- Criminal speech
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Part of a series on Censorship By media Banned books · Banned films
Re-edited film · Internet
Music · Press · Radio · Thought
Speech and expression
Video gamesMethods Bleeping · Book burning
Broadcast delay · Chilling effect
Concision · Conspiracy of silence
Content-control software
Euphemism · Expurgation
Gag order · Heckling
Internet censorship circumvention
Memory hole · Newspaper theft
Pixelization · Political correctness
Postal · Prior restraint
Propaganda model
Revisionism · Sanitization/Redaction
Self-censorship · Speech code
Strategic lawsuit · Verbal offence
WhitewashingContexts Corporate · Political · Religious
Ideological · Criminal speech
Hate speech · Media bias
Suppression of dissent · Systemic biasBy country Censorship · Freedom of speech
Internet censorshipCriminal speech is a legal concept that identifies certain kinds of speech as a crime. The concept is somewhat at odds with freedom of speech in its broadest sense, within the broader freedom of expression, and asserts certain limitations on such freedom.
Concepts like criticism of government and criticism of royalty are controversial. Other concepts limiting certain kinds of speech are not, such as that which prohibits shouting fire in a crowded theater (as a practical joke, and not as a warning), as such speech has the potential to cause harm.
Laws vary by country according with the legal principles that such country adheres to. Most speech is unregulated, and does not violate law. In reference to authoritarian governments which assert serious controls, such controls are commonly called suppression of dissent. In democracies, the concept of hate speech has emerged in recent years, to counteract the political and social influence of hate groups.
See also
Categories:- Censorship
- Criminal law stubs
- Politics stubs
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