An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography

Drawing on and expanding previous graduate course research, this paper investigated and analyzed public libraries’ policies regarding patron use of legal, visual Internet pornography on public computers. Pornographic imagery that falls within legal boundaries is protected by the First Amendment. Inc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Edlund Hannah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2020-05-01
Series:Open Information Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2020-0005
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spelling doaj-8a3536b6389144c19549312aee3f9ad62021-09-05T20:51:21ZengDe GruyterOpen Information Science2451-17812020-05-0141587410.1515/opis-2020-0005opis-2020-0005An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornographyEdlund Hannah0University of Washington iSchool, MLIS Candidate, 5240 Jefferson St., Houston, TX 77023, United StatesDrawing on and expanding previous graduate course research, this paper investigated and analyzed public libraries’ policies regarding patron use of legal, visual Internet pornography on public computers. Pornographic imagery that falls within legal boundaries is protected by the First Amendment. Incidents of, and library responses to, pornography viewing are not a new issue and have caused turmoil across the field of library and information science. In an attempt to understand the problem, the research question asks: how do public libraries respond to patrons viewing legal Internet pornography, while upholding First Amendment rights as well as the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) and other legal requirements? Libraries tread a fine line to protect First Amendment rights, respect community laws, and uphold CIPA. Research indicated that responding to Internet pornography use in public libraries is heavily dependent on individual, community and library values. Policies are more likely to prohibit patrons from accessing Internet pornography, and most libraries have at least some Internet filtering software restricting what content may be accessed on public use computers. However, evidence also suggests that regardless of policy or filters, library staff will at some point encounter a patron accessing Internet pornography.https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2020-0005children’s internet protection act (cipa)internet pornographyfirst amendmentinternet filterspublic libraries
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Edlund Hannah
spellingShingle Edlund Hannah
An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
Open Information Science
children’s internet protection act (cipa)
internet pornography
first amendment
internet filters
public libraries
author_facet Edlund Hannah
author_sort Edlund Hannah
title An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
title_short An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
title_full An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
title_fullStr An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of American public libraries’ policies on patron use of Internet pornography
title_sort analysis of american public libraries’ policies on patron use of internet pornography
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Information Science
issn 2451-1781
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Drawing on and expanding previous graduate course research, this paper investigated and analyzed public libraries’ policies regarding patron use of legal, visual Internet pornography on public computers. Pornographic imagery that falls within legal boundaries is protected by the First Amendment. Incidents of, and library responses to, pornography viewing are not a new issue and have caused turmoil across the field of library and information science. In an attempt to understand the problem, the research question asks: how do public libraries respond to patrons viewing legal Internet pornography, while upholding First Amendment rights as well as the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA) and other legal requirements? Libraries tread a fine line to protect First Amendment rights, respect community laws, and uphold CIPA. Research indicated that responding to Internet pornography use in public libraries is heavily dependent on individual, community and library values. Policies are more likely to prohibit patrons from accessing Internet pornography, and most libraries have at least some Internet filtering software restricting what content may be accessed on public use computers. However, evidence also suggests that regardless of policy or filters, library staff will at some point encounter a patron accessing Internet pornography.
topic children’s internet protection act (cipa)
internet pornography
first amendment
internet filters
public libraries
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opis-2020-0005
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