Article 1WT1B Online behind bars: if internet access is a human right, should prisoners have it?

Online behind bars: if internet access is a human right, should prisoners have it?

by
Dan Tynan in San Francisco
from Technology | The Guardian on (#1WT1B)

It makes prison officials nervous, but campaigners and tech companies argue that getting inmates digitally connected will help with rehabilitation

For most of the developed world, internet access is a given. Google, Amazon, Facebook offer a privileged world of communication, entertainment, shopping and education that many of us take for granted. Unless, that is, you happen to be incarcerated.

Aside from limited connections at a handful of juvenile detention facilities, there's no way for America's 2.3 million inmates to access the internet. Worse, institutions may punish inmates when their families post online on their behalf. Prison authorities cite concerns that inmates will use the internet to harass victims or threaten witnesses, arrange for deliveries of contraband or commit new crimes online.

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