) of simulated child pornography can be regulated, but only when the material is promoted as authentic child pornography.89
Sexually explicit speech is also regulated on broadcast television and radio. In 1978, the Supreme Court held in FCC v. Pacifica Foundation that the nature of these media allowed the government to regulate offensive and indecent material transmitted over the airwaves.90 The Court stated, “Broadcast media have established a uniquely pervasive presence in the lives of all Americans.”91 Because of this pervasiveness, “patently offensive, indecent material presented over the airwaves confronts the citizen, not only in public, but also in the privacy of the home, where the individual’s right to be left alone plainly outweighs the First Amendment rights of an intruder.”92 Second, “broadcasting is uniquely accessible to children, even those too young to read.”93 Third, “because the broadcast audience is constantly tuning in and out, prior warnings cannot completely protect the listener or viewer from unexpected program content.”94 The government’s ability to prohibit explicit speech in broadcast media was reaffirmed in 2009 in FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc.95 In Fox, the Court upheld the decision of the Federal Communications Commission to prohibit even isolated or fleeting sexual or excretory references. The Court, however, has expressly refused to extend the broadcast rules to the Internet.96
Finally, the Supreme Court has recognized that some speech in the real world may be protected as used by adults but may be regulated with respect to exposure to minors, defined as anyone under age seventeen.97 In 1957, the Court held in Butler v. Michigan that adults should not be reduced to reading “only what is fit for children,”98 although the government can, under Ginsberg v. New York (1968), prohibit the sale in the real world of harmful sexual material to minors even if the material does not qualify as obscene.99
Nonetheless, translating the rule of Ginsberg to the Internet has proved futile to date. The seller in a hard-copy sale can be held responsible to assess the age of the purchaser. The online seller does not see the purchaser.100 Although some pornographic websites voluntarily require the input of a credit card number for the purpose of limiting the site to adults,101 this is unworkable because a minor may easily use an adult’s credit card, and many adults object to submitting credit card information online. Nonetheless, given that this seemed like the best approach at the time, Congress passed the Communications Decency Act (CDA) in 1996,102 a law that mandated that all sexually explicit websites require the input of a credit card or equivalent age-linked identification prior to viewing.
The CDA sought to protect minors from harmful material on the Internet by prohibiting “knowingly” sending or displaying to a minor any message “that, in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory activities or organs.”103 These provisions were challenged under the First Amendment and the Supreme Court found that the CDA violated the First Amendment.104 The statute was particularly poorly drafted, and the Court reasoned, correctly, that the terms of the CDA were overbroad, vague, and that “governmental interest in protecting children from harmful materials . . . does not justify an unnecessarily broad suppression of speech addressed to adults.”105
Congress took another stab at regulating indecent speech on the Internet with the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) in 1998. Trying to correct for the CDA’s failures, COPA prohibited Web publishers with “commercial purposes” from knowingly making available on the Web material “harmful to minors.”106 Congress intended COPA to cover adult material that does not qualify as harmful for adults under the narrowly applied definition of “obscenity” from Miller but that would meet the Miller standards as applied to children. COPA had a long and sordid affair with the court system,107 but after ten years and three trips to the Supreme Court, the Court denied certiorari108 to reconsider the Third Circuit’s 2008 opinion finding COPA unconstitutional.109
In its last opinion on the statute, the Supreme Court remanded the case to the trial court to make factual determinations relevant to the question of whether in-box filters were a less restrictive, effective alternative to legislation.110 The District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania appointed experts and, based on their reports, issued factual findings, holding that, notwithstanding government’s “compelling interest of protecting minors,”111 filters “are at least as effective, and in fact, are more effective than COPA” in protecting children from sexually explicit material on the Web.112 The district court also held that COPA was “not narrowly tailored,” was “unconstitutionally vague,” and was also “unconstitutionally overbroad” as written.113
On appeal in ACLU v. Mukasey, the Third Circuit affirmed. Again, the court relied on the claims that filtering technology can block foreign content immune from COPA, is more flexible than COPA, and is highly effective in preventing minors from accessing sexually explicit material on the Web.114 Additionally, the court found that filters are “less restrictive than COPA” because they “impose selective restrictions on speech at the receiving end, not universal restrictions at the source.”115 The Supreme Court’s denial of certiorari laid COPA to rest forever, although most experts have now concluded, with the advent of proxy sites, that in-box filters are not effective. For example, Internet Safety Technical Task Force, found in 2008:
Filtering and monitoring technologies are . . . subject to circumvention by minors—especially older minors—who are often more computer literate than their parents and who access the Internet increasingly from multiple devices and venues. . . . Increasingly, minors are also learning how to use proxies to circumvent filters or to reformat their computers to remove parental controls. Home filters also cannot protect at-risk minors who live in unsafe households or do not have parents who are actively involved in their lives. 116
Notwithstanding the failure of CDA and COPA, the Supreme Court has consistently reinforced the principle that the protection of children is a compelling state interest.117 In some sectors, the arguments against regulating online porn center around the notion that any kid smart enough to circumvent a filter can make his or her own choices, and in any event minors are already surrounded by pornography.
But the right of the state (and parents) to limit minors’ choices is deeply embedded in constitutional law. The law holds that “infants do not have the mental capacity and discretion to protect themselves from the artful designs of adults.”118 For instance, minors do not have the Second Amendment right to bear arms, and a state may require adults to carry the burden of protecting children from guns.119 In Texas, a gun owner is criminally negligent “if a child gains access to a readily dischargeable firearm” and the gun owner “failed to secure the firearm.”120 States also prohibit selling liquor to minors,121 alcohol consumption by minors,122 employing minors during school hours or in hazardous work,123 providing tobacco products to minors,124 permitting minors to use tobacco in a place of business,125 providing certain weapons to minors,126 body piercing or tattooing minors,127 and entering into contracts with minors.128 The Supreme Court reaffirmed that “‘there is a compelling interest in protecting the physical and psychological well-being of minors’ which extend[s] to shielding them from indecent messages that are not obscene by adult standards.”129
The Supreme Court has also articulated a compelling governmental interest in supporting parents’ authority to raise their children in the manner they see fit.130 The government acts on behalf of parents, not in place of them. “Constitutional interpretation has consistently recognized that the parents’ claim to authority in their own household to direct the rearing of their children is basic in the structure of our society.”131 In Prince v. Massachusetts, the Court further added that it “is cardinal with us that the custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents, whose primary function and freedom include preparation for obligations the state can neither supply nor hinder.”132 The government will support parental choices that limit what may be characterized as free speech rights. For example, the state respects parents’ decisions regarding placing their children in private sectarian schools rather than public schools,133 placing them in schools that teach in languages other than English,134 and, at times, taking them out of school altogether.135 “Parents should be the ones to choose whether to expose their children to certain people or ideas.”136 Because the state respects parental authority, it must provide the “support of laws designed to aid [the] discharge of that responsibility.”137 Further, the state assists when “parental control or guidance cannot always be provided.”138 The government has a responsibility to act in a manner that does not impose its morality on children, but rather, that supports “the right of parents to deal with the morals of their children as they see fit.”139 Although some lower courts are suggesting limits on parental control over speech in some instances,140 the Supreme Court has held fast to parental rights, even in upholding a state statute requiring minors to have parental consent (or a judicial override in exceptional circumstances) for an abortion.141 In a 2007 case, the Court again said that the constitutional rights of children in schools differ from those of adults.142
Of course, the First Amendment and the right of free expression must be given great respect by all Americans and by the courts. But it is possible to reach a solution that does not violate First Amendment principles and still provides better protection to children and supports the choice of adults who want to keep pornography out of their homes and businesses. The trail to that solution may be steeper now that both the CDA and COPA were held unconstitutional after a decade of litigation. Thus, Congress needs incentives to make further attempts in the near future to regulate pornography online. Not only has Congress been embarrassed, but much of the dicta and legal precedent set forth in the cases surrounding the CDA and COPA will make it even more difficult for a future statute to pass constitutional muster.143
However, heavy political opposition to any regulation on the Internet is more likely the cause for congressional inaction than are insurmountable legal or constitutional hurdles. First, so many entities make money directly and indirectly from the online porn industry (and other aspects of an unregulated Internet), including a broad web of powerful “legitimate” companies. It is little wonder that those who fight against online protection and accountability are well funded. Second, because the workings of the Internet are still obtuse to most Americans, techies can easily stop discussion by dropping vague allegations about how the Internet (and the innovation of future technology) would be ruined by any regulation. These claims may not be accurate, but they easily intimidate opponents and make politicians reluctant to engage in a battle that (as with most political battles) is fought with sound bites, not complex explanations.
In 2004, President Hinckley observed:
Legal restraints against deviant moral behavior are eroding under legislative enactments and court opinions. This is done in the name of freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of choice in so-called personal matters. But the bitter fruit of these so-called freedoms has been enslavement to debauching habits and behavior that leads only to destruction. A prophet, speaking long ago, aptly described the process when he said, “And thus the devil cheateth their souls, and leadeth them away carefully down to hell” (2 Nephi 28:21).144
The longer parents and families wait in seeking legal support, the harder it will be to reverse the inroads that pornography is making in this legal vacuum.
Other Legal Issues
In addition to the First Amendment concerns, crafting a regulation of Internet content is challenging for other reasons. One difficult problem is dealing with Internet content that originates in foreign countries, presumably outside the jurisdictional reach of U.S. law enforcement and courts.145 This question came up early in the COPA litigation, and the Third Circuit court ultimately found that COPA could not be considered underinclusive simply because it did not address foreign websites.146 In addition, much of the harmful content is published from servers in the United States.147 If the deluge of pornography served from the United States were controllable, other countries may be willing to make and enforce Internet standards for material published within their borders as well.
Another practical problem is the need to draw a line between acceptable and unacceptable content. Statutory application lines are seldom perfect, but we have enforced speech regulations around such lines before. We have a solid basis in existing statutes for wording the concept of unduly harmful material. For instance, Congress has enacted, and the courts have upheld, the definition of “Sexually Explicit Conduct” in various federal statutes, such as 42 U.S.C. § 13031(c)(5), with minimal variations.148 Even the trade organization for the pornography industry cites the § 13031(c)(5) definition in describing what images it will not include in advertisements submitted for its newsletter.149 We also have a solid Supreme Court track record of applying such definitions. The Court has consistently upheld the Miller definition despite the same kinds of objections about drawing a line on “obscenity.”150
Of particular interest is the treatment of the definition in the COPA litigation. The COPA definition is the classic three-prong test adopted by the Supreme Court in Miller v. California,151 but it asks an adult juror to determine what is prurient, offensive, or of overriding worth with respect to a minor rather than an adult.152 It relies on a local “community standard.” A similar minor-targeted version of the Miller definition was upheld in Ginsberg v. New York with respect to sales of harmful material to minors in a non-Internet context.153 Moreover, on the first appeal of COPA to the Supreme Court, the Court upheld COPA’s definition against a challenge that a community standard test was unworkable in the Internet context.154
Also informative is that, on remand from a second Supreme Court appeal, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania easily recognized what content fits the COPA definition. In ACLU v. Gonzales, the court freely uses the term “sexually explicit,” as well as “adult” and sometimes “harmful to minors,” to describe the material covered by COPA’s definition.155 The Gonzales Findings of Fact, Section E, is titled, “Sexually Explicit Materials Available on the Web.”156 In that section alone, the opinion identifies, classifies, and categorizes “sexually explicit,” “material,” “Web pages,” and “sites” dozens of times.157 The court summarizes the court-appointed experts’ reports filed in the case in terms of separately identifiable “sexually explicit” or “adult” material.158
The Findings of Fact were used by the court as reliable evidence of the reach and applicability of COPA. Thus, this opinion, as well as the expert reports relied upon, stands or falls on the ability of the court and the experts to “know it when [they] see it” and wrap it up in the phrase “sexually explicit,” a phrase repeatedly used in federal law.159 The experts must have believed that the COPA definitions are easily identifiable and thus legitimately the basis for the precise numerical studies accepted by the court.
Although the Gonzales court was truly hostile to COPA, the opinion proves that even critics can understand and apply the COPA definition of “Harmful to Minors.” The Gonzales opinion also shows that jurors and Web publishers can be expected to understand what a definition of “Harmful to Minors” means.
What We Can Do
At this point in the campaign, many feel like the armies of Israel—“dismayed, and greatly afraid” (1 Sam. 17:11). However, we are not defenseless in our battle against pornography. We are armed with a sling and various stones in our bag (1 Sam. 17:49–50). These stones include viable and constitutional legal solutions, consumer pressure, political and social involvement, education, and personal righteousness.
Constitutional Legislation
Although Congress’s previous attempts at legislating Internet pornography have been unsuccessful, that does not mean that any act seeking to regulate the Internet must necessarily fail. I discuss here two possible approaches—combining technology, industry, and law—that offer regulatory schemes that could withstand constitutional scrutiny.
Zoning
Internet zoning is one example of a constitutional way to regulate Internet content. The particular zoning scheme that I refer to is called the CP80 Internet Community Ports Concept, and the proposed accompanying legislation is referred to as the Internet Community Ports Act (ICPA).160
To understand the concept of zoning, one needs at least a basic level of knowledge of how the Internet operates and, in particular, how users browse the Internet by looking at and requesting information from Web page publishers. I will attempt to give a concise technical explanation below, but for purposes of an overview explanation for those with little exposure to the mechanics of the Internet, perhaps the simplest (although technically flawed and imprecise) analogy is to cable television channels. If Internet content were organized into channels, a parent could choose to block access to Internet pornography just as easily as he or she blocks unwanted cable-television channels—by simply calling his or her cable provider and requesting that the unwanted channel be shut off from the digital feed to his or her receiver.
Over sixty-five thousand ports or channels for the transmission of information currently exist in cyberspace.161 Most traffic now travels over ten to twenty of these ports. The default, or primary, range includes port 80, over which the vast majority of current Web traffic passes, and port 25, over which most email traffic currently passes. The government and military use a range of secured ports, and technology experts can redirect their Internet access to another range of ports designated by numbers. However, the vast majority of these ports are unused.
The Ports Concept assumes that ranges of ports could be assigned to different purposes. One port group would be designated as the general commercial range—the Ports Concept calls this range the Community Ports. The decency standards for this range of ports would be similar to the standards now applicable in the real world for areas of public traffic, such as streets, buses, and malls. Another range of ports would be designated as Open Ports. Any legal content, including legal pornography, could be transmitted over Open Ports under the Ports Concept. Internet Service Providers (ISPs) can easily sort the two types of ports with free software.162
This proposed zoning of content regulates the means of delivery of Internet pornography by separating it at the source rather than blocking it. Thus, with Internet content zoned into different Internet ports, consumers can easily and definitively choose which channels (in this case, ports) they want to access or block through their Internet service in their home or office, just as they do with cable television. If a consumer chooses Community Ports, access to content on Open Ports is impossible, rather than subject to imperfect computer-installed filters, which users can hack past, circumvent, or disable, and which must be regularly updated and monitored. Furthermore, this approach resolves potential First Amendment concerns by allowing Internet users to select content at the receiving end while not criminalizing speech at the source.163
I discuss at length elsewhere the constitutional implications of an ICPA-based regulation.164 In summary, ICPA provides a legally viable option because (1) the government has compelling interests in protecting children from harmful material, protecting parents’ rights to decide what their children access, and protecting the privacy of those who own real property and wish to exclude some forms of speech; and (2) ICPA is narrowly tailored to achieve those compelling interests because there are no restraints made prior to the speech taking place, it is an opt-in choice for consumers, and ICPA leaves more than reasonable alternatives for publishing adult speech.
Electronic Labeling and Choice
Even without the enforcement power of an accompanying statute, zoning (or its equivalent) could still occur on a voluntary basis if Internet content publishers would label their sites according to the type of content contained on the Web pages.165 Once sites rate their content, ISPs could provide packages to consumers based on consumer rating preferences. As with the zoning described above, this kind of content management is preferable to filters because users cannot simply circumnavigate the filter at a weak moment if the filtering is happening at the ISP level and the content is not coming into the home at all.
Industry self-regulation through labels has been suggested before. After the Senate passed the CDA, the House passed the Internet Freedom and Family Empowerment Act,166 suggesting website labels as an alternative. Shortly thereafter, the World Wide Web Consortium, an international policy group,167 announced the release of Platform for Internet Content Selection (PICS).168 PICS provided an infrastructure for content labeling that was intended to permit self-regulation. With PICS, a simple software code was invisibly embedded in content served on the Web. The coded “tags” would identify a range of characteristics of the content.169 Internet users could then program individual browsers or filters to block certain categories of content.
Representative Anna Eshoo (D–Calif.) proposed improvements to the CDA in the form of the Online Parental Control Act shortly after the PICS technology was finished.170 Her bill substituted “harmful to minors” for the “decency” language in the CDA and specifically mentioned PICS as a mechanism that would allow the enforcement of the “harmful to minors” standard.171 At the time of Eshoo’s bill, however, the original CDA was “on the fast track to a Supreme Court challenge.”172 Members of Congress had little interest in revisiting the issue.
In Reno v. ACLU, when the Supreme Court rejected the CDA, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, joined by Justice William Rehnquist, seemed to encourage the further development and use of PICS in the United States. She described such a technology:
Gateway technology is not ubiquitous in cyberspace, and because without it “there is no means of age verification,” cyberspace still remains largely unzoned—and unzoneable. . . . User-based zoning is also in its infancy. For it to be effective, (i) an agreed-upon code (or “tag”) would have to exist; (ii) screening software or browsers with screening capabilities would have to be able to recognize the “tag”; and (iii) those programs would have to be widely available—and widely used—by Internet users.173
But she regretted that “at present, none of these conditions is true.” Although acknowledging that the CDA and the Internet had to be evaluated as they were presented to the Court, she stated encouragingly that “the prospects for the eventual zoning of the Internet appear promising.”174
In July 1997, President Bill Clinton brought executives from high-tech groups together to discuss new methods of resolving the issue of material that was harmful to minors.175 Reportedly, Clinton, along with members of the industry, coalesced around the idea of a Web rating system based on PICS software similar to the United Kingdom’s RSACi.176 Those involved claimed agreement to a commitment to “mak[e] the Internet ‘family-friendly’ without government regulation” by “giving parents a ‘virtual toolbox’ filled with already existing filtering technology bolstered by law enforcement.”177 Many commercial interests, especially the major news agencies, were opposed to this type of regulation.178
For a while, the ICRA/PICS approach generated some enthusiasm. But in 2006, operators of commercial sites with sexually explicit material attacked a proposed amendment to a telecom reform bill that required some form of mandatory labeling of adult websites.179 While the Association of Sites Advocating Child Protection (ASACP), whose members include Playboy.com, Hustler.com, and other smaller adult websites, claimed to support voluntary self-regulation based on labeling, no serious effort to adopt labeling has surfaced.
I point out these approaches—zoning and labeling—to illustrate that legal solutions within constitutional mandates are possible. I do not suggest that either are perfect solutions or that they easily resolve all practical complexities. A workable solution may take some creativity and innovation, both in terms of technological application and legal structure. But dialogue about how to address the problem should not be abandoned because of any notion that it is not possible to satisfy the First Amendment. The current cause of inaction is not primarily legal, but political. American parents, foundations for the protection of children, and primary educators are not creating the political pressure necessary to motivate legislators to stand up to the well-funded lobbyists representing pornography suppliers and investors, who aim to ensure future profits without serious obligations to conform or risk liability. Moreover, many child-focused groups, similar to most politicians, are still not well enough informed and tech savvy to challenge the claims of technological impossibility, no matter how poorly founded.
As we build up enough unified political pressure, other options for more quickly taking action are available. Of course, we need to examine our own relationship with Internet temptation and we need to support others in seeking and providing addiction recovery help. We must be vigilant in training and supervising our own children and grandchildren. In addition to these actions, public-minded individuals can help with the effort to reach a preventive solution.
Become Involved
Do not let pornography’s apparent stronghold on our society deter you. You may be surprised at what a big difference a few people can make in the political process or the commercial landscape. “Wherefore, be not weary in well-doing, for ye are laying the foundation of a great work. And out of small things proceedeth that which is great. Behold, the Lord requireth the heart and a willing mind” (D&C 64:33–34). Even in the 1970s, President Kimball encouraged the Saints to become involved: “Members of the Church everywhere are urged to not only resist the widespread plague of pornography, but as citizens to become actively and relentlessly engaged in the fight against this insidious enemy of humanity around the world.”180 Lawyers and nonlawyers alike have powerful tools to address this social problem, even without legislation. For instance, we as paying consumers can insist on more choices in how we use the Internet. We can send a clear message to service providers, Web businesses, advertisers, and other companies that we will, to the greatest extent possible, spend our consumer dollar to support only businesses that do not capitalize on pornography. We can become better educated about technology and how it works, about the political and legal process, and about the economic forces behind the pornography production and delivery industries. We can remind our elected representatives that we are still expecting efforts to reach legislative solutions to protect children and give adults effective options to keep offensive material out.
“Lawmaking bodies will listen to effectively organized citizens. However, too often the trend is tragically toward citizen apathy and a sense of futility.”181 Do not assume that you are in the minority with your views. There are thousands of parents and concerned citizens, many of whom are not LDS, who also feel that pornography is a destructive force. President Gordon B. Hinckley warned of the danger of giving in to a vocal minority:
I am not one to advocate shouting defiantly or shaking fists and issuing threats in the faces of legislators. But I am one who believes that we should earnestly and sincerely and positively express our convictions to those given the heavy responsibility of making and enforcing our laws. The sad fact is that the minority who call for greater liberalization, who peddle and devour pornography, who encourage and feed on licentious display make their voices heard until those in our legislatures may come to believe that what they say represents the will of the majority. We are not likely to get that which we do not speak up for. 182
As the amount of pornography is expanding exponentially, it is also becoming increasingly accessible, affordable, and acceptable. An industry that was once relegated to dark corners and shadowy streets now is a click away on the Internet. The battle to get recognition of its harmful effects and to insist on some legal protection is going on right now, and the Lord needs his Saints to fight it. “Discipleship is not a spectator sport.”183
Purveyors of pornography seek to legitimize their trade as freedom of expression under the First Amendment. To a large extent they have been successful in their attempts, to the point that images of child sexual abuse, so long as it is produced without the involvement of a real child, is material that adults have a constitutional right to make and consume.184 However, relevant legal precedent and compelling government interests may be harnessed, and a constitutional solution is not impossible. While Congress’s attempts at regulation have thus far been unsuccessful, there are promising legal avenues remaining, as well as important actions that can be taken by individuals. Strategies such as zoning the Internet or requiring publishers to label online content could produce effective results without running afoul of the First Amendment. Writing to and encouraging local legislators will facilitate the development of solutions. In the meantime, we must also educate ourselves and our children about the evils of pornography, learn how to keep pornography out of our homes and lives, and encourage others to do the same.
Fortunately, along with the warnings of the prophets come messages of encouragement and promises of success. Although “the moral footings of society continue to slip”185 and those who safeguard those footings often suffer persecution, the Lord has commanded us, “Be of good cheer, and do not fear, for I the Lord am with you, and will stand by you” (D&C 68:6). We are assured that making “the gospel of Jesus Christ the center of [our] lives . . . will not remove our troubles from us but rather will enable us to face our challenges, to meet them head on, and to emerge victorious.”186