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The Court is reticent to allow content-based regulations of speech.
Since New York Times v. U.S., the government cannot regulate expression to protect national security.
Reporters, if asked, must appear in front of a grand jury.
Early in the internet age, the Court ruled that the internet is very similar to print media.
Prior Restraint means that the government may not ban a speech before it is actually given.
Miller changed the Roth standard to the standard that speech, artwork, or books are deemed obscene if they lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
The Court went to great lengths to define community standards in Roth.
Neither libel nor obscenity are protected by the First Amendment.
The Court almost never allows regulations of what the press publishes.