[This is an excerpt from my 1995 Yale Law Journal article " Cheap Speech and What It Will Do ," written for a symposium called "Emerging Media Technology and the First Amendment.) Thirty years later, I thought I'd serialize the piece here, to see what I may have gotten right—and what I got wrong.]
The proto-infobahn of today—the Internet, bulletin boards, and various commercial services—has already generated quite a few First Amendment controversies. Professor Anne Branscomb has ably summarized many of them in another Essay in this Symposium.
Some of these may only be transplants of conventional questions into a new but essentially similar environment. For instance, there's already a lively debate about the propriety of regulating sexually harassing speech; harassing speech on electronic