Things that caught our eye

The Role of Companies in Addressing Online Threats

4 Dec, 2014   | by:

Tackling a perhaps less addressed aspect of Elonis case, raises the question of social media companies’ role in addressing threats on their platforms.  Citron’s new book “Hate Crimes in Cyberspace” analyzes key issues around how law could move forward in handling free speech challenges and distributing responsibility between schools, parents and Silicon Valley.  You can read more on the aftermath of Supreme Court’s December 1st hearing on NYT’s Room for Debate.

, Freedom of Expression,

Things that caught our eye

The Elonis Case: Online Death Threats and Free Speech

25 Nov, 2014   | by:

On December 1st, the US Supreme Court will hear Elonis’ First Amendment challenge to his conviction. Elonis had spent three years in prison after posting death threats to his wife on Facebook. While “true threats” are an exception to the rule against criminalizing speech, Elonis argues his posts do not constitute “true threats” because he did not intend to hurt his wife: the aggressive lyrics he posted had a cathartic function for him. Emily Bazelon, senior research fellow at Yale Law School and well-known writer on the topic of online harassment, discusses what is at stake with this decision in her post on the New York Times Magazine.

,

Things that caught our eye

MobileForceField: UK Startup Launches World’s First Child Cyberbullying Interception App

6 Oct, 2014   | by:

In search of tech solutions to behavioral problems, a group of fathers with an IT background from the UK developed an Android app that controls which apps children download on their smartphones, in an effort to prevent cyberbullying. Perhaps more controversially, the app filters out “inappropriate and offensive phrases” that a child might receive in text messages. Wondering about free speech and privacy implications? You can read more about it here.

, ,