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I am wondering if there are specific clause in the freedom of speech law in the U.S. that could get you in trouble.

David Siegel
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Sayaman
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    Can we assume that in order to create the work there aren't any other crimes or torts being committed, e.g. killing someone for a snuff film or producing child pornography? Are we just talking about someone viewing the work and suing for damages because they saw it? – IllusiveBrian Jul 04 '21 at 16:31
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    You can get sued for almost anything. “Freedom of speech” generally limits what the government can do about speech. Can you be clearer about the context? – jeffronicus Jul 04 '21 at 16:31
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    violent material without any crime committed, of course. – Sayaman Jul 04 '21 at 16:48
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    Usually when people ask "can you get sued?" on this site, they mean lawsuits which are not almost guaranteed to be dismissed by the court as frivolous. – vsz Jul 05 '21 at 08:13
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    While you can't get succesfully sued, as per accepted answer, it should probably be noted that you might not be able to publish such material anywhere -- cinemas, bookstores and publishers, as well as content sites such as youtube, and probably website providers as well have their own guidelines, what kind of material is acceptable. – Gnudiff Jul 05 '21 at 13:36
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    @vsz Still, it behooves us to clarify sloppy wording. Sloppy wording betrays sloppy thinking. Helping people to think for themselves begins with clearing up those muddy waters. – J... Jul 05 '21 at 13:37
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  • You can be sued for anything, whether it would be successful/dismissed, etc. is another matter. 2. Freedom of speech (First Amendment) protects you from the government not from other parties suing you. We came home and found our son lying dread on his bed of a gunshot wound, he had his headphones on and there was an Ozzy record on the turntable. So we called our lawyer.
  • – AbraCadaver Jul 05 '21 at 22:26
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    @AbraCadaver When a private person uses the courts to get damages for someone acting on their constitutional rights, that is held to be "state action" . Thus libel suits are limited by the first amendment, and suits to enforce restrictive housing agreements are prohibited by the Equal Protection clause. Copyright and trademark suits may also be limited by the first amendment. – David Siegel Jul 06 '21 at 03:31
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    @AbraCadaver +1 for the perfectly relevant DK reference. – evildemonic Jul 06 '21 at 17:33