• Adventure
  • Auto
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Home & Garden
  • Money
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Video
  • Shows
  • Blogs
  • Quizzes
  • Games
  • Random Article
  • Geography
  • History
  • People
  • Home > 
  • Culture > 
  • People > 
  • Government > 
  • Agencies

by Robert Valdes

Print
Cite This!
Close 
Please copy/paste the following text to properly cite this HowStuffWorks article:

Valdes, Robert.  "How does the FCC police obscenity?"  16 March 2004.  HowStuffWorks.com. <http://people.howstuffworks.com/fcc-obscenity.htm>  11 February 2012.
Cite
Feedback

What's the real story?

Stuff They Don't Want You to Know Videos »
Stuff They Don't Want You to Know Videos »
Inside this Article
  1. How does the FCC police obscenity?
  2. Obscenity
  3. The Obscenity Debate
  1. Enforcing Obscenity Regulations
  2. Lots More Information
  3. See all Agencies articles

Lots More Information

Related HowStuffWorks Articles

  • How Radio Works
  • How Television Works
  • How Spam Works
  • How Lawsuits Work
  • How Long-Distance Scams Work

More Great Links

  • FCC Web Site
  • The Museum of Broadcast Communications
  • Sirius Satellite: Howard Staying Put -- September 20, 2006
  • Read the Communications Act of 1934
Previous Page

More Great Links

Top 5 Ways to Get Smarter
Top 5 Ways to Get Smarter
The Ultimate Kissing Quiz
The Ultimate Kissing Quiz
The Ultimate Stuff Mom Never Told You Fan Quiz
The Ultimate Stuff Mom Never Told You Fan Quiz
The Ultimate Mafia Quiz
The Ultimate Mafia Quiz
10 Largest Diamond Heists
10 Largest Diamond Heists
Watch videos about serial killers >>

You Might Also Like

How Firefighter Training Works

To a typical kid, the only thing cooler than a firetruck is a person who rides in one. Take a closer look at what it takes to become a municipal firefighter and examine different elements of their training.

What is the DREAM Act?

As of 2008, about 612,000 undocumented youth in the U.S. had earned high school diplomas or GEDs. Could the DREAM Act clear the way for these students to continue on to college?

Popular Articles

  • Have Oil & Gas Companies Been "Fracking" Illegally?
  • EPA Claiming Coal Ash Reduces Greenhouse Gas Emissions
  • Ash Sunstein Campaign Calls On EPA to Regulate Coal Ash As Hazardous Waste
Inside this Article
  1. How does the FCC police obscenity?
  2. Obscenity
  3. The Obscenity Debate
  1. Enforcing Obscenity Regulations
  2. Lots More Information
  3. See all Agencies articles
Previous Page

Top Videos

FPO
  • Stuff They Don't Want You to Know Videos
  • Serial Killer Videos
  • Science of Sex Appeal Videos
  • Mythbusters Videos

HowStuffWorks Games

FPO
  • Word Bubbles
  • Bike Build Game
  • Lost in Migration
  • Cannon Challenge
  • Speed Match

Related Content

Prices: FCC Books

  • The Federal Communications Commission: Front Line in the Culture and Regulation Wars (Understanding Our Government)
    The Federal Communications Commission: Front Line in the Culture and Regulation Wars (Understanding Our Government)

    In its more than seventy years of existence, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has emerged as one of the most important and controversial agencies in the United States government. As an independent regulatory commission, the FCC possesses an expansive legislative mandate to formulate a national communications policy. Using its authority, the FCC has done such far-reaching things as setting rates for long distance telephone service, creating rules and standards for broadcast programming, writing regulations for providers of cable television and information services, and, in recent decades, introducing competition in virtually every sector of the communications industry. As the FCC has gone about implementing its statutory mandate, it has frequently been the target of criticism by interest groups and members of Congress. Even these critics, however, would have a hard time imagining how a task as complicated as the formulation of a national telecommunications policy could be accomplished without the expertise and full time attention of an agency such as the FCC.The first work to integrate detailed information on the FCC as an organization—its politics, key policy initiatives, and legal issues—offers students, researchers, and general readers alike easy access to an array of topics related to the FCC. Chapters discuss the agency's origins, organization, programs, controversies, notable people, and significant court cases. Topics include the Telecommunications Act of 1996, Michael Powell, Verizon Communications Inc. v. FCC, the Fairness Doctrine, telephone-cable competition, and indecency. A comprehensive annotated bibliography lists sources for further research.

    $75.00

  • Cases In Communication Law 3Ed
    Cases In Communication Law 3Ed

    Of the sixty-four cases in the third edition of Paul Siegel’s popular Cases in Communication Law, nineteen are new to this edition. Included among these are Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, in which the Supreme Court revamped the system of campaign financing; U.S. v. Stevens, in which the Court refused to permit punishment for films depicting animal cruelty; and Presley v. Georgia, where the Court tells us for the first time that the defendant’s right to a public trial are sufficient to open up the jury selection to the press and public.Forty of the cases presented here are U.S. Supreme Court cases, fifteen are federal appellate decisions, and seven were decided at the federal district court level. The book also includes two state supreme court cases.

    $39.95

HOWSTUFFWORKS
  • Adventure
  • Auto
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Home & Garden
  • Lifestyle
  • Money
  • Science
  • Tech
MORE STUFF
  • Blogs
  • Games
  • HSW Tools
  • RSS
  • Maps
  • Podcasts
  • Quizzes
  • Newsletters
  • Video
OUR WEBSITES
  • Animal Planet
  • Consumer Guide Auto
  • Consumer Guide Products
  • Discovery Channel
  • Discovery Fit & Health
  • HSW Brazil
  • HSW China HowStuffWorks China
  • Investigation Discovery
  • Oprah Winfrey Network
  • Planet Green
  • Science Channel
  • TLC
  • Discovery Education
  • Store
CUSTOMER SERVICE
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Help
CORPORATE
  • About Us
  • Careers @ Discovery
  • Privacy Policy
  • Visitor Agreement
TAKE US WITH YOU
FOLLOW US
© 1998-2012 HowStuffWorks, Inc