Tweeting Deemed Not 'Broadcasting' And Allowed In Courtroom
from the nice-of-them dept
Michael Scott points us to a case in Connecticut state court, in which "broadcasting" from the courtroom was forbidden, but there was a debate over whether or not Twittering from the courtroom should be allowed. The arguments go back and forth, noting that there are some similarities to broadcasting with Twitter, but not necessarily enough. The judge then looked at the reason behind prohibiting broadcasting, and realized it was to keep direct images from being seen, but that reporting from the courtroom should be allowed. The only concern is if the actions were disruptive (such as with a loud keyboard), but noted that such problems could be dealt with on a case by case basis. The guy trying to restrict the use of Twitter claimed that such "communications tend to be either trivial or inaccurate and thus play no useful role in educating the public about the judicial process," but the judge pointed out that a court should not be controlling the "substance of courtroom reporting," and said that Twittering would be allowed, so long as there is no disruption (which would be dealt with specifically). Seems like a reasonable outcome.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: broadcasting, connecticut, courtroom, tweeting
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Holy spinning newspapers!
Follow this on Twitter! We're out of exclamation points?
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Doubly reasonable
Sadly, I'm impressed. This level of quality should be the norm.
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Re: Holy spinning newspapers!
This also just in: death of joke causes neck injuries across the country from severity of disgusted head shakes.
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Re: Doubly reasonable
QFT
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Re: Doubly reasonable
They do not want news stations with cameras sitting in the court room taking up space and distracting people. Think any time that there is a high profile case would it be good to have the four local stations and a national one or two taking up space.
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Re:
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