"Caring for Your Baby and Young Child: Birth to Age 5" by the American Academy of Pediatrics is a tome, but is the best practical guide for what you need to do, and what to expect, for the first few years of a child's life. Use it like a reference or manual rather than reading cover-to-cover.
Conversely then, how does the DMCA not violate the first amendment by silencing speech? Is there actually any difference in the direction of application of this regulation?
The DMCA takedown system is an exemption to copyright law; violate it, and you lose its safe harbor and go back under ordinary copyright law. Copyright law does not violate the First Amendment because the Constitution specifically allows for it:
> To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries
and the First Amendment does not override it; it is specifically worded "Congress shall make no law".
Funnily enough, the Carnegie Natural History Museum funded a project exactly like this at Carnegie Mellon University. An AR tour of their Architecture exhibit that placed exhibit objects back into their full construction. I wonder if that project went anywhere...