Originally posted by ngtm1r
The slippery slope is considered an informal logical fallacy for a reason...
The problem is when you risk equating the slipperly slope in such a way, you can also be arguing for the complete abolition of law itself; there are probably slippery slope arguements that would equate, perfectly logically, theft to the banning of personal ownership (for example).
But on the other hand there can be clear precedence where a law or social concept has set a precedent in one direction or the other that has allowed (or would allow) damaging legal situations.
So really the issue becomes one of 'braking'; would filtering child porn lead to filtering adult (i.e. consensual) porn, and eventually all sorts of material considered 'immoral'? Can we trust the law to solidly prevent that sort of slide towards the China style censorship - not just now, but in the future?
As it stands, I honestly haven't made my mind up. On the one hand, you can stop some very evil people accessing or distributing some very vile stuff. On the other hand, there are a myriad of problems, both technical (will be virtually impossible to correctly filter, and you'll either have a loose system that lets stuff through or a tight system that bars legit content, for example), and also social (risking removing the problem in such a way as to become 'hidden' from public scrunity and thus pressure to investigate, precedence for allowing censorship, etc).