果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Victory for Internet Expression at UCF

CREDIT (Jillian Cain Photography/Shutterstock, Inc.)

罢辞诲补测鈥檚 press release announces a victory for free speech on the Internet at the University of Central Florida (UCF). Last September, UCF student Matthew Walston created a group on the popular site Facebook.com called 鈥淰ictor Perez is a Jerk and a Fool.鈥 At the time, Perez was running for UCF student senate. Walston鈥檚 relatively tame comments inspired Perez to submit a complaint, and Walston was brought up on charges of harassment and personal abuse. After FIREwrote a letter to UCF administrators on Walston鈥檚 behalf, a hearing board found Walston 鈥not in violation鈥 of the personal abuse and harassment regulations.

As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Greg Lukianoff stated in the press release,

This case is an excellent demonstration of the perils of vague and overbroad speech codes on college campuses鈥. By having a policy banning 鈥減ersonal abuse,鈥 UCF made it possible for a student to be dragged through a ludicrous, months-long disciplinary process for calling someone a 鈥渏erk鈥 online.

[ . . . ]

Facebook.com presents a worrisome opportunity for administrations to keep track of the 鈥渙ffensive speech鈥 of their students like never before, extending the reach of unconstitutional speech codes deep into cyberspace. FIREneed to know that university administrators and police are also on Facebook.com and may be monitoring their activities鈥. A good rule of thumb for students is that posting something on the Internet is no less public than posting it on a billboard. Your privacy is not assured.

FIRE is seeing an increasing trend toward university and police monitoring of Facebook.com and other, similar websites. Walston鈥檚 exoneration represents an important victory for freedom of expression on the Internet for university students. Unfortunately, as Greg stated, universities鈥 attempts to control student expression on popular college websites continue with no end in sight. FIREwill continue to monitor this critical arena of free expression to defend the premise that on the Internet, just as in their dorms or apartments, the First Amendment still protects the rights of state college and university students.

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share