Deck 16: Legal Controls and Freedom of Expression

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Question
The Miller v. California case established a national standard for obscenity that is the same for all communities in the United States.
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Question
In 1912, federal law outlawed the transportation of boxing movies across state lines-not because they were violent but because there had been a black heavyweight boxing champion since 1908.
Question
Parodies and insults of public figures are protected from libel suits unless the statements cause undue emotional pain.
Question
The Supreme Court has defined censorship as prior restraint of speech.
Question
For the first half of the twentieth century, local and state film review boards were considered constitutional.
Question
Most of the world's population now lives in countries where the press is free.
Question
Defamation that is broadcast is considered slander because it is spoken rather than written.
Question
Public speech that causes someone damage or actual injury is libelous, even if the speech in question is true.
Question
The Sedition Act strengthened First Amendment protections for citizens.
Question
If a soon-to-be-released article seems to violate libel or obscenity laws, most U.S. courts would act to stop publication.
Question
Libel is a right guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Question
Appropriating a writer's or artist's words or music without consent or payment is a form of expression that is not protected as speech.
Question
Movies released in the United States are required by federal law to be labeled with an MPAA
movie rating.
Question
Motion pictures have been defined as free speech by the U.S. Supreme Court since 1915.
Question
Students who quote and cite a copyrighted source in a term paper for class are technically violating the law.
Question
Only after the Sedition Act expired in 1801 did Americans broadly support the idea of a free press.
Question
The United States follows a libertarian model of free expression and free press.
Question
There is no federal shield law for journalists in the United States.
Question
Reporters need to be careful about printing accusations made by attorneys in a court of law in case a suspect is later found ''not guilty.''
Question
Ordinary citizens have more privacy protection under U.S. law than politicians or other public figures.
Question
In twentieth-century Supreme Court decisions, the print media and broadcast media received the same First Amendment protections.
Question
Which of the following is not characteristic of the libertarian model for expression and speech?

A) Tolerance for the expression of everything, from pornography to advocacy of anarchy
B) Encouraging vigorous government criticism
C) A great deal of trust in citizens' ability to distinguish truth from falsehood
D) Arguing that the mass media have grown too powerful and need to become more socially responsible or face some sort of government regulation
E) All of the options are characteristics of the libertarian model.
Question
When the movie rating system began in the late 1960s, the G, PG, PG-13, R, X, and NC-17 ratings were all developed at that time and put immediately into place.
Question
State leaders believe the press should serve the goals of the state in the model.

A) authoritarian
B) communist
C) libertarian
D) social responsibility
E) seditious
Question
The notion of the press working as the Fourth Estate, or as watchdog over the government, is contained in which model of speech and expression?

A) Authoritarian
B) Communist (or state)
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Antiquarian
Question
Newspapers are not required by law to give individuals an opportunity to reply to an editorial attack.
Question
Since its debut in 1990, the NC-17 movie rating has been a commercially successful rating for films with adult content.
Question
Which model of expression tolerates all forms of speech, including pornography?

A) Authoritarian
B) State model
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Communitarian
Question
Which model of the press is most often associated with today's mainstream U.S. news media?

A) Authoritarian
B) Communist
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Seditious
Question
Compared with most other nations, the United States has freedom of speech, religious tolerance, and press freedom.

A) a little less
B) a little more
C) a lot more
D) a lot less
E) about the same
Question
The FCC can fine broadcast stations any amount it sees fit for indecent incidents.
Question
Print and broadcast media are not treated equally under the First Amendment.
Question
Currently, both print journalists and broadcasters need federal licenses to operate their businesses.
Question
Which of the following statements about the Sedition Act of 1798 is not true?

A) It aimed to silence opposition to a possible war with France.
B) It led to a public backlash that ultimately supported greater protection of a free press.
C) It was passed by a political party in power to undermine efforts by an opposing political party.
D) It was supported and reinforced by President Thomas Jefferson when he later took office.
E) It was originally passed by Congress and signed into law by President John Adams.
Question
In 1971, President Richard Nixon's administration tried to block publication of .

A) reports on weapons of mass destruction
B) reports of government overspending
C) instructions on how to make an H-bomb
D) the Progressive magazine
E) a study of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war
Question
According to the 1934 Communications Act, broadcast stations must provide equal opportunities and response time for qualified political candidates.
Question
Prior restraint means .

A) that courts and governments can block the press from publishing any article they deem inflammatory or controversial
B) that courts and governments cannot block any publication or speech before it occurs
C) that courts and governments have the right to review every article before it is published
D) that courts and governments can give the news media rules on what they can and cannot publish
E) None of the options is correct.
Question
According to the text, one of the first widely circulated arguments for a free, unlicensed press can be traced to .

A) the un-amended U.S. Constitution
B) the tradition of a free press that started in Great Britain and other European countries in the 1600s
C) English poet John Milton's
D) President John Adams
E) Welsh poet Dylan Thomas's poem, ''Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night"
Question
Which statement about the Sedition Act of 1798 is true?

A) It was passed to silence editorials encouraging the country to take part in a pending war.
B) It was used to prosecute newspapers that criticized the political party that controlled the presidency and Congress.
C) It was renewed over and over again by several presidents after Adams.
D) No U.S. governments after 1801 again tried to limit dissent about a war by passing a law making it a crime.
E) Its excesses actually helped bolster public support for taking rights away from a free press.
Question
Broadcasters are no longer legally required to provide competing points of view when airing programs about controversial issues.
Question
Which of the following constituted a ''clear and present danger'' to national security according to the federal courts?

A) Publishing a design for the H-bomb in Progressive magazine
B) Prosecuting the president for potentially criminal acts
C) Stealing the Pentagon Papers and publishing them
D) Distributing antiwar pamphlets during peace time
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
The Supreme Court sided with Larry Flynt in his case against Jerry Falwell because .

A) Hustler magazine was never sold outside the court's jurisdiction
B) parody falls under the opinion and fair comment rule
C) privileged speech is protected under the First Amendment
D) Hustler was not the only national porn magazine
E) it approved of the magazine's message
Question
The idea of absolute privilege refers to .

A) the ability of reporters to print or broadcast anything they want
B) the ability of the very rich to hire lawyers to sue anybody who libels them
C) the ability of prosecutors to accuse defendants of crimes in court without risking libel
D) the federal shield laws that allow a reporter to keep a source confidential
E) the way in which college students and professors can use small portions of a written work, as long as they use the proper citation
Question
For public figures to successfully sue for libel, they must prove ''actual malice,'' which means the news medium .

A) knew the statement was false but published it anyway
B) published a true statement with the intention of hurting the public figure
C) was reckless with the public figure's privacy rights
D) had long harbored ill will toward and dislike for the public figure
E) has a reputation for being mean-spirited
Question
The Pentagon Papers case involved which of the following legal concerns?

A) Reporters were infringing on the copyrights of the Pentagon.
B) Reporters were making unfair use of the documents.
C) Newspapers were libeling the president and his administration by exposing their lies.
D) The president should have the absolute privilege to block newspapers from publishing unflattering material.
E) Whether or not the government has the right to censor a newspaper and prevent
Question
In 1976, Congress extended the copyright period to .

A) fifteen years
B) fifty years, or seventy-five years for a corporate copyright owner
C) the life of the author plus twenty-five years
D) the life of the author plus fifty years, or seventy-five years for a corporate copyright owner
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
The U.S. Supreme Court's standards for judging something as obscene include which of the following?

A) The average person, applying community standards, would find that the material appeals
B) The material depicts sexual conduct in a patently offensive way.
C) The material lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
D) The work as a whole must be judged obscene.
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
Some members of the U.S. Government wanted to charge the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, with .

A) computer fraud for hacking into the cell phones of crime victims
B) computer fraud for running a scam posing as a deposed Nigerian prince
C) espionage for publishing the Pentagon Papers
D) espionage for releasing thousands of confidential U.S. embassy documents online
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
Private individuals must prove falsehood, damages, and negligence to win which kind of case?

A) Copyright
B) Fair use
C) Libel
D) Sedition
E) Censorship
Question
Which of the following is not part of the legal definition of obscenity?

A) The work as a whole must appeal to prurient interest.
B) The work as a whole must lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
C) The work must depict or describe dirty words and brutal violence.
D) The work must depict sexual conduct in a patently offensive way.
E) All of the options are part of the legal definition.
Question
In the Progressive magazine case, a federal district court took a course of action based on concern that the magazine would publish .

A) information on how an H-bomb works
B) a story that defamed the president
C) obscene material
D) a story that endorsed drug use
E) copyrighted material
Question
Which statement about copyright law is true?

A) Copyright covers a creative work for only seven years after it is produced.
B) Companies like Disney are huge supporters of getting their material into the public domain.
C) Corporate owners spend lots of money getting Congress to shorten the length of copyright protections.
D) The original idea behind American copyright law was that authors would have a
E) Copyright laws have remained virtually unchanged since they were written in the eighteenth century, being adapted without debate to new media.
Question
Reporters who print or broadcast statements made in court are protected against libel by .

A) absolute privilege
B) qualified privilege
C) opinion and fair comment
D) malpractice
E) right to privacy law
Question
It became obvious that old laws regarding obscenity and child pornography were not keeping up with Web technology when .

A) minors were arrested on child pornography charges for ''sexting''
B) the Child Online Protection Act was found unconstitutional
C) the concept of community standards was eclipsed by the global reach of the Internet
D) states such as Connecticut, Florida, and New York had to consider adjustments to their child pornography laws with the arrival of ''sexting''
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
Before it was found unconstitutional in 2007, the Child Online Protection Act .

A) addressed a child's right to be left alone
B) made it illegal to post ''material that is harmful to minors''
C) banned advertisers from targeting children
D) exempted the children of celebrities and public figures
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
Which laws, passed in 1917 and 1918, made it a federal crime to disrupt the nation's war effort?

A) Privacy Act
B) First Amendment
C) Espionage Acts
D) Sedition Acts
E) Bill of Rights
Question
At the end of the copyright period, a creative work such as a book or song becomes .

A) more valuable to the person or company that owns the copyright
B) protected from use by anyone other than the author or creator
C) available for public use with the payment of a royalty fee
D) available for public use free of charge
E) a target for online piracy
Question
Which of the following actions by the media is not a violation of the usual rights of privacy for a private citizen?

A) Taping or photographing a person in their home or other private space
B) Sharing health records
C) Using a person's image or quote in a news story without consent
D) Disclosing information about religion, sexual activities, or personal activities
E) Using a person's image or name, without consent, in advertisements or endorsements
Question
A written or broadcast expression that defames someone's character is _.

A) absolute privilege
B) copyright
C) censorship
D) fair use
E) libel
Question
The creators of works such as books, music, lyrics, movies, and TV programs are protected if someone tries to make money off their work because of .

A) copyright law
B) libel
C) fair use
D) limited privilege
E) public domain
Question
In 1912, in the first type of national action limiting the film industry, the U.S. government banned the interstate commerce of which kinds of films?

A) Pornographic films
B) Boxing films
C) German films
D) Films endorsing anarchy
E) Films about labor unions
Question
In 2001, the weakened privacy laws and gave the federal government more latitude in searching private citizens' records and intercepting electronic communications without a court order.

A) USA PATRIOT Act
B) Privacy Act
C) Fair Use Law
D) Shield Law
E) First Amendment
Question
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
Private individuals must prove falsehood, damages, and negligence to win this kind of case.
Question
Because of fears about the spread of communism in the 1950s and the tactics of lawmakers such as Senator Joseph McCarthy, TV networks started asking actors and other workers to .

A) hold controversial political views in order to get and keep their jobs
B) sign loyalty oaths denouncing communism
C) defend themselves in a court of law from accusations of being communists
D) stop working in television and radio
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
Section 315 of the 1934 Communications Act requires broadcast stations to .

A) cover all sides of a controversy
B) give all qualified political candidates an equal opportunity to obtain airtime
C) provide response time for individuals attacked in a broadcast editorial
D) provide educational programming for children
E) serve the public interest of their audiences
Question
The U.S. movie rating system is an example of .

A) industry self-regulation
B) censorship
C) state regulation
D) FCC guidelines
E) federal regulation
Question
Adopted by 95 percent of the movie industry during most of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, the Motion Picture Production Code would have allowed .

A) showing a minister of religion as the hero of a story
B) showing a gangster as the hero of a story
C) a scene with lots of passionate kissing
D) comedy classified as ''toilet humor''
E) a joke about a traveling salesman and a farmer's daughter
Question
Who came up with the ''seven dirty words'' comedy routine that landed a radio station in hot water with the FCC and resulted in rules about what times of the day a broadcaster can air ''adult'' material?

A) Jerry Seinfeld
B) George Carlin
C) Janeane Garofalo
D) Robin Williams
E) Lenny Bruce
Question
The U.S. government banned boxing films from being transported from state to state in 1912 because of .

A) concerns about children watching the violent images of boxing
B) concerns about people betting on the fights
C) concerns about images of the first black heavyweight being perceived as a threat by the white community
D) concerns that the movies would make the ''low-class'' sport too popular
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
The Communications Act of 1934 mandated that radio broadcasters operate in the ''public interest, convenience, and necessity'' based on which of the following arguments?

A) Radio stations are funded by the government and therefore should serve the public.
B) Limited broadcast signals constitute a scarce national resource.
C) Minors have unrestricted access to the radio.
D) The government should be able to control broadcasting the way it controls the print media.
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
Which of the following statements about the FCC and ''fleeting expletives'' in live TV shows is not true?

A) The FCC fining flurry was partially in response to campaigns against Howard Stern's vulgarity and the Janet Jackson exposed-breast incident.
B) In 2006, Congress increased the FCC's maximum allowable fine to $325,000 per incident.
C) In 2010, a federal appeals court rejected the FCC's policy on the basis that it was too vague.
D) In 2010, a federal appeals court rejected Congress's increase of the FCC's maximum allowable fine.
E) All of the options are true.
Question
Performers, writers, or producers who did not bow to pressure from people like Senator Joseph McCarthy and found themselves blacklisted as part of the communist ''witch-hunts'' of the 1950s .

A) were sent to special camps to protect the public
B) could only work for minimum wage
C) lost their jobs and any chance of getting hired
D) could only work for Red Channels, an anticommunist radio and television show
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
This kind of law was intended to make sure authors and producers can earn money from their original work.
Question
The case in 1952 determined that film should be protected as a form of free speech.

A) Burstyn v. Wilson
B) Mutual v. Ohio
C) New York Times v. Sullivan
D) Progressive
E) Pentagon Papers
Question
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
This term is generally defined as prior restraint of public communication.
Question
The idea of net neutrality refers to .

A) laws that keep Internet providers from supporting a political candidate or party
B) the fact that the early design of the Internet happened in Switzerland
C) the belief that government should allow Internet providers to allow or block any content they want
D) the belief that all wired Internet providers should be required to provide the same access to all Internet services and content
E) None of the above options is correct.
Question
In the Mutual v. Ohio (1915) decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that film was a .

A) ''business pure and simple''
B) ''means for public discourse''
C) ''legitimate form of free speech''
D) ''blight on creative expression''
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
One way to understand net neutrality is as a debate between which of the following groups?

A) Those who think the government needs to guarantee equal speed and access for all Internet services and content, and those who think the government should let companies charge whatever they want
B) Those who think the Internet is an essential utility like water or electricity (and needs more regulation), and those who think of it as an information service like cable TV (and needs less regulation)
C) Those who want to see the FCC continue to push for strong net neutrality rules, and those who want to overturn the regulations that do exist
D) Those who want the same rules for broadband and wireless connections, and those who think wireless connections should be exempt from certain rules
E) All of the options are correct.
Question
In the 1960s, radio programming that featured deejays and callers discussing intimate sexual topics was called .

A) dirty radio
B) topless radio
C) pirate radio
D) commercial radio
E) night radio
Question
In 1984, the PG-13 movie rating was added, in part, because which of the following two popular films were considered too violent and disturbing for children under thirteen?

A) Amadeus / This Is Spinal Tap
B) Gremlins / The Terminator
C) The Terminator / The Killing Fields
D) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom / Gremlins
E) The Killing Fields / Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
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Deck 16: Legal Controls and Freedom of Expression
1
The Miller v. California case established a national standard for obscenity that is the same for all communities in the United States.
False
2
In 1912, federal law outlawed the transportation of boxing movies across state lines-not because they were violent but because there had been a black heavyweight boxing champion since 1908.
True
3
Parodies and insults of public figures are protected from libel suits unless the statements cause undue emotional pain.
False
4
The Supreme Court has defined censorship as prior restraint of speech.
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5
For the first half of the twentieth century, local and state film review boards were considered constitutional.
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6
Most of the world's population now lives in countries where the press is free.
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7
Defamation that is broadcast is considered slander because it is spoken rather than written.
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8
Public speech that causes someone damage or actual injury is libelous, even if the speech in question is true.
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9
The Sedition Act strengthened First Amendment protections for citizens.
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10
If a soon-to-be-released article seems to violate libel or obscenity laws, most U.S. courts would act to stop publication.
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11
Libel is a right guaranteed by the First Amendment.
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12
Appropriating a writer's or artist's words or music without consent or payment is a form of expression that is not protected as speech.
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13
Movies released in the United States are required by federal law to be labeled with an MPAA
movie rating.
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14
Motion pictures have been defined as free speech by the U.S. Supreme Court since 1915.
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15
Students who quote and cite a copyrighted source in a term paper for class are technically violating the law.
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16
Only after the Sedition Act expired in 1801 did Americans broadly support the idea of a free press.
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17
The United States follows a libertarian model of free expression and free press.
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18
There is no federal shield law for journalists in the United States.
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19
Reporters need to be careful about printing accusations made by attorneys in a court of law in case a suspect is later found ''not guilty.''
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20
Ordinary citizens have more privacy protection under U.S. law than politicians or other public figures.
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21
In twentieth-century Supreme Court decisions, the print media and broadcast media received the same First Amendment protections.
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22
Which of the following is not characteristic of the libertarian model for expression and speech?

A) Tolerance for the expression of everything, from pornography to advocacy of anarchy
B) Encouraging vigorous government criticism
C) A great deal of trust in citizens' ability to distinguish truth from falsehood
D) Arguing that the mass media have grown too powerful and need to become more socially responsible or face some sort of government regulation
E) All of the options are characteristics of the libertarian model.
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23
When the movie rating system began in the late 1960s, the G, PG, PG-13, R, X, and NC-17 ratings were all developed at that time and put immediately into place.
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k this deck
24
State leaders believe the press should serve the goals of the state in the model.

A) authoritarian
B) communist
C) libertarian
D) social responsibility
E) seditious
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
The notion of the press working as the Fourth Estate, or as watchdog over the government, is contained in which model of speech and expression?

A) Authoritarian
B) Communist (or state)
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Antiquarian
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Newspapers are not required by law to give individuals an opportunity to reply to an editorial attack.
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27
Since its debut in 1990, the NC-17 movie rating has been a commercially successful rating for films with adult content.
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28
Which model of expression tolerates all forms of speech, including pornography?

A) Authoritarian
B) State model
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Communitarian
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29
Which model of the press is most often associated with today's mainstream U.S. news media?

A) Authoritarian
B) Communist
C) Libertarian
D) Social responsibility
E) Seditious
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30
Compared with most other nations, the United States has freedom of speech, religious tolerance, and press freedom.

A) a little less
B) a little more
C) a lot more
D) a lot less
E) about the same
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31
The FCC can fine broadcast stations any amount it sees fit for indecent incidents.
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32
Print and broadcast media are not treated equally under the First Amendment.
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33
Currently, both print journalists and broadcasters need federal licenses to operate their businesses.
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34
Which of the following statements about the Sedition Act of 1798 is not true?

A) It aimed to silence opposition to a possible war with France.
B) It led to a public backlash that ultimately supported greater protection of a free press.
C) It was passed by a political party in power to undermine efforts by an opposing political party.
D) It was supported and reinforced by President Thomas Jefferson when he later took office.
E) It was originally passed by Congress and signed into law by President John Adams.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
35
In 1971, President Richard Nixon's administration tried to block publication of .

A) reports on weapons of mass destruction
B) reports of government overspending
C) instructions on how to make an H-bomb
D) the Progressive magazine
E) a study of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam war
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
36
According to the 1934 Communications Act, broadcast stations must provide equal opportunities and response time for qualified political candidates.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Prior restraint means .

A) that courts and governments can block the press from publishing any article they deem inflammatory or controversial
B) that courts and governments cannot block any publication or speech before it occurs
C) that courts and governments have the right to review every article before it is published
D) that courts and governments can give the news media rules on what they can and cannot publish
E) None of the options is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
According to the text, one of the first widely circulated arguments for a free, unlicensed press can be traced to .

A) the un-amended U.S. Constitution
B) the tradition of a free press that started in Great Britain and other European countries in the 1600s
C) English poet John Milton's
D) President John Adams
E) Welsh poet Dylan Thomas's poem, ''Do Not Go Gentle into That Good Night"
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
Which statement about the Sedition Act of 1798 is true?

A) It was passed to silence editorials encouraging the country to take part in a pending war.
B) It was used to prosecute newspapers that criticized the political party that controlled the presidency and Congress.
C) It was renewed over and over again by several presidents after Adams.
D) No U.S. governments after 1801 again tried to limit dissent about a war by passing a law making it a crime.
E) Its excesses actually helped bolster public support for taking rights away from a free press.
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40
Broadcasters are no longer legally required to provide competing points of view when airing programs about controversial issues.
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k this deck
41
Which of the following constituted a ''clear and present danger'' to national security according to the federal courts?

A) Publishing a design for the H-bomb in Progressive magazine
B) Prosecuting the president for potentially criminal acts
C) Stealing the Pentagon Papers and publishing them
D) Distributing antiwar pamphlets during peace time
E) None of the above options is correct.
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42
The Supreme Court sided with Larry Flynt in his case against Jerry Falwell because .

A) Hustler magazine was never sold outside the court's jurisdiction
B) parody falls under the opinion and fair comment rule
C) privileged speech is protected under the First Amendment
D) Hustler was not the only national porn magazine
E) it approved of the magazine's message
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43
The idea of absolute privilege refers to .

A) the ability of reporters to print or broadcast anything they want
B) the ability of the very rich to hire lawyers to sue anybody who libels them
C) the ability of prosecutors to accuse defendants of crimes in court without risking libel
D) the federal shield laws that allow a reporter to keep a source confidential
E) the way in which college students and professors can use small portions of a written work, as long as they use the proper citation
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44
For public figures to successfully sue for libel, they must prove ''actual malice,'' which means the news medium .

A) knew the statement was false but published it anyway
B) published a true statement with the intention of hurting the public figure
C) was reckless with the public figure's privacy rights
D) had long harbored ill will toward and dislike for the public figure
E) has a reputation for being mean-spirited
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45
The Pentagon Papers case involved which of the following legal concerns?

A) Reporters were infringing on the copyrights of the Pentagon.
B) Reporters were making unfair use of the documents.
C) Newspapers were libeling the president and his administration by exposing their lies.
D) The president should have the absolute privilege to block newspapers from publishing unflattering material.
E) Whether or not the government has the right to censor a newspaper and prevent
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46
In 1976, Congress extended the copyright period to .

A) fifteen years
B) fifty years, or seventy-five years for a corporate copyright owner
C) the life of the author plus twenty-five years
D) the life of the author plus fifty years, or seventy-five years for a corporate copyright owner
E) None of the above options is correct.
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47
The U.S. Supreme Court's standards for judging something as obscene include which of the following?

A) The average person, applying community standards, would find that the material appeals
B) The material depicts sexual conduct in a patently offensive way.
C) The material lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
D) The work as a whole must be judged obscene.
E) All of the options are correct.
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48
Some members of the U.S. Government wanted to charge the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, with .

A) computer fraud for hacking into the cell phones of crime victims
B) computer fraud for running a scam posing as a deposed Nigerian prince
C) espionage for publishing the Pentagon Papers
D) espionage for releasing thousands of confidential U.S. embassy documents online
E) None of the above options is correct.
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49
Private individuals must prove falsehood, damages, and negligence to win which kind of case?

A) Copyright
B) Fair use
C) Libel
D) Sedition
E) Censorship
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50
Which of the following is not part of the legal definition of obscenity?

A) The work as a whole must appeal to prurient interest.
B) The work as a whole must lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
C) The work must depict or describe dirty words and brutal violence.
D) The work must depict sexual conduct in a patently offensive way.
E) All of the options are part of the legal definition.
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51
In the Progressive magazine case, a federal district court took a course of action based on concern that the magazine would publish .

A) information on how an H-bomb works
B) a story that defamed the president
C) obscene material
D) a story that endorsed drug use
E) copyrighted material
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52
Which statement about copyright law is true?

A) Copyright covers a creative work for only seven years after it is produced.
B) Companies like Disney are huge supporters of getting their material into the public domain.
C) Corporate owners spend lots of money getting Congress to shorten the length of copyright protections.
D) The original idea behind American copyright law was that authors would have a
E) Copyright laws have remained virtually unchanged since they were written in the eighteenth century, being adapted without debate to new media.
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53
Reporters who print or broadcast statements made in court are protected against libel by .

A) absolute privilege
B) qualified privilege
C) opinion and fair comment
D) malpractice
E) right to privacy law
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54
It became obvious that old laws regarding obscenity and child pornography were not keeping up with Web technology when .

A) minors were arrested on child pornography charges for ''sexting''
B) the Child Online Protection Act was found unconstitutional
C) the concept of community standards was eclipsed by the global reach of the Internet
D) states such as Connecticut, Florida, and New York had to consider adjustments to their child pornography laws with the arrival of ''sexting''
E) All of the options are correct.
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55
Before it was found unconstitutional in 2007, the Child Online Protection Act .

A) addressed a child's right to be left alone
B) made it illegal to post ''material that is harmful to minors''
C) banned advertisers from targeting children
D) exempted the children of celebrities and public figures
E) None of the above options is correct.
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56
Which laws, passed in 1917 and 1918, made it a federal crime to disrupt the nation's war effort?

A) Privacy Act
B) First Amendment
C) Espionage Acts
D) Sedition Acts
E) Bill of Rights
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k this deck
57
At the end of the copyright period, a creative work such as a book or song becomes .

A) more valuable to the person or company that owns the copyright
B) protected from use by anyone other than the author or creator
C) available for public use with the payment of a royalty fee
D) available for public use free of charge
E) a target for online piracy
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k this deck
58
Which of the following actions by the media is not a violation of the usual rights of privacy for a private citizen?

A) Taping or photographing a person in their home or other private space
B) Sharing health records
C) Using a person's image or quote in a news story without consent
D) Disclosing information about religion, sexual activities, or personal activities
E) Using a person's image or name, without consent, in advertisements or endorsements
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59
A written or broadcast expression that defames someone's character is _.

A) absolute privilege
B) copyright
C) censorship
D) fair use
E) libel
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60
The creators of works such as books, music, lyrics, movies, and TV programs are protected if someone tries to make money off their work because of .

A) copyright law
B) libel
C) fair use
D) limited privilege
E) public domain
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61
In 1912, in the first type of national action limiting the film industry, the U.S. government banned the interstate commerce of which kinds of films?

A) Pornographic films
B) Boxing films
C) German films
D) Films endorsing anarchy
E) Films about labor unions
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k this deck
62
In 2001, the weakened privacy laws and gave the federal government more latitude in searching private citizens' records and intercepting electronic communications without a court order.

A) USA PATRIOT Act
B) Privacy Act
C) Fair Use Law
D) Shield Law
E) First Amendment
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k this deck
63
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
Private individuals must prove falsehood, damages, and negligence to win this kind of case.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
64
Because of fears about the spread of communism in the 1950s and the tactics of lawmakers such as Senator Joseph McCarthy, TV networks started asking actors and other workers to .

A) hold controversial political views in order to get and keep their jobs
B) sign loyalty oaths denouncing communism
C) defend themselves in a court of law from accusations of being communists
D) stop working in television and radio
E) None of the above options is correct.
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k this deck
65
Section 315 of the 1934 Communications Act requires broadcast stations to .

A) cover all sides of a controversy
B) give all qualified political candidates an equal opportunity to obtain airtime
C) provide response time for individuals attacked in a broadcast editorial
D) provide educational programming for children
E) serve the public interest of their audiences
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66
The U.S. movie rating system is an example of .

A) industry self-regulation
B) censorship
C) state regulation
D) FCC guidelines
E) federal regulation
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67
Adopted by 95 percent of the movie industry during most of the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, the Motion Picture Production Code would have allowed .

A) showing a minister of religion as the hero of a story
B) showing a gangster as the hero of a story
C) a scene with lots of passionate kissing
D) comedy classified as ''toilet humor''
E) a joke about a traveling salesman and a farmer's daughter
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68
Who came up with the ''seven dirty words'' comedy routine that landed a radio station in hot water with the FCC and resulted in rules about what times of the day a broadcaster can air ''adult'' material?

A) Jerry Seinfeld
B) George Carlin
C) Janeane Garofalo
D) Robin Williams
E) Lenny Bruce
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69
The U.S. government banned boxing films from being transported from state to state in 1912 because of .

A) concerns about children watching the violent images of boxing
B) concerns about people betting on the fights
C) concerns about images of the first black heavyweight being perceived as a threat by the white community
D) concerns that the movies would make the ''low-class'' sport too popular
E) All of the options are correct.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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70
The Communications Act of 1934 mandated that radio broadcasters operate in the ''public interest, convenience, and necessity'' based on which of the following arguments?

A) Radio stations are funded by the government and therefore should serve the public.
B) Limited broadcast signals constitute a scarce national resource.
C) Minors have unrestricted access to the radio.
D) The government should be able to control broadcasting the way it controls the print media.
E) All of the options are correct.
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71
Which of the following statements about the FCC and ''fleeting expletives'' in live TV shows is not true?

A) The FCC fining flurry was partially in response to campaigns against Howard Stern's vulgarity and the Janet Jackson exposed-breast incident.
B) In 2006, Congress increased the FCC's maximum allowable fine to $325,000 per incident.
C) In 2010, a federal appeals court rejected the FCC's policy on the basis that it was too vague.
D) In 2010, a federal appeals court rejected Congress's increase of the FCC's maximum allowable fine.
E) All of the options are true.
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72
Performers, writers, or producers who did not bow to pressure from people like Senator Joseph McCarthy and found themselves blacklisted as part of the communist ''witch-hunts'' of the 1950s .

A) were sent to special camps to protect the public
B) could only work for minimum wage
C) lost their jobs and any chance of getting hired
D) could only work for Red Channels, an anticommunist radio and television show
E) None of the above options is correct.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
73
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
This kind of law was intended to make sure authors and producers can earn money from their original work.
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k this deck
74
The case in 1952 determined that film should be protected as a form of free speech.

A) Burstyn v. Wilson
B) Mutual v. Ohio
C) New York Times v. Sullivan
D) Progressive
E) Pentagon Papers
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
75
Selecting from the following list of terms, match the question with the best answer. Some terms may be used more than once or not at all.
A. Copyright
B. Fair use
C. Libel
D. Absolute privilege
E. Censorship
This term is generally defined as prior restraint of public communication.
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Unlock for access to all 85 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
The idea of net neutrality refers to .

A) laws that keep Internet providers from supporting a political candidate or party
B) the fact that the early design of the Internet happened in Switzerland
C) the belief that government should allow Internet providers to allow or block any content they want
D) the belief that all wired Internet providers should be required to provide the same access to all Internet services and content
E) None of the above options is correct.
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77
In the Mutual v. Ohio (1915) decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that film was a .

A) ''business pure and simple''
B) ''means for public discourse''
C) ''legitimate form of free speech''
D) ''blight on creative expression''
E) All of the options are correct.
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78
One way to understand net neutrality is as a debate between which of the following groups?

A) Those who think the government needs to guarantee equal speed and access for all Internet services and content, and those who think the government should let companies charge whatever they want
B) Those who think the Internet is an essential utility like water or electricity (and needs more regulation), and those who think of it as an information service like cable TV (and needs less regulation)
C) Those who want to see the FCC continue to push for strong net neutrality rules, and those who want to overturn the regulations that do exist
D) Those who want the same rules for broadband and wireless connections, and those who think wireless connections should be exempt from certain rules
E) All of the options are correct.
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79
In the 1960s, radio programming that featured deejays and callers discussing intimate sexual topics was called .

A) dirty radio
B) topless radio
C) pirate radio
D) commercial radio
E) night radio
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80
In 1984, the PG-13 movie rating was added, in part, because which of the following two popular films were considered too violent and disturbing for children under thirteen?

A) Amadeus / This Is Spinal Tap
B) Gremlins / The Terminator
C) The Terminator / The Killing Fields
D) Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom / Gremlins
E) The Killing Fields / Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
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Unlock Deck
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