The thrust of the article about the US is in this paragraph:
Quote:
COICA would induce all Internet Service Providers, including the largest like Comcast and Verizon, to start censoring sites on a pair of blacklists: one published and maintained by the Department of Justice without judicial oversight, and the other by the Attorney General. Sites that have been in the past or could today be considered for these lists include Ebay, YouTube, Dropbox, Facebook, SoundCloud, Veoh, Rapidshare and many other popular Internet websites. A site is a potential target for these lists if infringement, or linking to infringement, might be considered “central” to the site. Worse yet, getting on the list is easy but getting off could be quite difficult as it’s not clear what process will be in place to get off the list, even when a listing is done in error. The consequences for a law-abiding business of being blacklisted would be extremely dire.
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/coica...#ixzz19hqpqvVG
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IMHO, the First Amendment would make this kind of action on the government's part extremely doubtful.
The article also mentions Wikileaks. I find this kind of censorship to be more likely, especially if it can be tied to national security under the Patriot Act. But then, it would also be challengable in court. The problem with cases like Wikileaks is that by the time it gets to court, the "secrets" are no longer secret.
Finally, I think we have seen that censorship of porn is impossible. However, the caveat would be child porn. If anything is possible, it is with regard to child porn.