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Jerks rejoice! Trolling still legal in Arizona

Only harrassment of a "specific person" is no longer allowed.

 

Kevin Morris

Tech

Posted on May 15, 2012   Updated on Jun 2, 2021, 5:06 pm CDT

Relax, Internet trolls. Arizona Governor Jan Brewer finally signed a controversial anti-harassment bill into law Monday, but not before legislators cut language that many critics said violated the first amendment and, somewhat less controversially, outlawed trolling.

You can still make everyone hate you, and no one will toss you in jail.

As originally written, House Bill 2549 would have made it illegal to use “any electronic device” to  “annoy” or “offend” another person. The goal, one representative told the Phoenix New Times, was simply to protect people from harassment and stalking.

Still, Media Coalition, one of the groups that led the charge against the bill, called its language “unconstitutionally vague,” adding that it would criminalize “all manner of writing, cartoons, and other protected material the state finds offensive or annoying” across the Internet as a whole.

Welp, now the words “annoy” and “offend” are out, and the bill clarifies that a “specific person” or “persons” must be a target of the harassment. That means no one’s going to jail for that one time they stirred up shit on a message board. You can be jerk, you just can’t harass anyone. Good on the Arizona legislature for paying attention to the public outrcry.

Trolls probably celebrate victories like this by being even bigger assholes, so just be careful on the Internet for the next few days.

You can read the full text of the bill here.

Photo by wstryder

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*First Published: May 15, 2012, 6:41 pm CDT