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- <text id=94TT1627>
- <title>
- Nov. 21, 1994: Culture:Censoring Cyberspace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 21, 1994 G.O.P. Stampede
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/CULTURE, Page 102
- Censoring Cyberspace
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Carnegie Mellon's attempt to ban sex from its campus computer
- network sends a chill along the info highway
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt--Reported by John F. Dickerson/New York and Douglas Root/Pittsburgh
- </p>
- <p> The steam began rising for Carnegie Mellon University four weeks
- ago, when one of its research associates, Martin Rimm, informed
- the administration that a draft of his study of pornography
- on the computer networks was about to be released. Rimm had
- made an elaborate analysis of the sexually oriented material
- available online. Not only had he put together a picture collection
- that rivaled Bob Guccione's (917,410 in all), but by tracking
- how many times each image had been retrieved by computer users
- (a total of 6.4 million downloads), he had obtained a measure
- of the consumer demand for different categories of sexual content,
- some of them, as a faculty adviser put it, "extremely rough."
- </p>
- <p> The problem, from the Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, university's
- point of view, was not that Rimm had found sexually explicit
- content on the computer networks; there is sex in every medium,
- from comic books to videotapes. Nor was it even that he had
- found some of it on CMU's own computers; every university connected
- to the Internet is a conduit, however unwitting, for gigabytes
- of salacious words and pictures. The immediate issue was that
- Rimm had brought it to the administration's attention, pointing
- out that some of the images on CMU's machines--digitized pictures
- of men and women having sex with animals, for example--had
- been declared obscene by a Tennessee court a few months before.
- </p>
- <p> William Arms, vice president of CMU's computing services department,
- spent an hour reviewing the questionable material "with the
- law of Pennsylvania in one hand and a mouse in the other" and
- decided that the university was in deep trouble. It is illegal
- in the state to knowingly distribute sexually explicit material
- to anyone under the age of 18--as many freshmen are--or
- to distribute obscene material at all, no matter what the consumer's
- age. Fearing that the university would be open to prosecution--and the worst kind of publicity--CMU's academic council
- hurriedly voted to shut down those areas of the computer system
- that carried discussions or depictions of sex. The plug was
- scheduled to be pulled last Tuesday.
- </p>
- <p> Thus the lines were drawn for a battle over the preservation
- of free speech in the new interactive media--a battle that
- not only raised tricky questions about how to balance openness
- with good taste, but also managed, on a campus not noted for
- activism, to rouse something resembling a student protest movement.
- CMU casts a long shadow in cyberspace. It was one of the first
- universities to join the Arpanet (the precursor to the Internet)
- and the first to wire up its dorms. It even provides Internet
- access to some of its bathrooms. Using the computer networks
- to spread the word and muster support, the students quickly
- organized a "Protest for Freedom in Cyberspace" that drew 350
- students and faculty members. (Pittsburgh in the 1990s, though,
- is hardly Berkeley in the '60s: the protesters last week politely
- applauded their opponents and then retired to a reception with
- cheese and fruit.)
- </p>
- <p> At the core of the CMU dispute is a question that goes beyond
- the campus and could touch every media and entertainment company
- that wants to do business on the info highway: to what extent
- can the operators of interactive media be held responsible for
- the material that moves through their systems? Are they common
- carriers, like the phone companies, which must ignore the content
- of the messages? Are they like TV stations, whose broadcasts
- are monitored by the government for fairness and suitability?
- Or are they like bookstores, which the courts have ruled can't
- be expected to review the content of every title on their shelves?
- And what happens when that content hops over borders and lands
- in a different city--or country--whose laws and community
- standards may differ?
- </p>
- <p> The last issue came to a head most dramatically last July, after
- a U.S. postal inspector, posing as a customer in Tennessee,
- downloaded X-rated pictures from an adult computer bulletin
- board in California. Though the images might have been acceptable
- by California standards, they were judged obscene in the Bible
- Belt, and the owners of the bulletin board were convicted of
- transporting obscene material across state lines. Their appeal
- may be headed for the Supreme Court.
- </p>
- <p> There's more to free speech than sexy words and pictures, of
- course. Publishers who venture onto international networks like
- the Internet are particularly concerned about libel and slander.
- The rules of libel in England, for example, are considerably
- more restrictive than those in the U.S.; what might be considered
- a fair crack at a public figure in New York City could be actionable
- in London. Conversely, the muzzles that are slapped on reporters
- covering trials in Commonwealth countries can't be placed so
- easily on writers living abroad, as Canadian officials learned
- to their dismay last year when foreign press reports of a particularly
- sensitive homicide case in Ontario began drifting back into
- Canada through the Internet.
- </p>
- <p> All sorts of subversive materials have found their way onto
- the computer networks, from secret spy codes to instructions
- for making long-range rocket bombs. As if to provoke the authorities,
- some college students have posted collections of electronic
- pamphlets that include Suicide Methods, an instruction manual
- for self-destruction, and The School Stopper's Textbook, which
- tells students how to blow up toilets, short-circuit electrical
- wiring and "break into your school at night and burn it down."
- </p>
- <p> High schools pose a special problem for administrators, who
- want to give students the benefits of computer networking without
- exposing minors to everything that washes up online. Many lower
- schools have adopted the CMU approach, cutting off access to
- the electronic discussion groups where the most offensive material
- is carried.
- </p>
- <p> At CMU, the administration determined that its problem was centered
- in a collection of discussion groups, called Usenet newsgroups,
- with awkward but functional titles like alt.sex, rec.arts.erotica
- and alt.binaries.pictures.erotica. The "binary" groups are the
- most controversial, for they contain codes that savvy computer
- users can translate into pictures and movie clips. The university's
- initial decision was to pull the plug on all the major "sex"
- newsgroups and their subsidiary sections--more than 80 categories
- altogether.
- </p>
- <p> That decision drew fire from all sides. The student council
- pointed out that the administration was restricting the reading
- matter of adults to what was acceptable for children. The American
- Civil Liberties Union complained that the ban was overly broad
- and included discussions of sexual matters that were clearly
- protected speech. Mike Godwin, staff counsel for the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, made a distinction between words and pictures,
- arguing that while images are still sometimes found obscene,
- words never are--a view confirmed by the Allegheny county
- assistant district attorney, who told Time there was "not a
- chance in a million" his office could win an obscenity case
- based on a written work.
- </p>
- <p> But the central objection was more fundamental: that the university
- had ignored decades of constitutional law and abrogated its
- responsibility as a center for free inquiry. "I'm deeply ashamed
- that Carnegie Mellon capitulated so spinelessly," said one CMU
- student in a radio call-in debate. "Some lawyer told them they
- might someday be dragged into court, and they just decided,
- `To hell with the First Amendment.'"
- </p>
- <p> By midweek, the university had begun to back down. First it
- seized on Godwin's formula, banning the binaries and leaving
- the text in place--pending review by a student-faculty committee.
- Then, on Thursday night, the faculty senate voted to recommend
- restoration of all the newsgroups, including the binaries.
- </p>
- <p> But the issue will not go away. There is material on the networks--child pornography, in particular--that has been targeted
- for prosecution by U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno. Unless
- computer users exercise some self-restraint, control could be
- imposed from the outside. If that happens, the next generation of interactive media may
- not have the freedom and openness that today's users value so
- highly.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-