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- From: mech@eff.org (Stanton McCandlish)
- Forwarded message:
- Date: Thu, 11 May 1995 15:14:32 -0700
- From: "Brock N. Meeks" <brock@well.sf.ca.us>
- To: cwd-l@cyberwerks.com
- Subject: CWD-Internet As Terrorist
-
-
- CyberWire Dispatch // Copyright (c) 1995 //
-
- Jacking in from the "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" Port:
-
- Washington, D.C. -- The Internet had its head placed on the chopping block
- during a Congressional hearing today (May 11th).
-
- Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) put it there. Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) tied its
- hands, while Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) welded the axe.
-
- Specter, as chairman of the Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and
- Government Information, called the hearing to investigate "The Availability
- of Bomb Making Information on the Internet." The hearing focused on "the
- use of the Internet by a variety of groups and individuals to propagate
- 'mayhem manuals,' which as their name suggests, are guides to assist people
- in committing acts of violence," Specter said.
-
- Specter didn't mince words about his intentions. The subtext of the
- hearing was that the Internet, somehow, now represents a "clear and present
- danger" to the American way of life, threatening innocent citizens and
- children. "There are serious questions about whether it is technologically
- feasible to restrict access to the Internet or to censor certain messages,"
- Specter said.
-
- Feinstein rode into the hearing with blinders on. "I have a problem with
- people teaching others" how to build bombs that kill, she said. The First
- Amendment doesn't extend to the that kind of information, she said,
- especially when it resides in electronic format so easily available.
-
- Her remarks were directed at a panel of experts who had, for the most part,
- acknowledged that such information was readily available on the Net,
- but nonetheless was indeed protected by the First Amendment.
-
- The First Amendment argument didn't fly with Feinstein, who railed at the
- panel's testimony. "You really have my dander up," she said. "This is not
- what this country is about."
-
- That remark drew a sharp response from Jerry Berman, executive director of
- the Washington-based Center for Democracy and Technology: "Excuse me,
- Senator, but that *is* what this nation is all about."
-
- Feinstein would hear nothing of it. "I believe there is a difference
- between free speech and teaching someone to kill," she said, "And all
- we're doing here is protecting [terrorist information] under the mantle of
- free speech."
-
- Feinstein, former mayor of San Francisco, one of America's most liberal
- cities, carried a lot of baggage into the hearing; she was once the failed
- target of a letter bomb addressed to her office while mayor, according to a
- Subcommittee staffer.
-
- Sen. Kohl waded into the hearing reading from a tired script,
- saying that America would "be shocked" if they knew about "dark back
- alleys" of the "information superhighway." Kohl paid lip-service to the
- Constitution, saying that government shouldn't "be in the business of
- telling people what they can and cannot think." However, that didn't stop
- him from suggesting that government has every right to "prevent people from
- endangering public safety," which really means restricting access --
- somehow -- to the "dangerous" (ooohhh....) "dark back alleys" of the
- Internet.
-
- His suggestions: (1) Parents should be notified every time their kids get
- an online account. (2) Every parent should be able to block a kid's access
- to whatever areas they want. "If we have the technology to get kids on the
- Internet, we should have the technology to get them off it," he said. (3)
- Online companies should rip out a page from the video game industry, where
- "industry-wide cooperation to restrict access to minors has forestalled
- government intervention," he said.
-
- The vid-game industry, right, those cozy folks that bring Mortal Kombat
- into your living room and shopping malls, where even 8-year olds know how
- to punch in the infamous "blood codes" which, when enabled, show defeated
- characters being gutted while still alive, leaving the screen oozing. And
- this is the same video industry which drew a sharp rebuke from Sen. Specter
- himself last December when he found out that the so-called "industry-wide
- cooperation" to label games with "ratings" wasn't being implemented on
- anything more than a piecemeal basis.
-
- Fueling this hysteria-circus was Robert Litt, deputy assistant attorney
- general, Criminal Div. of the Department of Justice. Litt mouthed to the
- Subcommittee what will certainly become the "Scare Monger's Anthem": "Not
- only do would-be terrorists have access to detailed information on how to
- construct explosives, but so do children."
-
- ... And so do children...
-
- "This problem can only grow worse as more families join the Internet
- 'society,'" Litt warned. .
-
- "... And so do children..."
-
- But does any of this so-called terrorist information require any kind of
- congressional Constitutional tweaking? Not according to Litt's own
- testimony. There are, on the books now, "a number of federal laws" that
- can be used to "prosecute bomb-related offenses," and those can be directly
- transferred to any such investigations linked to the Internet, Litt
- testified, adding that such laws "can be applied even when the offense is
- accomplished through speech."
-
- Read it again: "[A]pplied even... through speech." If that was the sound
- of a hammer falling -- or an axe -- you're right.
-
- Litt outlined how current laws protect even bomb making materials on the
- Internet as expressions of free speech; however, he noted, with some glee,
- that the proposals before Congress right now, offered up by the White
- House, will "permit the government to better track and prosecute those who
- misuse information available on the Internet...."
-
- The hysteria of these doomsayers, however, ran into an unexpected brick
- wall during the hearing. Sen. Specter asked Litt point-blank if he had
- *any* kind of statistics or "direct knowledge" of any "criminal act" that
- had resulted from anyone obtaining information off the Internet. "No
- Senator, we do not," Litt answered somewhat shyly. Specter reframed the
- question -- twice -- giving Litt a chance to weasel an answer, but there
- was no weasel room.
-
- The cold, hard facts are and remain: No law enforcement agency has been
- able to link any criminal act to any information now residing on the
- Internet.
-
- But this wasn't good enough for Specter, who asked Litt to go back and
- "investigate" the question and report his findings back to the
- Subcommittee.
-
- Another blow to Internet foes was the testimony of Frank Tuerkheimer.
- Tuerkheimer, a professor of law at the U. of Wisconsin, made his fame in
- the 1970s as the U.S. Attorney which successfully argued to stop the
- publication of the "How to Make an H-Bomb" article in the _Progressive_
- magazine. He won that case, which he admitted today, he had little
- enthusiasm for trying because the information in the article was gathered
- from public domain sources. However, all of that effort was moot point, he
- noted: Some other publication printed the article anyway.
-
- Information will find a way to get out, Tuerkheimer said. "We're not
- talking about regulating information," he said, "we're talking about
- regulating 'information-plus." That's when the information is taken and
- used in the commission of a criminal act, and it's that combination that
- needs to be addressed, not the information, he said.
-
- Putting a fine point on his arguments, Tuerkheimer noted in his
- testimony that the Encyclopedia Britannica "reveals great detail on
- explosive manufacture." [It's all right there on on pages 275-282 of Vol.
- 21 of the 1986 edition.] Adding insult to injury, he pointed out that on
- page 279 of that section, there is a description of the Ammonium
- Nitrate/Fuel oil mixture bomb like that used in the Oklahoma City bombing!
-
- I wonder, now, if Sen. Feinstein will rush to outlaw the encyclopedia... or
- maybe she'll introduce a bill that will have librarians issued X-acto
- knives to cut out just those pages. "...so the children" won't have
- access....
-
- Perhaps Tuerkheimer's finest blow was when he noted that the Department of
- Agriculture Forestry Service publishes the "Blaster's Handbook" (written
- with taxpayer money) that also includes a recipe for the Ammonium
- Nitrate/Fuel oil bomb like that used to blow little kids into chunks in the
- Oklahoma City bombing.
-
- America's online sweetheart, America Online, was represented ably by
- William Burrington. He admitted to the Subcommittee that although his
- company monitored "selected areas" for violations of the company's terms of
- service, there was no possible to keep an eye on every public message. The
- point he hammered on -- and rightly so -- is that the "information ocean"
- that is the Internet is impossible to place restrictions on "because of its
- international nature," he said, more than once. Any laws the U.S. might
- try to apply don't mean shit internationally, as Burrington tried to point
- out, a point that apparently fell on deaf ears.
-
- One pair of ears that didn't fail to hear were those of Sen. Patrick Leahy
- (D-Vermont). This old warhorse continued to be what increasingly sounds
- like the only voice of reason on Capitol Hill. "Before we head down a road
- that leads to censorship," he said, "we must think long and hard about its
- consequences."
-
- Leahy is bothered about "tragic events" such as the Oklahoma bombing as
- much as anyone, he said. However, the "same First Amendment that protects
- each of us and our right to think and speak as we choose, protects others
- as well," he said. It is "harmful and dangerous *conduct*, not speech,
- that justify adverse legal consequences," Leahy noted.
-
- There is "little to be gained in the way of safety by banning" access to
- so-called terrorist information "over electronic media," Leahy said,
- especially when it's so readily available in paper form... even from the
- Agriculture Department. Hell, there's probably even an government
- sponsored 800 number you can call to order the "Blaster's Handbook."
-
- In one lengthy discussion, Specter cited an Internet posting in which the
- poster asked for bomb making information that he (or she, gender wasn't
- noted) could use against "zionist government officials." Specter asked the
- panel if such a message could be considered a crime.
-
- "No," said the Justice Department's Litt. "But what about the response to
- the
- message?" Specter asked. Such a response "approaches, if it hasn't already
- crossed the line, a prosecutorial offense," Litt said.
-
- Tuerkheimer disagreed. "Too general," he said. There's "no
- target" identified, "it's hard to see how the Justice Department could
- prosecute" the responder to that message, he said.
-
- Of course, Specter's query begs the question: Would it be a crime to
- respond to the "bomb information wanted" message by sending them a copy of
- the taxpayer funded, government-sponsored "Blaster's Handbook"? You make
- the call, because if you don't, Congress will.
-
- "In other words, the industry acts now or Congress will do it for you," Kohl
- said.
-
- I doubt he was joking.
-
- Meeks out...
- --
- <A HREF="http://www.eff.org/~mech/"> Stanton McCandlish
- </A><HR><A HREF="mailto:mech@eff.org"> mech@eff.org
- </A><P><A HREF="http://www.eff.org/"> Electronic Frontier Foundation
- </A><P><A HREF="http://www.eff.org/1.html"> Online Services Mgr. </A>
-
-
- Rick Lithgow, rlith@pcms.com, moderator BOCA_MODEMS & Z1_GERMER
-
- * WCE 2.0/2295 * She slices, She Dices, She Circumsises! It's Lorena Bobbit!
-