About the Author
Stuart N. Brotman
Stuart N. Brotman is the author of “The First Amendment Lives On.” He is a distinguished professor of journalism and electronic media at the University of Tennessee. He wrote this for InsideSources.com.
- Why ‘Cancel Culture’ Is a Symptom of a Larger Social Disease — Censorship
- George Carlin’s American Dream Celebrates the First Amendment
- Free Speech, Free Press, Play Ball!
- How the Perfection Pretext Is Undermining American Life
- Why Going Online for a Free COVID-19 Test Falls Short
- How To Train Students To Become Better Informed Citizens
- Is There Proof in the Pudding of Digital Privacy Protection?
- A Third Way Approach to Regulating Facial Recognition Systems
- How California’s Net Neutrality Law Can Inform Federal Digital Privacy Policymaking
- Greater Social Media Trust is Needed to Fight COVID-19
- A Better Way to Close the Digital Divide
- Let’s Focus on the Rule of Law, Not Politics, in Reporting on Federal Court Decisions
- Digital Privacy Protection Requires Holistic Approach
- The Challenge of Navigating Privacy’s ‘Perfect Storm’
- Limiting Personal Information in Our Post-Pandemic ‘New Normal’
- How Health Information Privacy Lives on During the COVID-19 Pandemic
- Let’s Use Our Best Digital Messengers for Pandemic Public Health Information
- Digital Privacy Policy Needs Carrots to Encourage Innovation
- How Public Libraries Can Help Close America’s Digital Privacy Divide
- How Persistent Is Our Privacy Paradox?
- Making Sure the Next ‘Killer App’ Is Not a Privacy Killer
- Consumer Privacy Protection May Justify a Big Tech Antitrust Exemption
- Greater U.S. Leadership Is Needed for Global Internet Freedom
- The Internet Lives On
- The Continuing Leadership of the U.S. in Global Net Vitality
- Promoting First Amendment Values in Cyberspace
- The Telecommunications Act of 1996 Struck the Right Federal-State Balance of Power
- Copyright Piracy’s Continuing Strength
- Opinion: Broadband Internet’s Elephant in the Room
- “Regulatory Buffering” and the Speed of Innovation
- Broadband Policy Can’t Be Future-Proofed
- The “Necessity” of Broadband Service Doesn’t Justify Public Utility Regulation