pokermind wrote:Ugh,JimHacker wrote:[SNIP]
Protection of the community (ie, putting criminals in prison prevents them from committing other crimes because they are not at large) is more complicated. Obviously a person in prison is not committing crimes against society whilst they are in prison so it works to that extent. [SNIP]
There is a lot of criminal on criminal crime in prison, murder, assaults, rapes (yep same sex rape), and even internet crime on the public at large. Prison computers should be read only, but NO thanks to liberal courts.
Poker
Was the 'ugh' at the length of the post or my liberal-ness?
Yes, people commit crimes in prison, but generally on each other or occasionally guards rather than on society (which is the point of the protection aspect). As to on prison computers, I've seen things where prisoners broke the rules or even attmpted to co-ordinate an escape attempt but there aren't many cases i've seen where they were committing more crimes (internet scams etc) without being caught very quickly.
I'm not sure what you mean by read-only. If you mean inmates shouldn't be permitted to create documents then that defeats one of the points of giving an inmate access to a computer. If you mean they shouldn't be able to email people or participate in online discussions then that's something else.