Parents supremely concerned
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Jeff Benson
Mothers are concerned with Tuesday’s U.S. Supreme Court decision not
to penalize websites that make pornography available to children. But
it’s the sites’ persistence in their online marketing that gets them
really steamed.
“I don’t receive pornography through the U.S. mail, so I don’t
want it through our e-mail,” said Jill Money, PTA president at Corona
del Mar High School. “It’s an uninvited intruder.”
A 5 to 4 Supreme Court vote blocked Congress’ latest attempt
Tuesday to get a law passed that would’ve imposed a $50,000 daily
penalty on commercial Internet sites that refuse to steer their
sexual material toward an older audience.
In 1999, the district court blocked enforcement of the Child
Online Protection Act, citing an unsubstantiated need. The onus was
instead put on parents to limit their children’s exposure to the
sexually explicit online material. More than five years later, that’s
still the case.
Newport-Mesa parents said they’d like a balance of parental
supervision and government intervention when dealing with their
children’s exposure to sensitive material.
“I respect the free speech element of the Supreme Court decision,
but it’s sad that we can’t do more to protect our children,” Money
said.
Money, who has children ages 19, 16 and 12, said she keeps the
family computer in a place where she can personally supervise what
her kids are doing but still gets frustrated whenever any of them
receive spam e-mail soliciting lewd material.
Katherine Mielke, Newport Beach Public Library’s marketing
specialist who has a 19 and 16-year-old, said her family has
experienced problems with filtering inappropriate material sent their
way for years.
“These things keep coming and keep multiplying,” Mielke said.
“They try to get you to view pornography, even though you don’t want
it. It really makes it difficult for a parent, even one who’s
vigilant.”
Money and Mielke both said it’s difficult for their children to
access necessary websites for school-related projects because the
filters and firewalls on their computers also restrict some
information.
“What bothers me about it is that these companies will find a way
to get it to the kids,” Newport Heights PTA President Terry Torres
said. “They’ll find a niche in the market to get it to them. That’s
what the Supreme Court doesn’t take into consideration, and that’s
what bothers me. There’s no form for companies to properly market.”
Costa Mesa resident Hydee Beth’s children, who are 9, 7, 4 and 1,
aren’t yet at spammers’ target age. But she, too, has trouble
navigating the Web with her kids due to her computer’s Internet
blockers, effective but “inconvenient” tools designed to keep out
violent, obscene and sexually explicit material.
“There are certain sites [my children] try to go to but they’re
blocked through [America Online],” she said. “For my son, there are
some things I think would be OK for him to see, but I have to use my
screen name. If I’m not there to put him through, he can’t get
through.”
Most of the parents also hope a Supreme Court ruling to further
restrict access will be delivered in the near future.
Supreme Court justices Anthony M. Kennedy, Ruth Bader Ginsburg,
David Souter, John Paul Stevens and Clarence Thomas voted against the
law, favoring filters and allowing parents to decide whether to block
out questionable material.
Kennedy said he felt the government most likely undermined the
abilities parents would have to filter out explicit material stemming
from overseas Web companies, which aren’t regulated by the same
domestic Internet bylaws.
“Filtering software, of course, is not a perfect solution to the
problem of children gaining access to harmful-to-minors materials,”
Kennedy said. “It may block some materials that are not harmful to
minors and fail to catch some that are.
“Whatever the deficiencies of filters, however, the government
failed to introduce specific evidence proving that existing
technologies are less effective than the restrictions in [the Child
Online Protection Act].”
* JEFF BENSON is the news assistant and may be reached at (949)
574-4298 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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