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- Newsgroups: alt.callahans
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!amdahl!rtech!sgiblab!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!linac!uchinews!kimbark!mss2
- From: mss2@kimbark.uchicago.edu (Michael S. Schiffer)
- Subject: Re: Censorship (was Testing Tin)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.210416.21337@midway.uchicago.edu>
- Sender: news@uchinews.uchicago.edu (News System)
- Reply-To: mss2@midway.uchicago.edu
- Organization: University of Chicago
- References: <memo.899923@cix.compulink.co.uk>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 21:04:16 GMT
- Lines: 58
-
- In article <memo.899923@cix.compulink.co.uk> cliveg@cix.compulink.co.uk writes:
-
- >> SEA joins in: "When I was a younger lass and employed, oh about last
- >> If he [the system administrator ] had said that all newsgroups
- >> except the comp.* hierarchy were going to be lost, I might not have
- >> squawked as much. DJ is right, censorship is a no-no."
-
- >Tanais is sitting next to the fire. In deep discussion with Taldin. A
- >book is by the fox's side. He stops at this comment, begs his
- >forgiveness from Taldin a momnent and thumbs through until he finds the
- >right page:
-
- >"'If there had been a censorship of the press in Rome we should have had
- >today neither Horace nor Juvenal, nor the philosophical writings of
- >Cicero.' Said Voltaire". And Tanais closes the book.
-
- "I'm surprised at Voltaire-- in the days when literacy implied
- a classical education, familiarity with Roman history was pretty much
- a requisite. And the origin of the term `censor' belies any claim
- that Rome was free of censorship. Indeed, sometimes the government
- wasn't satisfied with ridding themselves of the books, and got rid of
- the author, whether by lethal means or, as in the case of Ovid, merely
- exile. Perhaps Voltaire meant that there wasn't a formal process of
- censorship along the lines of what he knew (although Enlightenment
- France hardly had a patch on the twentieth century totalitarian states
- in that line, as witness the fact that Voltaire and Rousseau and such
- were honored intellectuals rather than hanged or thrown into a dungeon)."
-
- >"Censorship is a heavy subject, but I wouldn't want to imagine life
- >without the legacy of Horace, Juvenal -- or indeed the Place, no matter
- >who passes those doors". And smiling at everyone in the room he turns to
- >Taldin to continue his conversation.
-
- "I do think it's important to distinguish between censorship
- and judgment, though. No one is required to allow others to use their
- resources. If the owner of a machine, or the agent of that owner
- who's in charge of things, doesn't think alt.sex.* is an appropriate
- use of computing resources, then that's his or her call. No one has a
- right to alt.sex, or alt.callahans, or rec.crafts.textiles for that
- matter, on someone else's machine. Whether one agrees with the
- criteria or not isn't really relevant, if it's not a public resource--
- it's not necessary for the corporate library to get _Penthouse_, even
- if it receives some non-work-related publications like _Sports
- Illustrated_ and _Newsweek_. That's not a matter of censorship, as
- it's not telling people what _they_ can or can't read-- just what the
- employer will make available. If the machine owner makes a policy of
- getting groups based on user interest, it might be worth protesting,
- but unless one has a contractual right to receive a full Usenet feed
- as part of one's compensation, news would seem to be a favor to be
- extended at the machine owner's wish rather than a right to be
- demanded in the name of freedom of speech. "
-
- Michael
- --
- Michael S. Schiffer, LHN, FCS "I decline utterly to be impartial
- mss2@midway.uchicago.edu as between the fire brigade and the fire."
- mike.schiffer@um.cc.umich.edu -- Winston Churchill, July 7, 1926
- mschiffer@aal.itd.umich.edu
-