Porn inspectors: adult industry fights tight rules.Attorney General Alberto Gonzales For the New York Yankees infielder, see . Alberto Gonzales (born August 4 1955) is an American jurist who served as the 80th Attorney General of the United States. Gonzales was appointed to the post in February 2005 by President George W. Bush. is eager to keep a closer eye on porn--and this is one time the adult entertainment industry would prefer a smaller audience. The Free Speech Coalition, a trade association for producers and distributors of adult content, wants to block expanded record keeping requirements known as "2257 rules," after the section of the criminal code in which they're found--that they say place unreasonable burdens on their businesses. The rules require producers to keep records verifying that all their performers are of legal age to appear in adult movies or magazines. But in June, based on a new interpretation of the original 1990 statute, the Justice Department extended those requirements to "secondary producers" (such as Web sites that host adult content), demanded that more extensive records be kept for longer periods of time, and announced that it would do random inspections of those records. Violators face up to five years in prison for a first offense, 10 for subsequent offenses. A Justice Department press release claims the rules "are crucial to preventing children from being exploited by the production of pornography pornography Depiction of erotic behaviour intended to cause sexual excitement. The word originally signified any work of art or literature depicting the life of prostitutes. ." But Free Speech Coalition Communications Director Tom Hymes argues that "the point of these regulations is certainly not to protect children or minors, because it will not do that. The purpose can only be a punitive pu·ni·tive adj. Inflicting or aiming to inflict punishment; punishing. [Medieval Latin p n one, to create burdens that are so onerous on·er·ous adj. 1. Troublesome or oppressive; burdensome. See Synonyms at burdensome. 2. Law Entailing obligations that exceed advantages. on this industry that lots of people are driven out of business." Smaller producers and distributors, he points out, will be especially burdened. Individuals who stream webcam images of themselves over the Internet, for example, may find it prohibitively pro·hib·i·tive also pro·hib·i·to·ry adj. 1. Prohibiting; forbidding: took prohibitive measures. 2. expensive to preserve copies of all the content they transmit. And many performers may be wary of giving their personal information--including real names and addresses--to every "secondary producer" who hosts their work. From a legal perspective, the Free Speech Coalition argues that the restrictions amount to a prior restraint Government prohibition of speech in advance of publication. One of the fundamental rights guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is the freedom from prior restraint. on constitutionally protected speech, that many of the rules are unworkably vague, and that the inspection provisions--which for small producers may entail entail, in law, restriction of inheritance to a limited class of descendants for at least several generations. The object of entail is to preserve large estates in land from the disintegration that is caused by equal inheritance by all the heirs and by the ordinary visits to private homes--offend the Fourth Amendment. |
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