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Kentucky agrees not to discriminate against blogs

June 17, 2008 by Greg Beck

In a victory for the free speech rights of bloggers, Kentucky has settled a lawsuit with political blogger Mark Nickolas, whose critical comments about then-Governor Ernie Fletcher resulted in the state “blacklisting” all blogs on state-owned computers. Under the settlement, Kentucky officials agreed to no longer single out blogs for special treatment.

Public Citizen filed suit against Fletcher on Nickolas’s behalf, arguing that arbitrarily discriminating between blogs and mainstream media sites violated the First Amendment. Public Citizen also presented evidence that the filtering policy was implemented because the governor’s office was unhappy with Nickolas’s blog, which was widely read by state employees. The ban went into effect the same day Nickolas was quoted in The New York Times criticizing Fletcher.

Kentucky reserved the right to regulate its computer systems to prevent employees from accessing inappropriate sites, but agreed not to discriminate against websites just because they are blogs.

Public Citizen’s filings in the case are available here.


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Posted in Internet Free Speech, Litigation | 4 Comments

4 Responses

  1. on June 17, 2008 at 2:22 pm Evan

    Interesting development. Great work.


  2. on June 19, 2008 at 9:35 pm Kentucky Agrees To Stop Selectively Blocking State Employees From Reading Critical Blogs | Technology Update News

    [...] has decided that it is changing that policy and won’t block critical sites, leading Public Citizen to drop the lawsuit. Of course, without a court ruling, it’s now not clear if the original actions were legal — and [...]


  3. on June 19, 2008 at 9:37 pm News About Tech from all around the world » Kentucky Agrees To Stop Selectively Blocking State Employees From Reading Critical Blogs

    [...] has decided that it is changing that policy and won’t block critical sites, leading Public Citizen to drop the lawsuit. Of course, without a court ruling, it’s now not clear if the original actions were legal — and [...]


  4. on August 3, 2008 at 4:58 pm Kentucky Agrees To Stop Selectively Blocking State Employees From Reading Critical Blogs | My Best Blogroll

    [...] has decided that it is changing that policy and won’t block critical sites, leading Public Citizen to drop the lawsuit. Of course, without a court ruling, it’s now not clear if the original actions were legal — and [...]



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