The city of Boston has apparently banned the Boing Boing weblog from its free, city-wide WiFi network.
Boing Boing of course was Ground Zero for blogosphere ridicule of the city's overreaction to the Great Mooninite Scare of '07.
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The city of Boston has apparently banned the Boing Boing weblog from its free, city-wide WiFi network.
Boing Boing of course was Ground Zero for blogosphere ridicule of the city's overreaction to the Great Mooninite Scare of '07.
Rob | April 21, 2007, 3:16pm | #
I knew that title sounded vaguely familiar... down with BoingBoing!JK | April 21, 2007, 5:13pm | #
Shortly the Boston police will notice the R2D2 mailboxes. Can't wait for them to arrest the Postmaster General.Steven Andrew Miller | April 21, 2007, 7:33pm | #
It amazes me that so many of the people who are bend out of shape over Bush & Co. listening in on overseas phones calls to terrorists are the same to push for gov't controlled internet access. Government controlled internet access that will drive private internet access out of business.Hugh Akston | April 21, 2007, 7:38pm | #
I don't think so, Deus. The First Amendment reads "Congress shall make no law... etc. etc." meaning that the federal gov't is restricted in its ability to restrict speech. Most SCOTUS' have interpreted that to apply to state and local gov'ts as well, but its not a slam dunk.Paul | April 21, 2007, 8:17pm | #
Hugh:damaged justice | April 21, 2007, 9:05pm | #
Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of self-absorbed, oh-so superior bunch of folks. I'll take Memepool over those arrogant, self-righteous blowhard fucktards any day.DADIODADDY | April 21, 2007, 10:28pm | #
ah mumbles...the man who put the hack in hack politician...what a maroon...Uggh | April 21, 2007, 11:04pm | #
Its high time for the citizens of Boston to have another party... dress up like ninja warriors (blame the Japanese) and toss the City-owned Wifi radios into the harbor.Seth Finkelstein | April 22, 2007, 3:56am | #
Sigh ... It's a just that the site triggered a prohibited phrase in the censorware.Jennifer | April 22, 2007, 10:05am | #
Goddamned Internet filters. I remember the stupid filter at school when I was teaching: no accessing sites with Latin quotes because the word "cum" set off the filter, no accessing sites dedicated to Emily Dickinson because some of her poems talked about Teh Sex. . . in other words, the filter made the Internet largely useless for anyone trying to do the sort of online research you'd expect from an English- or humanities-major type.LarryA | April 22, 2007, 10:29am | #
Jennifer, at least you won't be arrested and sentenced to 40 years if you trip some popup bomb.mccleary | April 22, 2007, 10:38am | #
dj:Warren | April 22, 2007, 11:18am | #
LarryA... The government is really into "protecting" people. The FCC says you can't broadcast certain words and certain pictures. It says it's protecting citizens. But I'm sitting in my home with DirecTV and can watch whatever I want. I can afford the best pornography--laser-disc porn! The government's not protecting me from anything.
All the government's doing is discriminating against poor people. It thinks poor people are like cows, that poor people can't think straight: If we let them hear dirty words or see dirty pictures, there's going to be madness! If you're poor and all you can afford is a 12-inch black-and-white TV and can't pay for cable--you're so protected! You'd probably be happier if you could see some pornography, a pair of titties, once in a while on free TV. But a pair of titties on free TV? The government figures if you saw that, you'd just explode!
A good point there. I don't think the link between titties and a free society can be stressed enough.
Sigh. | April 22, 2007, 12:06pm | #
But a pair of titties on free TV? The government figures if you saw that, you'd just explode!ed | April 22, 2007, 2:59pm | #
With government largess comes sticky strings.crimethink | April 22, 2007, 3:30pm | #
Jennifer,John Rhoads | April 22, 2007, 3:33pm | #
FYI: Freedom of speech is covered by the Massachusetts state constitution (and most state constitutions) so whether the national provision applies to the states is irrelevant in this case.miche | April 22, 2007, 5:14pm | #
From what I read the Boston plan was paid for by private money and is managed by a non-profit. Apparently the idea was to drive down cost of broadband service.Boston's proposal aims to reduce the price of broadband Internet access for city residents from an average of roughly $40 a month to $15 by having the nonprofit act as a wholesale seller of network capacity to existing sellers of Internet access. Those companies could offer low-cost or free ad-supported online connections.I assume that you could still buy your own service and not deal with filters.
City officials hope that even if some Internet providers don't participate, they would face pressure to cut prices for the existing services.
Deus | April 22, 2007, 9:34pm | #
Reason was a banned site. It was banned for pornography and hate speech.Why does Argentina hate the Pillow Girl?
Hobolawstudent | April 22, 2007, 9:41pm | #
I wouldn't worry too much about anything being banned from Boston's free public Wi-Fi.Eric the .5b | April 22, 2007, 10:27pm | #
Live by the gushing for icky-corporation-free wifi, due by the icky-corporation-free wifi.Paul | April 22, 2007, 11:42pm | #
no accessing sites with Latin quotes because the word "cum" set off the filter,highnumber | April 23, 2007, 12:54am | #
Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of self-absorbed, oh-so superior bunch of folks.JohnD | April 23, 2007, 8:39am | #
My fiancée is an elementry school principal.Russ 2000 | April 23, 2007, 10:04am | #
Jennifer's post reminds me that Boston's best public prep school is Boston Latin School. So good luck to the Boston Latin students trying to do some web research for their required Latin classes.downstater | April 23, 2007, 10:20am | #
the real purpose of "free" wi-fi is to provide another essential service the city can hire employees to run and dun taxpayers to pay for.