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Regulating bloggers: free speech on the Web.


THE LIBERAL blog Daily Kos Daily Kos (IPA: /koʊs/) is an American political blog, publishing news and opinion from a progressive point of view.  and its conservative counterpart RedState don't agree on much, but last March they joined virtual hands to protect the Internet from the Federal Election Commission (FEC See forward error correction.

FEC - Forward Error Correction
).

The agency had originally concluded that the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act's rules pertaining per·tain  
intr.v. per·tained, per·tain·ing, per·tains
1. To have reference; relate: evidence that pertains to the accident.

2.
 to "public communications" had been intended to apply to media such as television, where the volume of your voice is closely linked to the size of your wallet, and not to the Internet. But a 2004 district court ruling required the agency to develop specific rules for the Net, raising the possibility that bloggers could be subject to onerous spending restrictions, disclosure requirements, and FEC investigations. Liberal, conservative, and libertarian lib·er·tar·i·an  
n.
1. One who advocates maximizing individual rights and minimizing the role of the state.

2. One who believes in free will.



[From liberty.
 bloggers joined in protest.

Most of the protesters seemed satisfied at the end of March, when the FEe unanimously approved new rules for cyberspace Coined by William Gibson in his 1984 novel "Neuromancer," it is a futuristic computer network that people use by plugging their minds into it! The term now refers to the Internet or to the online or digital world in general. See Internet and virtual reality. Contrast with meatspace. , clarifying that paid ads on third-party Web sites would be subject to campaign-finance restrictions but exempting most other Internet speech from such rules. But former FEC Commissioner Bradley Smith argues that it would be better to codify codify to arrange and label a system of laws.  the Net exemption in statute rather than let the commission rely on its own rulemaking. "The 'reform community' was willing to give up almost anything to preserve the principle that the FEC could regulate the Internet, that no form of political speech would remain unregulated," says Smith. The current rules may give online speech wide latitude, he warns, but now the regulators have "got their nose in the tent."
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Author:Sanchez, Julian
Publication:Reason
Article Type:Brief article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2006
Words:244
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