A Seattle library is in news for not removing a man who watched porn movies on library's computers.
According to reports, when library's patron Julie Howe saw the man watching porn movies, she asked him to shift to another system, but the man refused to do so. Howe informed the librarian, but the librarian refused to act.
Reuters
A Seattle library is in news for not removing a man who watches porn movies happily on library computers.
Related Articles
Dow wins $2.16 billion in Kuwait arbitration
EU Court Rejects MasterCard Claim That Fees Benefit Consumers
EU court to rule on $1.1 billion Microsoft fine on June 27
Related Topics
Howe wrote an email stating, " She [the librarian] could see the porn site on the screen from her information desk where she was standing and was sympathetic that library could not censor the content."
However, a spokesperson for the Seattle Public Library said, "We're a library and we facilitate access to all the one who visits. We don't tell people what they can view and what not. We can't say that you know. First amendment is protecting the freedom of speech. We can't censor it's not our business."
In 2010, the Washington State Supreme Court ruled in a 6-3 decision: "A public library traditionally historically enjoyed broad discretion to select materials to add to its collection of printed materials for its patrons use. We are making the same discretion available in the public library to choose right content from internet and make available to patrons."
Must Read
Like us on Facebook
The ruling came when the American Civil Liberties Union sued a library in rural Missouri for constitutional violations after a community member had complained to the rights group that she had been denied access to astrology and witchcraft websites.
When she was reminded of the court ruling, Howe said she very well knew what freedom of speech laws talked about.
Howe, who seemed to be quite hurt by the incident, wrote further, "I had spoken extensively to the library about the incident clearly and also with Police and local representatives. The man right was acceptable as per constitutional law ( which I am not arguing with), but what about our right which goes unknown even thou we are not deliberately into that."
Another patron Jessica Christensen said, "Talking too loudly is not possible in Seattle Public Libraries as you may be asked to calm down and not distract others, you know they watch pornography".
Follow us on LinkedIn
LinkedIn
Popular Multimedia
Phillip Phillips: Things You Need to Know, His Girlfriend and His Victory at the American Idol [PHOTOS & VIDEO]
Aishwarya Rai To Attend Cannes 2012 Amidst Baby Weight Gain Controversy [PHOTOS]
Top Ten Happiest Countries in the World in 2012 [SLIDESHOW]
World’s Largest Pool, The Crystal Lagoon Chile, Wows Guests At San Alfonso Del Mar Resort [PHOTOS]
UK
China
South Korea
Japan