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-
- Computer underground Digest Wed May 31, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 44
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Tibia Editor: Who built the Seven Towers of Thebes?
-
- CONTENTS, #7.44 (Wed, May 31, 1995)
-
- File 1--The Trivia Winner----
- File 2--ACLU Cyber-Liberties Alert #5
- File 3--Sen. Feinstein S.2375 (Wiretap bill)
- File 4--Full text of _Stratton Oakmonth v. Prodigy_
- File 5--Prodigy decision location and amateur analysis
- File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 30 May 1995 15:29:25 -1000
- From: frankt@PIXI.COM(Frank Tutt)
- Subject: File 1--The Trivia Winner----
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: And the first who knew it was not a
- A Monkey.....))
-
- Please pass to your "Trivia Editor":
-
- > Trivia Editor: Writer of the song "Daydream Believer Is: ??????
-
- That would be John Stewart, originally with the Kingston Trio, later a solo
- act from early seventies through ??.
- Frank Tutt
- frankt@pixi.com
- Comin' at ya from Aiea, Hawaii (Consonant-free!)
- "Consistency is the hog-goblin of little minds"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 26 May 1995 18:35:05 -0400
- From: Lynnclu@AOL.COM
- Subject: File 2--ACLU Cyber-Liberties Alert #5
-
- ACLU Cyber-Liberties Alert: 05/26/95
- Feinstein Amendment Would Censor Online Info About "Explosive Materials"
-
- Senator Feinstein (D-CA) has indicated that she will offer an
- amendment to the broad counter-terrorism bill (an incredibly
- unconstitutional and anti-liberty bill) now pending in the U.S.
- Senate.
-
- The ACLU opposes the Feinstein amendment as a blatant violation of the
- First Amendment's free speech guarantees. While the amendment applies
- to all media, it grew out of Senator Feinstein's vilification of the
- internet at the Senate's May 11 counter-terrorism hearings.
-
- The Feinstein amendment must be **rejected** -- it cannot be "fixed."
-
- Join the ACLU, People for the American Way, and others in opposing
- this amendment.
-
- **ACT NOW**
-
- Fax, write, or call Senator Feinstein to express your opposition to the
- amendment.
-
- Senator Dianne Feinstein
- FAX 202/228-3954
- Voice 202/224-3841
- SH-331 SOB
- Washington, DC 20510-0504
- -----------------------------------
-
- Earlier today, the ACLU faxed the following letter in opposition to the
- amendment to all U.S.
- Senators.
-
- i---------------------------------------------------------
-
- American Civil Liberties Union
- Washington National Office
- 122 Maryland Avenue, NE
-
- VIA FAX
-
-
- RE: The Feinstein Amendment on Disseminating Information on
- Explosives
-
- Dear Senator:
-
- The American Civil Liberties Union has already communicated its
- position on the proposed anti-terrorism legislation. Senator
- Feinstein has indicated she intends to introduce an amendment making a
- criminal offense out of the dissemination of information about
- manufacturing explosives.
-
- The Feinstein amendment would, for example, make it a felony,
- punishable by 20 years imprisonment, for any person "to disseminate by
- any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the
- manufacture of explosive materials if the person . . . reasonably
- should know that" the materials are likely to be used to further a
- federal crime.
-
- Because it covers pure speech, without even a focus on a
- particularized threat of violence, the Feinstein amendment is clearly
- unconstitutional. In fact, it is difficult to contemplate an
- amendment in this area that would be more demonstrably
- unconstitutional.
-
- The amendment is also unnecessary. Current law, 18 U.S.C.sec. 231,
- makes it a felony to teach explosives to any person if it is known or
- should have been known that that person intended to use the explosives
- unlawfully in furtherance of a civil disorder. Current law, however,
- focuses on a particular person using the information for a particular
- criminal purpose.
- The Feinstein amendment, however, criminalizes merely putting out
- information -- in print, on radio or television, in cyberspace --
- without any requirement of knowledge of the particular would-be
- criminal or would-be crime.
-
- In fact, the media coverage of the Oklahoma City bombing has left
- everyone with sufficient knowledge so that everyone could be
- prosecuted if he or she published information on explosives,
- regardless of the purpose. Even an article that described how a
- fertilizer-based bomb was built in order to suggest prophylactic
- measures to preclude such threats could be the basis of its author's
- prosecution.
-
- Under the Feinstein amendment, all the newspapers and broadcasters who
- described how bombs are built in the coverage on Oklahoma City could
- be prosecuted if they ran similar stories again.
-
- There are many reasons -- quite distinct from engaging in violence --
- why individuals might wish to disseminate information about
- explosives. These range from county extension agents with suggestions
- on tree stump removal, to OSHA guidelines on demolition of buildings,
- to construction company planning excavations, to newspapers reporting
- on current events. The Feinstein amendment would subject to criminal
- prosecution the people involved in all these situations -- because,
- after Oklahoma City all of them would meet the absurdly low standard
- for criminal culpability in the amendment.
-
- As the ACLU, People for the American Way and others have noted: The
- Feinstein amendment takes the lowest standard used for culpability
- under the criminal statutes and seeks to apply it to actions the
- Constitution requires be given the highest level of protection -- the
- exercise of their right of free speech.
-
- Because the Feinstein amendment would criminalize such a broad scope
- of First Amendment-protected activity, it would also enormously
- increase the investigative and surveillance authority of the FBI. In
- order words, the Feinstein amendment would turn a whole host of
- actions into crimes thereby establishing the criminal predicate for
- which the FBI guidelines allow an investigation to be pursued.
-
- Even worse, the FBI investigates when it merely has a "reasonable
- indication" that a crime might have been committed. This means that
- anyone who simply disseminates -- on paper, over the airwaves, or in
- cyberspace -- information on manufacturing explosives is made subject
- to investigation by the FBI.
- This would happen even if the disseminator had no grounds to believe
- the information could be used for a crime, because the FBI could claim
- merely to be investigating to see whether a crime had been committed
-
- The Feinstein amendment would also have the effect of forcing the
- internet --as well as libraries, broadcasters and publishers -- to do
- the impossible task of prescreening the recipients of their
- information. Such a requirement is obviously impossible to meet. It
- also destroys the very purpose of both the internet and libraries --
- providing the widest possible access to information.
-
- The American Civil Liberties Union strongly urges the United States
- Senate to defeat the Feinstein amendment on disseminating information
- relating to explosives.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Laura Murphy Lee, Director
- ACLU Washington National Office
-
- Donald Haines
- Legislative Counsel
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- For more information about the ACLU's Cyber-Liberties efforts and our
- opposition to the counter-terrorism bill, see our online resources:
-
- ACLU Free Reading Room -- gopher://aclu.org:6601
- ACLU Constitution Hall on America Online -- keyword ACLU
- To request our FAQ, or be added to/dropped from our list, write to
- infoaclu@aclu.org
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 27 May 95 23:23:09 -0500
- From: hinderman@delphi.com
- Subject: File 3--Sen. Feinstein S.2375 (Wiretap bill)
-
- Following is the substance of a letter which I wrote to Senator Dianne Fein-
- stein regarding S.2375 (the wiretap bill). Those of you who agree with my
- point of view are welcome to use it as a model for writing to your own
- senators.
-
-
- May 20, 1995
-
- The Honorable Dianne Feinstein
- United States Senator, State of California
- 11111 Santa Monica Blvd.
- Los Angeles, Ca. 90025
-
- Re: S.2375
-
- Dear Senator Feinstein:
-
- I have obtained a copy of the referenced bill for which you voted, and
- which was passed last year. I have read it with interest. I would like to
- make the following observations:
-
- (1) The words "or lawfully authorized" which appear in section 2604
- may seem innocuous, but they in fact constitute a very powerful
- quantifier -- so powerful, in fact, that they render superfluous the other
- half of the disjunction in which they appear -- i.e. "any court ordered . .
- . interception", since court ordered interceptions are obviously a subset
- of the class of all lawfully authorized acts.
-
- (2) Although the bill contains a section of definitions (2601), the
- expression "lawfully authorized" is not addressed.
-
- (3) Little solace is to be had from the fact that the bill requires that a
- wiretap be effected ". . . only with the affirmative intervention of an
- individual officer or employee of the carrier.", since such intervention
- can be obtained by such means as intimidation, bribery or collusion.
- (Section 2604).
-
- (4) The bill contains no provision for the punishment of any federal
- employee who should succeed in performing an illegal wiretap by means
- of the technology required by this bill.
-
- What this means, in practical terms, is that if I should write a letter to
- the editor of my local paper in which I criticize Attorney General Reno
- for her handling of the Waco, Texas tragedy, and recommend that she be
- dismissed from her position and prosecuted for the unwarranted deaths
- of the men, women and children who died there, and Ms. Reno should
- learn of this letter, she could then go on a "fishing expedition" by
- having my phone tapped in an attempt to retaliate against me. She
- could further claim that she had the legal right to require such a
- wiretap, since she is the lawfully appointed Attorney General. In the
- unlikely event that a court should find that Ms. Reno acted unlawfully,
- such a finding would be essentially meaningless, since Congress has
- provided no penalty for an illegal wiretap carried out by a federal
- employee.
-
- I cannot believe that you would knowingly subject the people of the State
- of California to the potential for such abuse. I prefer to think that you
- did not fully understand the implications of this bill at the time you voted
- for it.
-
- I would like to see the law which emerged from this bill rescinded in its
- entirety. Failing that, I believe it should be amended so that a wiretap
- can be lawfully performed only if a judge has issued a court order
- authorizing it -- no exceptions. In addition, I believe a section should be
- added requiring severe penalties for any employee of the federal
- government who succeeds in performing a wiretap without such
- authorization. I would recommend a minimum ten year prision term, a
- minimum $50,000 fine and the forfeiture of all pension and other
- benefits which would otherwise appertain to such an employee.
-
- Since this letter is concerned with a matter of public policy, I reserve
- the right to place it, along with any reply which you may choose to
- provide me, on the Internet.
-
- Thank you for considering my opinions.
-
-
- Sincerely,
-
-
-
- Paul Hinderman
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 29 May 1995 13:07:53 -0400
- From: kadie@EFF.ORG(Carl M. Kadie)
- Subject: File 4--Full text of _Stratton Oakmonth v. Prodigy_
-
- [bmac@bu.edu found this at
- http://www.ziff.com:8001/~pcmag/trends/tr0526b.htm
- There is now also a copy at
- ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/CAF/law/stratton-oakmonth-v-prodigy
- The _Cubby v. CompuServe_ decision is also on-line:
- ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/CAF/law/cubby-v-compuserve.text
- and
- ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/CAF/law/cubby-v-compuserve
- - Carl]
-
- =========================================================
-
- SUPREME COURT - STATE OF NEW YORK
-
- Present:
- HON. STUART L. AIN
- Justice
- TRIAL/IAS, PART 34
- NASSAU COUNTY
-
- STRATTON OAKMONTH, INC.
- and DANIEL PRUSH,
-
- Plaintiff(s),
- INDEX No. 31063/94
- -against-
- MOTION DATE:
- 3/10/95
- PRODIGY SERVICES COMPANY, a
- Partnership of Joint Venture with
- IBM CORPORATION and SEARS-ROEBUCK &
- COMPANY, "JOHN DOE" AND "MARY DOE",
-
- Defendant(S).
-
- The following papers read on this motion:
-
- Plaintiffs' Notice of Motion & Exhibits 1
- Plaintiff's Supporting Exhibits P & O (filed separately
- under seal pursuant to a confidentiality agreement) 1A
- Plaintiffs' Memo of Law in Support 2
- Appendix to Plaintiffs' Memo of Law 3
- Defendant's Opposing Affidavit and Exhibits 4
- Defendant's Memo of Law in Opposition 5
- Reply Affidavit 6
- Reply Memo of Law 7
-
- Upon the foregoing papers, it is ordered that this
- motion by Plaintiffs for partial summary judgment against
- Defendant PRODIGY SERVICE COMPANY ("PRODIGY") is granted and
- this Court determines, as a matter of law, the following two
- disputed issues as follows:
-
- (I) that PRODIGY was a "publisher" of statements
- concerning Plaintiffs on its "Money Talk" computer bulletin
- board for the purposes of Plaintiffs' libel claims; and,
-
- (ii) that Charles Epstein, the Board Leader of
- PRODIGY's "Money Talk" computer bulletin board, acted as
- PRODIGY's agent for the purposes of the acts and omissions
- alleged in the complaint.
-
- At issue in this case are statements about Plaintiffs
- made by an unidentified bulletin board user or "poster" on
- PRODIGY's "Money Talk" computer bulletin board on October
- 23rd and 25th of 1994. These statements included the
- following:
-
- (a) STRATTON OAKMONTH, INC. ("STRATTON"), a securities
- investment banking firm, and DANIKI PORUSH, STRATTON's
- president, committed criminal and fraudulent acts in
- connection with the initial public offering of stock of
- Solomon-Page Ltd.,
- (b) the Solomon-Page offering was a "major criminal
- fraud" and "100% criminal fraud";
- (c) PORUSH was "seen to be proven criminal"; and,
- (d) STRATTON was a "cult of brokers who either lie for
- a living or get fired."
- Plaintiffs commenced this action against PRODIGY, the owner
- and operator of the computer network on which the statements
- appeared, and the unidentified party who posted the
- aforementioned statement. The second amended complaint
- alleges ten (10) causes of action, including claims for per
- se libel. On this motion, "in order to materially advance
- the outcome of this litigation" (Zamansky affidavit, par.
- 4), Plaintiffs seek partial summary judgment on two issues,
- namely:
- (1) whether PRODIGY may be considered "publisher" of
- the aforementioned statements; and,
- (2) whether Epstein, the Board Leader for the computer
- bulletin board on which the statements were posted, acted
- with actual and apparent authority as PRODIGY's "agent" for
- the purpose of the claims in this action.
-
- By way of background, it is undisputed that PRODIGY's
- computer network has at least two million subscribers who
- communicate with each other and with the general subscriber
- population on PRODIGY's bulletin boards. "Money Talk" the
- board on which the aforementioned statements appeared, in
- allegedly the leading and most widely read financial
- computer bulletin board in the United States, where members
- can post statements regarding stocks, investments and other
- financial matters. PRODIGY contracts with bulletin Board
- Leaders, who, among other things, participate in board
- discussions and undertake promotional efforts to
- encourage usage and increase users. The Board Leader for
- "Money Talk" at the time the alleged libelous statements
- were posted was Charles Epstein.
-
- PRODIGY commenced operations in 1990. Plaintiffs base
- their claims that PRODIGY is a publisher in large measure on
- PRODIGY's stated policy, starting in 1990, that it was a
- family oriented computer network. In various national
- newspaper articles written by Geoffrey Moore, PRODIGY's
- Director of Market Programs and Communications, PRODIGY held
- itself out as an online service that exercised editorial
- control over the content of messages posted on its computer
- bulletin boards, thereby expressly differentiating itself
- from its competition and expressly likening itself to a
- newspaper. (see, Exhibits I and J to Plaintiffs' moving
- papers.) In one article PRODIGY stated:
-
- "We make no apology for pursuing a value
- system that reflects the culture of the
- millions of American families we aspire to
- serve. Certainly no responsible newspaper
- does less when it carries the type of
- advertising it published, the letters it
- prints, the degree of nudity and unsupported
- gossip its editors tolerate."
- (Exhibit J.)
-
- Plaintiffs characterize the aforementioned articles by
- PRODIGY as admissions (see, Dettner v Pokoik, 81 AD2d 572,
- app. demd. 54 NY2d 750) and argue that, together with
- certain documentation and deposition testimony, these
- articles establish Plaintiffs' prima facie case. In
- opposition, PRODIGY insists that its policies have changed
- and evolved since 1990 and that the latest article on the
- subject, dated February, 1993, did not reflect PRODIGY's
- policies in October, 1994, when the allegedly libelous
- statements were posted. Although the eighteen month lapse of
- time between the last article and the aforementioned
- statements is not insignificant, and the Court is wary of
- interpreting statements and admissions out of context, these
- considerations go solely to the weight of this evidence.
-
- Plaintiffs further rely upon the following additional
- evidence in support of their claim that PRODIGY is a
- publisher:
- (A) promulgation of "content guidelines" (the
- "Guidelines" found at Plaintiff's Exhibit F) in which,
- inter alia, users are requested to refrain from posting
- notes that are "insulting" and are advised that "notes that
- harass other members or are deemed to be in bad taste or
- grossly repugnant to community standards, or are deemed
- harmful to maintaining a harmonious online community, will
- be removed when brought to PRODIGY's attention"; the
- Guidelines all expressly state that although "Prodigy is
- committed to open debate and discussion on the bulletin
- boards, ... this doesn't mean that 'anything goes'";
- (B) use of a software screening program which
- automatically prescreens all bulletin board postings for
- offensive language;
- (B) the use of Board Leaders such as Epstein whose
- duties include enforcement of the Guidelines, according to
- Jennifer Ambrozek,
- the Manager of PRODIGY's bulletin boards and the person at
- Prodigy responsible for supervising the Board Leaders (see
- Plaintiffs' Exhibit R, Ambrozek deposition transcript. at
- p. 191) and
- (b) testimony by Epstein as to a tool for Board Leaders
- known as an "emergency delete function" pursuant to which a
- Board Leader could remove a note and send a previously
- prepared message of explanation "ranging from solicitation,
- bad advice, insulting, wrong topic, off topic, bad taste,
- etcetera." (Epstein deposition Transcript, p. 52).
- A finding that PRODIGY is a publisher is the first
- hurdle for Plaintiffs to overcome in pursuit of their
- defamation claims because one who repeats or otherwise
- republishes a libel is subject to liability as if he had
- originally published it. In contrast, distributors such as
- book stores and libraries may be liable for defamatory
- statements of others only if they knew or had reason to know
- of the defamatory statement at issue. A distributor or
- deliverer of defamatory material is considered a passive
- conduit and will not be found liable in the absence of
- fault. However, a newspaper, for example, is more than
- a passive receptacle or conduit for
- news, comment and advertising. [as to the content of the
- paper constitute Miami Herald Publishing Co. v Tornillo, 418
- US 241, 258.] The choice of material to go into a newspaper
- and the decisions made as to the content of the paper
- constitute the exercise of editorial control and judgment.
- (Id.)., and with this editorial control comes increased
- liability. (See Cubby, supra.) In short, the critical issue
- to be determined by this Court is whether the foregoing
- evidence established a prime facie case that PRODIGY
- exercised sufficient editorial control over its computer
- bulletin boards to render it a publisher with the same
- responsibilities as a newspaper.
-
- Again, PRODIGY insists that its former policy of
- manually reviewing all messages prior to posting was changed
- "long before the messages complained of by Plaintiffs were
- posted". (Schneck affidavit, par. 4.) However, no
- documentation or detailed explanation of such a change, and
- the dissemination of news of such a change, has been
- submitted. In addition, PRODIGY argues that in terms of
- sheer volume--currently 60,000 messages a day are posted on
- PRODIGY bulletin boards--manual review of messages is not
- feasible. While PRODIGY admits that Board Leaders may remove
- messages that violate its Guidelines, it claims in
- conclusory manner that Board Leaders do not function as
- "editors". Furthermore, PRODIGY argues generally that this
- Court should not decide issues that can directly impact this
- developing communications medium without the benefit of a
- full record, although it fails to describe what
- further facts remain to be developed on this issue of
- whether it is a publisher.
-
- As for legal authority, PRODIGY relies on the Cubby
- case, supra. There the defendant CompuServe was a computer
- network providing subscribers with computer related services
- or forums including an online general information service or
- "electronic library". One of the publications available on
- the Journalism Forum carried defamatory statements about the
- Plaintiff, an electronic newsletter. Interestingly, an
- independent entity named Cameron Communications, Inc.
- ("CCI") had "contracted to manage, review, create, delete,
- edit and otherwise control the contents of the Journalism
- Forum in accordance with editorial and technical standards
- and conventions of style as established by CompuServe". The
- Court noted that CompuServe had no opportunity to review the
- contents of the publication at issue before it was uploaded
- into CompuServe's computer banks. Consequently, the Court
- found that CompuServe's product was, "in essence, an
- electronic for-profit library" that carried a vast number of
- publications, and that CompuServe had "little or no
- editorial control" over the contents of those publications.
- In granting CompuServe's motion for summary judgment, the
- Cubby court held:
-
- A computerized database is the functional
- equivalent of a more traditional news vendor,
- and the inconsistent application of a lower
- standard of
- liability to an electronic news distributor
- such as CompuServe than that which is applied
- to a public library, book store, or newsstand
- would impose an undue burden on the free flow
- of information.
-
- (776 F. Supp. 135, 140.)
-
- The key distinction between CompuServe and PRODIGY is
- two fold. First, PRODIGY held itself out to the public and
- its members as controlling the content of its computer
- bulletin boards. Second, PRODIGY implemented this control
- through its automatic software screening program, and the
- Guidelines which Board Leaders are required to enforce. By
- actively utilizing technology and manpower to delete notes
- from its computer bulletin boards on the basis of
- offensiveness and "bad taste", for example, PRODIGY is
- clearly making decisions as to content (see, Miami Herald
- Publishing Co. v Tornillo, supra), and such decisions
- constitute editorial control. (Id.) That such control is not
- complete and is enforced both as early as the notes arrive
- and as late as a complaint is made, does not minimize or
- eviscerate the simple fact that PRODIGY has uniquely
- arrogated to itself the role of determining what is proper
- for its members to post and read on its bulletin boards.
- Based on the foregoing, this Court is compelled to conclude
- that for the purposes of Plaintiffs' claims in the action,
- PRODIGY is a publisher rather than a distributor.
-
- An interesting comparison may be found in Auvil v. CBS
- 60 Minutes (supra), where apple growers sued a television
- network and local affiliates because of an allegedly
- defamatory investigative report generated by the network and
- broadcast by the affiliates. The record established that the
- affiliates exercised no editorial control over the broadcast
- although they had the power to do so by virtue of their
- contract with CBS, they had the opportunity to do so by
- virtue of a three hour hiatus for the west coast
- differential, they had the technical capability to do so,
- and they in fact had occasionally censored network
- programming in the past, albeit never in connection with "60
- Minutes". The Auvil court found:
-
- It is argued that these features, coupled with the
- power to censor, triggered the duty to censor.
- That is a leap which the Court is not prepared to
- join in.
- ...
-
- ... plaintiffs' construction would force the
- creation of full time editorial boards at local
- stations throughout the country which possess
- sufficient knowledge, legal acumen and access to
- experts to continually monitor incoming
- transmissions and exercise on-the-spot
- discretionary calls or face $75 million dollar
- lawsuits at every turn. That is not realistic.
-
- ...
- More than merely unrealistic in economic terms, it
- is difficult to imagine a scenario more chilling
- on the media's right of expression and the
- public's right to know.
-
- (ACO F. Supp. at 931-932.) Consequently, the court dismissed
- all claims against the affiliates on the basis of "conduit
- liability", which could not be established therein absent
- fault, which was not shown.
-
- In contrast, here PRODIGY has virtually created an editorial
- staff of Board Leaders who have the ability to continually
- monitor incoming transmissions and in fact do spend time
- censoring notes. Indeed, it could be said that PRODIGY's
- current system of automatic scanning, Guidelines and Board
- Leaders may have a chilling effect on freedom of
- communication in Cyberspace, and it appears that this
- chilling effect is exactly what PRODIGY wants, but for the
- legal liability that attaches to such censorship.
-
- Let it be clear that this Court is in full agreement with
- Cubby and Auvil, Computer bulletin boards should generally
- be regarded in the same context as bookstores, libraries and
- network affiliates. [See Edward V. DiLello, Functional
- Equivalency and the application to Freedom of Speech on
- Computer Bulletin Boards, 26 Colum. J. Law & Soc. Probs.
- 199, 210-213 (1993),] It is PRODIGY's own policies,
- technology and staffing decisions which have altered the
- scenario and mandated the finding that it is a publisher.
-
- PRODIGY's conscious choice, to gain the benefits of
- editorial control, has opened it up to a greater liability
- than CompuServe and
- other computer networks that make no such choice. For the
- record, the fear that this Court's finding of publisher
- status for PRODIGY will compel all computer networks to
- abdicate control of their bulletin boards, incorrectly
- presumes that the market will refuse to compensate a network
- for its increased control and the resulting increased
- exposure. [See, Eric Schlachter, Cyberspace, The Free Market
- and The Free Marketplace of Ideas: Recognizing Legal
- Differences in Computer Bulletin Board Functions, 16
- Hastings Communication and Entertainment L.J., 87, 138-139.)
- Presumably PRODIGY's decision to regulate the content of its
- bulletin boards was in part influenced by its desire to
- attract a market it perceived to exist consisting of users
- seeking a "family-oriented" computer service. This decision
- simply required that to the extent computer networks provide
- such services, they must also accept the concomitant legal
- consequences. In addition, the Court also notes that the
- issues addressed herein may ultimately be preempted by
- federal law if the Communications Decency Act of 1995,
- several versions of which are pending in Congress, is
- enacted. [See, Congressional Quarterly US S 652,
- Congressional Quarterly US HR 1004, and Congressional
- Quarterly US S314.]
-
- The Court now turns to the second issue presented here,
- of whether Epstein was PRODIGY's agent for the purposes of
- the acts and omissions alleged in the complaint. Agency is a
- legal relationship which results from the manifestation of
- consent of one person to allow another
- to act on his or her behalf and subject to his or her
- control, and consent by the other to so act. [Maurille v.
- Park Slope U-Maul, 194 AD2d 142; Restatement (Second) of
- agency *1 .] The starting point for an agency analysis in
- this case is the "Bulletin Board Leader Agreement" ("the
- Agreement" found at Exhibit A to Opposition Affidavit of
- William C. Schneck) between PRODIGY and Epstein. This
- Agreement sets forth eleven specific responsibilities
- expected of a Board Leader including (I) the posting of a
- minimum of 120 notes on the bulletin board each month; (II)
- working with member Representatives; (III) providing monthly
- reports and (IV) following any additional procedures
- provided by PRODIGY. The Agreement also requires prior
- PRODIGY approval of all promotional efforts. In addition,
- the Agreement contains the following language
-
- Although you will not be a PRODIGY
- representative, your actions as Board Leader
- will still reflect on PRODIGY.
-
- You will be solely responsible for all of
- your actions as a Board Leader. While
- PRODIGY will certainly support your actions
- as a Board Leader as a general matter (so
- long as they are not in breach of this
- Agreement), we will not assume any liability
- for anything you do (or fail to do) as a
- Board Leader. You hereby indemnify and agree
- to hold PRODIGY harmless from and against all
- claims cost, liabilities judgments ...
- arising out of or in connection with anything
- you do ...
- . . .
- Being a Board Leader does not make you a
- PRODIGY Services Company employee,
- representative or agent, and you agree not to
- claim or suggest that you are one.
-
- PRODIGY relies on this language to extricate itself from any
- alleged agency relationship with Epstein. However,
- talismanic language does not determine an agency
- relationship. [Matter of Shulman Transport Enterprises,
- Inc., 33 B.R. 383, 365, aff'd 744 Fzd 293.) The Court must
- look to the substance of the relationship. (fd.) Where one
- party retains a sufficient degree of direction and control
- over another, a principal-agent relationship exists. [Garcia
- v Herald Tribune Fresh Air Fund, Inc., 51 Ad2d *97.] In
- addition, whether one is an independent contractor is not
- determinative of whether one is an agent. [Columbia
- Broadcasting System, Inc. v Stokely-Van Camp, Inc., 522 F2d
- 369, Ackert v *******, 29 Misc2d 962, aff'd 20 AD2d *50.]
-
- As to the substance of the relationship between PRODIGY and
- its Board Leaders, PRODIGY Security Officer McDowell
- testified that Board Leaders are required to follow the
- Guidelines and the PRODIGY performs a "management function"
- with respect to the activities of the Board Leaders.
- (McDowell deposition transcript p. 78 found at Exhibit S to
- the moving papers.) Furthermore, Epstein's Supervisor,
- Jennifer Ambrozek , testified that PRODIGY reviews the
- Guidelines with Board Leaders, who are then required to
- enforce the Guidelines. (Ambrozek deposition transcript pp.
- 23 and 191, found at Exhibit R to the moving papers.) Board
- Leaders are also given a 28 page "Bulletin Board Leader
- Survival Guide" (Exhibit Q to the moving papers), dated
- October 1994, wherein many technical terms and procedures
- are explained, and the following caveat is given:
-
- IF YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT SOMETHING IS OR WHAT IT'S
- SUPPOSED TO DO, LEAVE IT ALONE UNTIL YOU CAN ASK.
-
- Where the facts are not disputed the question of agency
- should be resolved by the court. [Plymouth Rock Fuel Corp. v
- Leucedia Inc., 100 AD2d 842.] This is such a case. The
- aforementioned testimony by PRODIGY employees and
- documentation generated by PRODIGY, together with the
- Guidelines themselves, cannot be disputed by PRODIGY and
- leave no doubt that at least for the limited purpose of
- monitoring and editing the "Money Talk" computer bulletin
- board, PRODIGY directed and controlled Epstein's actions. In
- reaching this conclusion the Court has taken care not to
- rely on any testimony by Epstein, inasmuch as it is the
- conduct of the principal which must create the impression of
- authority, not the conduct of the agent. [See, Ford v Unity
- Hosp., 32 NY2d 464, 273.] Based on the foregoing, the Court
- holds that Epstein acted as PRODIGY's agent for the purposes
- of the acts and omissions alleged in the complaint.
-
- Dated: May 24, 1995
- Mineola, New York
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: bmac@bu.edu
- Subject: File 5--Prodigy decision location and amateur analysis
- Date: Mon, 29 May 1995 10:37:19 -500
-
- Here is where you can find the judge's decision:
-
- http://www.ziff.com:8001/~pcmag/trends/tr0526b.htm
-
- I read the whole thing through, slowly, and just finished.
- While it's not a happy thing for Prodigy, the judge's reasoning
- seems pretty thorough. The logic states:
-
- PUBLISHER QUESTION:
- 1. Prodigy chose to censor/edit its discussion forums
- so as to be a "family" oriented BBS.
-
- 2. Prodigy willingly and knowingly marketed itself
- to the public as an edited forum.
-
- 3. Therefore, Prodigy has editing control, and the
- additional responsibilities that go with that control.
-
- 4. This distinction makes Prodigy more analogous
- to a newspaper, than to a "conduit" of information,
- like a bookstore.
-
- 5. Prodigy created its own internal staff of editors, who
- were required to follow Prodigy policy in their duties.
-
- 6. Therefore, Prodigy was actually editing the board,
- including at the time of the libelous posting.
-
- 7. SO: Prodigy is a publisher who published a libelous
- statement. RULE: Publishers, as people who repeat and
- perpetuate libelous statements, are liable for their actions
- as sure as if they wrote the libelous statement themselves.
- Contrast this with conduits, like bookstores, who do not
- exercise primary editing control over their wares and so
- are responsible only if they know, or have reason to know,
- that there is libelous content therein.
-
- AGENCY QUESTION:
- Prodigy tried to avoid liability by claiming that the board
- leaders are solely responsible for the content of their forum,
- and sign a waiver stating that they cannot deny this sole
- responsibility. The judge nuked that argument:
-
- 8. An agency is where one party (the board leader) agrees
- to act on behalf of another party (Prodigy), subject to the
- other party's (Prodigy's) control.
-
- 9. An agency relationship makes the primary (Prodigy) liable
- for the actions of the agent b/c of that control.
-
- 10. Prodigy put the agent in such a position of control that
- the substance of the relationship must govern, and not the
- purported waiver of a relationship: the judge cut through the
- B/S and didn't let Prodigy weasel out b/c the board leader
- was acting as Prodigy's agent, and held out to the public
- as such.
-
- 11. Therefore, Prodigy is liable for the actions of the agent,
- which means that Prodigy is liable for the libelous statements.
-
- WHOPPING HUGE CAVEAT
- The procedural stance of the decision was for a partial
- summary judgment. What this means is that the fighting
- parties (Prodigy and the financial house) have stipulated the
- material facts, and judgment is being issued "as a matter of law"
- on the relevant parts.
-
- I might be wrong about this, but it seemed to me that
- the financial house might still have to *prove* that the
- statements were indeed libelous, unless there's already
- been a finding of fact on that issue that isn't mentioned
- in the decision. Can somebody confirm whether or not
- the question of libel has been decided yet, either by a jury
- or as a matter of law?
-
- Thanks for reading this far, if you did. Does my interpretation
- hold water?
- ******************
- Life is not a brief candle... It is a splendid torch
- that I want to make burn as brightly as possible
- before handing it on to future generations.
- --with thanks to George Bernard Shaw--
-
- Brendon McNamara [bmac@bu.edu]
- Boston University School of Law
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 19 Apr 1995 22:51:01 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)
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- ------------------------------
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- End of Computer Underground Digest #7.44
- ************************************
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-