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-
- Computer underground Digest Fri Feb 2, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 11
- 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
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #8.11 (Fri, Feb 2, 1996)
-
- File 1--ACLU Denounces Passage of Telecom Bill
- File 2--EFF Response to Telecommunications Bill
- File 3--Telecomm Bill may criminalize some Abortion Discussion
- File 4--Abortion Research FOLLOW-UP
- File 5--Comments on CDA Analysis
- File 6--Mike Godwin: Letter to President Clinton
- File 7--New grassroots campaign - please adopt
- File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 16 Dec, 1995)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 1 Feb 1996 20:31:27 -0500
- From: beeson@PIPELINE.COM(Ann Beeson)
- Subject: File 1--ACLU Denounces Passage of Telecom Bill
-
- AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
- ________________________________________________________________
- News from the ACLU National Washington Office
-
- ACLU Denounces Passage of Telecom Bill
- and Prepares to Challenge Online Censorship Provisions
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- Thursday, February 1, 1996
-
- WASHINGTON -- Citing grave free speech and privacy concerns, the
- American Civil Liberties Union today denounced the passage of the
- Telecommunications Deregulation law, and announced immediate plans to
- file a lawsuit on behalf of more than a dozen plaintiffs challenging
- the online censorship provisions of the bill unless President Clinton
- vetoes the measure.
-
- The ACLU also criticized the swiftness with which Congress acted.
- Both houses had less than 24 hours to consider the bill, leaving little
- time for debate or measured reflection on a massive and complex bill
- that would implicate one-eighth of the national economy. The margin
- in the House was 414 to 16; the Senate voted 91 to 5.
-
- "This law restructures the entire telecommunications industry and
- places the free speech and privacy rights of all internet users in
- permanent jeopardy," said Ira Glasser, Executive Director of the ACLU.
- "It will criminalize otherwise protected speech in cyberspace, impose
- new censorship controls on television, and destroy the diversity of
- media ownership. For a Congress that says it wants to get big
- government out of people's lives this law represents the most extreme
- hypocrisy."
-
- In a January 29th letter sent to members of Congress, the ACLU
- summarized three major provisions of the bill that cause concern and
- urged its rejection on free speech and privacy grounds:
-
- -- it would establish a big government censorship regime for
- criminalizing speech on the Internet, effectively restricting
- expression to that appropriate only for children and subjecting
- all Americans to the standards of the most socially
- conservative communities.
-
- -- its V-Chip requirement would give the government, rather than
- parents, the power to decide which programs are appropriate for
- family viewing.
-
- -- it would allow the concentration of the media in fewer hands,
- thwarting access by smaller companies and frustrating diversity
- and competition. (A copy of the letter is available upon
- request.)
-
- After its passage today, ACLU Legislative Counsel Donald Haines
- said, "Congress has abandoned its commitment to free speech, privacy
- and a marketplace free from communications monopolies. By rushing headlong
-
- to pass this bill, Congress is leaving us no choice but to turn to the
- courts."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 22:33:19 -0600
- From: jthomas@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
- Subject: File 2--EFF Response to Telecommunications Bill
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following is the EFF's response to the
- Telecomm Bill))
-
- YOUR CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS HAVE BEEN SACRIFICED FOR POLITICAL EXPEDIENCY
-
- EFF Statement on 1996 Telecommunications Regulation Bill
-
-
- Feb. 1, 1996 Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Contacts:
-
- Lori Fena, Exec. Dir.
- 415/436-9333 * lori@eff.org
-
- Mike Godwin, Staff Counsel
- 510/548-3290 * mnemonic@eff.org
-
- Shari Steele, Staff Counsel
- 301/375-8856 * ssteele@eff.org
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), decries the forfeiture of free
- speech prescribed by the sweeping censorship provisions of the
- telecommunications "reform" legislation passed overwhelmingly by the
- House and Senate Feb. 1, 1996, almost immediately after being reported
- out of committee, before the public was able to read, much less comment
- upon this bill.
-
- Congress demonstrates once more their willingness to abandon their most
- sacred responsibilities - the protection of the US Constitution and
- Bill of Rights - in order to expedite legislation that sacrifices
- individual, family and community rights in its rush to win the support
- of telecom industry giants as well as the religious right, during an
- election year.
-
- The consolation offered by our elected officials to those concerned about
- abridging free speech, is that there is a high probability that the
- censorship provisions in this bill would not stand up to court challenges
- based on constitutional grounds.
-
- Consider this a wake-up call. Our elected officials have spoken, and
- with the passage of the most sweeping US telecommunications legislation
- in over 60 years, our Constitutional rights in the new medium
- of computer networking have been usurped. As the 21st century draws near,
- our elected representatives have chosen to take us back to the close of
- the 19th.
-
- EFF is dismayed by the process and substance of this legislation, as
- well as by the immediate and far-reaching negative impact it will have on
- individuals, society and commerce.
-
-
- Impact
- ------
-
- This latest version of the "Communication Decency Act", originally proposed
- by Sen. James Exon (D-NB), contains a deadly combination of a vague and
- overly broad definition of what speech is unacceptable online, criminal
- prosecution, and large monetary fines, which will set off a tidal wave of
- censorship to avoid real and perceived liability.
-
- Although the bill provides for some protection for service providers, this
- shelter only exists if the provider takes an active roll in censoring
- public and private messages. We have already felt the industry foreshocks
- when AOL and CompuServe responded to recent government censorship
- requests. The censorship wave will begin with the largest online
- services, and flow rapidly through the whole U.S. community of service
- and content providers.
-
- The result will be a crippling of free society and commerce in the U.S., and
- damage to the global Internet.
-
- Individual participants in this medium stand to lose the freedom that has
- characterized the Internet since its beginning.
-
- Providers of online content, such as authors of World Wide Web documents,
- or hosts of AOL forums, will find themselves forced to "dumb down" all
- information and entertainment that they provide into little more than a
- cleansed, thin collection of "G-rated" material suitable for children.
- If the Internet is one vast, global library of information, this
- legislation will have reduced the public spaces of the Net to the
- "children's room" of that library.
-
- System operators and access providers will divert resources to censorship
- mechanisms and programs to avoid exposure to felony-level criminal liability
- for the actions and posts of users over whom they can exercise no control.
-
- New multi-billion dollar industries currently based in the U.S., such as
- Internet service, online publishing, and digital commerce, face
- economic uncertainty just as they begin to hit their stride, as investors,
- stockholders, and customers evaluate the negative impact of censorship on
- the value of their product and their company.
-
- The telecom bill unwisely encourages states to follow suit, defining and
- legislating online censorship and liability their own ways. These
- aftershocks, already working their way through state legislatures all
- over the country, will subject individuals and companies to legal mayhem
- as they run into contradictory local regulations enforced from afar against
- providers and users in other jurisdictions.
-
- The long-term effects could reach other media as well. As traditional
- content providers such as publishers, newspapers, television shows and
- talk radio, increasingly merge with online communications, it will
- become prohibitively expensive to produce two versions of the content,
- one for the Net, and one for everywhere else - a single, censored, version
- for all formats would be produced, chilling expression in print and
- other currently freer media.
-
-
- Process
- -------
-
- A quick review of the political process which produced this bill
- demonstrates how bad legislation occurs when the content of a bill is kept
- from public scrutiny, allowing only staffers and lobbyists to participate.
-
- * There have been no public hearings on this legislation. Neither the
- CDA, nor the larger Telecom Bill have been presented openly to the
- public. As a result, Congress has neither heard expert testimony about the
- medium and industry, nor allowed constituents to review and comment on what
- their "representatives" are doing.
-
- * No conference committee report or final bill text was made available for
- review, except to committee staffers and innermost lobbyists until after
- passage. Despite repeated promises from House Speaker Newt Gingrich,
- Congress has failed to provide online public access to committee reports
- and "live" bills.
-
- * Congresspersons voted for passage of this regulation without even having
- time to read, much less consider the impact of, the bill - less than
- one day after it is voted out of conference.
-
- * The sponsors of the bill and its fundamentalist supporters have, with no
- public participation or oversight, thrown away more rational proposals,
- including the Cox/Wyden bill, which would have actually helped parents
- and teachers control the online access of their children and students.
-
- EFF, along with Taxpayer Assets Project and several other public interest
- organizations, have repeatedly asked that current Congressional information
- be immediately provided to the public, not just to lobbyists, and that
- that the Telecom Bill be put on hold, pending full public participation
- in this debate. Voters may wish to express to Congress how they feel
- about being denied the right to read or have a say in legislation
- that threatens their freedom of expression.
-
-
- Substance
- ---------
-
- A brief summary of the problems inherent in the Telecom Bill's censorship
- provisions illuminates the magnitude of the issues. The CDA would:
-
- * subject all online content to the interpretation of ill-defined
- "indecency" law;
-
- * irrationally equate Internet communications with radio and TV broadcasting,
- and unconstitutionally impose on computer networks indecency restrictions
- that are more severe than those applied to any other medium;
-
- * actively hinder the on-going development and refinement of real
- solutions to problems such as online harassment and parents' needs to
- supervise their own children's online access;
-
- * in all probability will establish broad FCC regulation of the Internet,
- with all of the attendant problems that will entail;
-
- * create a new "access crime", equating the posting of material on a web
- site, or even the provision of basic Internet access, with willful
- transmission of indecent material directly to minors - harming the online
- service industry, and retarding the development of the electronic press;
-
- * afford no effective legal protection for system operators, creating a
- speech-chilling liability no more sensible than holding librarians and
- postmasters responsible for the content on bookshelves and in parcels.
-
- * weaken the privacy of all Internet users by turning system operators
- into snoops and censors.
-
- * would criminalize even classic works of literature and art, or medical
- and educational materials on breast cancer or sexually transmitted
- disease. Obscenity law, not the indencency law used in the Telecom Bill,
- considers literary, artistic or scientific value. Indecency law makes
- no such exceptions.
-
- Many reasonable adults might be surprised to find that the Telecom Bill's
- indecency restrictions could ban:
-
- * the online distribution of the King James Bible, which quite prominently
- features the word "piss" (in II Kings) - a word already specifically
- defined by the Supreme Court to be indecent;
-
- * the text (or video, for that matter) of a PG movie that any child may
- attend without parental supervision, not to mention the R-rated content
- available on any of a number of cable TV stations;
-
- * a _Schindler's_List_ WWW site, which could earn an Internet service
- provider prison time;
-
- * anything featuring nudity, in any context, including breast cancer
- information or photos of Michelangelo's Cistine Chapel paintings, which
- could result in the poster have to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars
- in fines, if the material happened to seem "patently offensive" to an
- excitable prosecutor.
-
- This is the grim reality of censorship through indecency regulation: It
- makes no allowances for artistic merit, social value, or medical necessity.
- It is without reason, and without conscience.
-
-
- Court Challenge
- ---------------
-
- Fortunately, there is a very good chance that the courts will refuse
- outright to uphold the Communications Decency provisions of the Telecom
- Bill. EFF, along with other civil-liberties groups, will be mounting a
- legal challenge to the bill's censorship provisions, on First Amendment and
- other Constitutional grounds. Among the bases for challenging the act:
-
- * Unconstitutional expansion of federal authority. It is inappropriate
- for the Federal Communications Commission or any other federal agency to
- dictate standards for content in a medium where there is no independent
- Constitutional justification for federal regulation, as there has been in
- the broadcast arena and in certain narrow areas of basic telephone
- service. Like newspapers and bookstores, the Internet is fully protected
- by the First Amendment.
-
- * Vagueness and overbreadth. The terms the act relies on -- "indecency"
- and "patently offensive" -- have never been positively defined by the
- courts or the Congress, and so create uncertainty as to the scope of the
- restriction, necessarily resulting in a "chilling effect" on protected
- speech. Moreover, these terms criminalize broad classes of speech that are
- understood to be protected by the First Amendment, including material that
- has serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
-
- * Failure to use the "least restrictive means" to regulate speech. The
- First Amendment requires that speech regulation laws must pass the "least
- restrictive means" test. That is, if government censorship is not
- the least restrictive possible means of ensuring the goal (protecting
- an unwitting or under-age audience from unsolicited indecency), then
- the restriction is unconstitutional. In the case of the Internet,
- government control is demonstrably not the least restrictive means,
- as filtration, ratings, and labeling technology and services are already
- available and operational - from software tools to help parents shield
- their children from inappropriate material, to special filtered
- Usenet service for entire schools, in which all information has been
- checked for indecent content.
-
- An indecency restriction must pass all of these tests to be constitutional.
- The Communications Decency Amendment fails every one of them.
-
- EFF, together with a wide range of civil-liberties groups and
- organizations that would be affected by the legislation, has already
- joined preparations for a massive legal challenge to the CDA should
- it pass - an effort that should enjoin enforcement of this legislation,
- and, we hope, prevent the darker scenarios outlined above. The entire
- process will be very costly in time, human resources and money, but is
- necessary to protect what remains of our rights to free speech, press, and
- association.
-
-
- Launching of the Blue Ribbon Campaign
- -------------------------------------
-
- A blue ribbon is chosen as the symbol for the preservation of basic civil
- rights in the electronic world.
-
- EFF asks that a blue ribbon be worn or displayed to show support for the
- essential human right of free speech. This fundamental building block of
- free society, affirmed by the U.S. Bill of Rights in 1791, and by the U.N.
- Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, has been sacrificed in the 1996 Telecom
- Bill.
-
- The blue ribbon will be a way to raise awareness of these issues, and for
- the quiet voice of reason to be heard.
-
- The voice of reason knows that free speech doesn't equate to abuse of
- women and children, or the breeding of hatred or intolerance.
-
- **************
-
- For more information on the Blue Ribbon Campaign, including blue ribbon
- graphics we encourage Net users to prominently display on their WWW pages
- with links to the URL below, please see:
-
- http://www.eff.org/blueribbon.html
- gopher.eff.org, 1/Activism/BlueRibbon
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Activism/BlueRibbon/
-
-
- For more information on the Communications Decency legislation and other
- Internet censorship bills, see:
-
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/
- gopher.eff.org, 1/Alerts
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Alerts/
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 15:16:51 -0800 (PST)
- From: telstar@WIRED.COM(--Todd Lappin-->)
- Subject: File 3--Telecomm Bill may criminalize some Abortion Discussion
-
- Here's what I've found out about the limitations on the dissemination of
- abortion materials contained within the telecom reform bill:
-
- (The amended text of the Telecom Bill follows below, along with U.S.C. 18,
- Section 1462.)
-
- Basically we're talking about a provision that extends a section of the US
- Code (The Comstock Act) prohibiting certain kinds of "obscene" speech to
- include "interactive computer services."
-
- Schroeder's office (202-225-4431) faxed me their position... they say that
- the changes "will criminalize a wide array of public health information
- relating to abortion, including discussion of RU-486 on the Internet."
- Perhaps, but...
-
- Sam Stratman from Rep. Hyde's office (202-225-4561) insists subsection (c)
- of Section 1462 has already been invalidated by the courts (although it
- remains on the books), so the extension of 1462 to include "interactive
- computer services" would have no bearing on abortion-related materials.
-
- According to the Center for Reproductive Law & Policy (212-514-5534), the
- last time ANY court has ruled on subsection (c) was in 1919... long before
- Roe v. Wade. They say the statute remains on the books, although it has
- long gone unenforced.
-
- Steven Lieberman from the NY State Bar clarified things even further.
- Lieberman says that the prohibitions in subsection (c) against the
- dissemination of information about abortion were invalidated by the Supreme
- Court in Bigelow v. Virginia in 1975. (This was a case concerning the
- availablity of out-of-state abortion materials in the state of Virginia.)
- As for the prohibitions against any "drug, medicine, article, or thing
- designed, adapted, or intended for producing abortion"... these were
- invalidated by Roe v. Wade.
-
- So, as Lieberman summarized the situation, "A prosecution under subsection
- (c) of Section 1462 would be doomed from the outset." Nevertheless, from a
- strictly formal standpoint, it appears that the prohibitions on abortion
- information are indeed in place... even if they are toothless.
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- WIRED Magazine
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Sec. 507 of the Telecom Bill Ammends Section 1462 of title 18 of the U.S.
- Code (Chapter 71), in ways which may make sending the following over the
- Internet illegal:
-
- o any text, graphic, or sound that is lewd, lascivious, or filthy
-
- o any information telling about how to obtain or make abortions and
- drugs, or obtaining or making anything that is for indecent or immoral
- use
-
- Here is Section 1462 as Ammended:
-
- (Telecom bill chnages in "<" and ">"):
-
- Section 1462. Importation or transportation of obscene matters
-
- Whoever brings into the United States, or any place subject to the
- jurisdiction thereof, or knowingly uses any express company or other common
- carrier <or interactive computer service (as defined in section 230(e)(2) of
- the Communications Act of 1934)>, for carriage in interstate or foreign
- commerce -
-
- (a) any obscene, lewd, lascivious, or filthy book, pamphlet, picture,
- motion-picture film, paper, letter, writing, print, or other matter of
- indecent character; or
- (b) any obscene, lewd, lascivious, or filthy phonograph recording,
- electrical transcription, or other article or thing capable of producing
- sound; or
- (c) any drug, medicine, article, or thing designed, adapted, or
- intended for producing abortion, or for any indecent or immoral use; or any
- written or printed card, letter, circular, book, pamphlet, advertisement, or
- notice of any kind giving information, directly or indirectly, where, how, or
- of whom, or by what means any of such mentioned articles, matters, or things
- may be obtained or made; or Whoever knowingly takes <or receives>, from such
- express company or other common carrier <or interactive computer service (as
- defined in section 230(e)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934)> any matter
- or thing the carriage <or importation> of which is herein made unlawful -
-
- Shall be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than five
- years, or both, for the first such offense and shall be fined not more than
- $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both, for each such offense
- thereafter.
-
- -----------
-
- Here is the text which addes the interactive computer service part
- in the Telecom Bill:
-
- SEC. 507. CLARIFICATION OF CURRENT LAWS REGARDING COMMUNICATION
- OF OBSCENE MATERIALS THROUGH THE USE OF COMPUTERS.
- (a) Importation or Transportation.--Section 1462 of title 18, United
- States Code, is amended--
-
- (1) in the first undesignated paragraph, by inserting ``or
- interactive computer service (as defined in section 230(e)(2) of the
- Communications Act of 1934)'' after ``carrier''; and
-
- (2) in the second undesignated paragraph--
- (A) by inserting ``or receives,'' after ``takes'';
- (B) by inserting ``or interactive computer service (as defined
- in section 230(e)(2) of the Communications Act of 1934)'' after ``common
- carrier''; and
- (C) by inserting ``or importation'' after ``carriage''.
-
- -----------
-
- Media Notes:
-
- USAToday 02/01/96 - 07:37 PM ET http://www.usatoday.com/news/washdc/ncs16.htm
-
- Telecommunications deregulation breaks down electronic walls
-
- "At one point, the debate veered off on abortion.
-
- Seeing a ''high-tech gag rule,'' Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., joined by Pat
- Schroeder, D-Colo., and several other women lawmakers, asserted the
- anti-pornography provisions would outlaw discussions about abortion over
- the Internet, the global computer network.
-
- Rep Henry Hyde, R-Ill., a leading abortion foe, assured members that
- nothing in the bill suggested any restrictions on discussions about
- abortion."
-
- Well, Henry Hyde was right - nothing in the bill suggests restrictions on
- abortion discussion - the restrictions are in Title 18 of the U.S. Code,
- which now includes computer networks.
-
- -----------
-
- Thanks to the Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute
- (http://www.law.cornell.edu/) and the Alliance for Competitive Communications
- (http://www.bell.com/) for source text.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 19:18:26 -0800 (PST)
- From: telstar@WIRED.COM(--Todd Lappin-->)
- Subject: File 4--Abortion Research FOLLOW-UP
-
- A follow-up to my earlier post:
-
- I just got off the phone with Simon Heller, Staff Attorney for the Center
- for Reproductive Law & Policy (212-514-5534). Heller provided some further
- detail about subsection (c) of the Comstock Act, U.S.C. 18, Section 1462.
-
- Heller went to great lengths to point out that subsection (c) has NEVER
- been ruled unconstitutional by a U.S. court. In addition, he said that
- because both the House and the Senate amended the bill as part of the
- telecommunications reform bill, from a legal standpoint this suggests to
- the court that the Comstock provisions have gained "renewed currency" -
- depite the fact that they date back to 1909.
-
- "Until a court specifically says a law is unconstitutional, it remains in
- effect," Heller said. "The constitionality of the limitations on speech
- about abortion contained within Section 1462 have never been adjudicted.
- For 25 years people have assumed that the law is unconstitutional. But
- that idea remains untested."
-
- One final note to make things even more confusing...
-
- This from an article by RORY J. O'CONNOR in today's San Jose Mercury News:
-
- Shortly after House members discovered the telco bill included language
- that would have made it a crime to even discuss abortion on the Internet,
- the Merc reports that, "the sponsor of the language, Rep. Henry Hyde,
- R-Ill., and pro-choice Rep. Nita Lowey, D-N.Y., took the floor in a
- scripted exchange to clarify that Hyde didn't intend the language to impose
- such a ban."
-
- There's a special name for these kinds of "scripted exchanges," but it
- escapes me for the moment. Nevertheless, legally, such exchanges serve to
- provide the courts with some insight into legislators' intent at the time
- when legislation is adopted. In this case, the exhange was meant to
- indicate that the revisions to the Comstock Act are *NOT* intended to serve
- as a prohibition against discussion of abortion online.
-
- It goes without saying that significan uncertainty and ambiguity surrounds
- the last-minute changes to the Comstock Act that were inserted into the
- telco reform bill. It also seems safe to say that the possiblity exists
- for some individual or organization to be prosectuted under the revised
- law. Such a prosecution probably would not pass constitutional muster (in
- light of Bigelow v. Virginia and Roe v. Wade), but regardless; until the
- courts rendered a final decision, the measure -- or any attempt to
- prosecute under it's provisions -- would have the effect of (further)
- chilling free speech on the Net.
-
- Ugh.
-
- Next stop... President Clinton's desk.
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- WIRED Magazine
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 11:39:08 -0500
- From: Tim King <timk@cybercom.net>
- Subject: File 5--Comments on CDA Analysis
-
- Groups like the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT) and the
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) have been a great source of
- information regarding the Communications Decency Act (CDA), recently
- passed by congress. As a critic of this act, I'd like to make some
- comments regarding the CDT's analysis of the latest CDA, which can be
- found at <http://www.cdt.org/policy/freespeech/12_21.cdaanal.html>.
- Related materials can be found at <http://www.cdt.org/cda.html>.
-
- The CDT's analysis is similar to others put forth by the EFF and ACLU.
- I would be very interested to hear from one of the EFF staff lawyers
- concerning the comments I make here.
-
- Please note that I am not a lawyer. Even if I were, the opinions
- expressed herein might be wrong. I am merely a concerned citizen who
- is intently interested in how the law applies to him and to his
- family.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
- According to the CDT, the CDA "relies on the vague and blatantly
- unconstitutional 'indecency' standard"
-
- This has been repeat ad nauseum, and was at one time true. But it does
- not appear to be true anymore. The amended 47 U.S.C. 223(a), which
- uses the word "indecent," does not appear to apply to the Internet. It
- applies, rather, to telephones and "telecommunications devices." A
- telecommunications device "does not include the use of an interactive
- computer service." [223(h)(1)(B)]
-
- ISPs are interactive computer services: "The term 'interactive
- computer service' means an information service, system, or access
- software provider... including specifically a service or system that
- provides access to the Internet..." [230(f)(2), see sec 509 of the
- act] Since Internet communication can only occur through an ISP, I
- should think that the use of the Internet is not covered by this
- provision. Someone please correct me if I'm wrong.
-
- Meanwhile, "the indecency standard" is currently applied by the law to
- telephone communications in general. Currently 223(a)(1)(A), which the
- CDA amends, applies to anyone who "makes any comment, request,
- suggestion or proposal which is obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, or
- INDECENT." [emphasis mine] To extend this law to include fax machines
- and direct modem-to-modem communication does not in itself seem
- unconstitutional.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Allegedly, the CDA "contains weaker protections [than the Cox/Wyden
- bill] for content providers who label content and enable others to
- block it..."
-
- 230(c) contains the good-Samaritan provision, which seems to be,
- word-for-word, as it appears in the Cox/Wyden bill.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The CDA "would allow states to impose additional restrictions on
- non-commercial activities such as freenets, BBS's, and non-profit
- content providers."
-
- I fail to understand how 223(g)(2) gives any power to the states that
- they didn't otherwise have. It appears to say only that states can
- make laws regarding INTRAstate commerce, so long as these laws don't
- conflict with federal law. This is guaranteed by the Constitution, is
- it not?
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- They say that the CDA "prohibits sending 'indecent' material directly
- to a minor or making indecent material available for display in a
- manner available to a minor (including world wide web pages, ftp
- sites, or usenet newsgroups)."
-
- In this case, our beloved commentators have evidently failed to
- actually read the bill. Section 223(d) applies to "whoever...
- knowingly uses an interactive computer service to send to a specific
- person or persons under 18 years of age, or... to display in a manner
- available to a person under 18 years of age, any... communication
- that, in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as
- measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory
- activities or organs..."
-
- Now, there are problems with this, but "the indecency standard" is not
- one of them. A "patently offensive" standard may be one of them, but
- this is indeed something different.
-
- I do have concerns, however. Firstly, it's difficult to tell to
- exactly which works this paragraph applies. And I don't know precisely
- which works are excluded. Furthermore, I don't know whose "community
- standards" are to be used to make the judgement. (The publisher's? The
- ISP's? The reader's?) Is pornography alone restricted? Or does the
- provision also apply to adult-oriented literature and sexual
- discussions and advice?
-
- Moreover, I am unclear on exactly what I must do in order to abide by
- this law, if I should want to publish content that falls under it.
- There are two ways for a web publisher, for example, to protect
- himself. He can use an account-based service with credit-card
- authorization. Or he can take "in good faith, reasonable, effective,
- and appropriate actions under the circumstances..., which may involve
- any appropriate measures to restrict minors from such communications,
- including any method which is feasible under available technology."
- [223(e)(5)(A)]
-
- So, do I have to verify the age of each potential user and issue them
- an account on my web page? This would necessitate not only a
- potentially large administrative overhead but also that my service
- provider would have to provide me with the ability to implement this.
- As an individual, with limited hours and dollars, this would seem
- quite an imposition, to say the least.
-
- What if I merely issue a warning, requiring the user to take some
- affirmative step, such as following a link, to access the questionable
- content? This is what many people do currently, as a matter of
- courtesy. But is this "effective" enough to comply with the CDA? If
- not, isn't the provision, then, an infringement on free speech? I
- would simply choose not to publish rather than be criminally liable.
-
- And how does this apply to USEnet news? It's technologically
- impossible for a poster to a newsgroup to limit access to only certain
- individuals. Can he simply assume that there are no minors floating
- around alt.sex.wizards? Or will he have to post anonymously? In either
- case, the law will have done little for minors, as will have only
- stopped articles from those who wish to, rightfully so, take credit
- for their own work.
-
- And if a minor happens to read a post someone submitted to
- alt.sex.wizards, it would appear that the poster is legally
- responsible. The ISP isn't responsible, as per 223(e)(1). The minor
- himself isn't responsible, right? And does the originating ISP, under
- (d)(2) and (e)(2)-(3), have a responsibility to cancel the offending
- article?
-
- Frankly, I don't see how the courts could, in good conscience, support
- this provision without limiting its apparent scope substantially. But,
- then again, I can't imagine how this bill could possibly pass. That's
- what I've said from the start: It's just gonna die.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- "CDT believes that this proposal threatens the very existence of the
- Internet as a means for free expression, education, and political
- discourse."
-
- Frankly, I think this warning is overblown. Of all the speech on the
- Internet, only a relatively small portion could possibly become
- criminal. That's not to say that the legislation is okay. Rather, it
- is to say that freedom on the Internet will survive enough for us to
- discuss the invalidity of the CDA, for example.
-
- In my estimation, for the most part, this bill will have little
- effect, good or bad, on the Internet as applied to children. Enough
- people will post pornography anonymously and enough questionable
- material will be available from foreign sites to make the act's affect
- moot.
-
- I fear that ISPs, if sufficiently alarmed, may get spooked into taking
- censorial or intrusional action. But I pray that they resist the urge.
- It will only be bad for business. The objectionable provisions of this
- bill will hopefully be appropriately scrutinized by the courts. And I
- support the ACLU and other organizations in their effort to bring this
- act to court.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 17:20:11 -0800 (PST)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 6--Mike Godwin: Letter to President Clinton
-
- Feb. 2, 1996
-
- A LETTER TO THE PRESIDENT: VETO THE TELECOM BILL
- By Mike Godwin
- Staff Counsel
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Phone numbers:
- 510-548-2976 or
- 510-548-3290
-
-
- Dear Mr. President,
-
- I know you've been awfully busy for the last four years. But if you'd
- had time, and the inclination to surf the Internet, you might have
- come across some of the things I've written about you there.
-
- You see, I've been one of your boosters and defenders on the Net ever
- since I watched your campaign from close up, back in 1992 when I
- lived in Nashua, New Hampshire. I even attended the rally in a high
- school gym where you spoke, powerfully, of your commitment to lead
- the United States into the next century. I shook your hand there.
-
- And when I got back home, I wrote to my friends on the Internet and
- on the WELL about how I thought you were the candidate who had the
- most to say about the future. I certainly hoped it was true, because
- even then I spent a large part of every day worrying about one
- special part of the future --the Internet.
-
- On the Net, you see, the First Amendment's promise of freedom of the
- press is not limited to Time Warner or Gannett or the New York Times.
- Suddenly, every American citizen is potentially a publisher who can
- reach a large audience and take full part in the public and private
- colloquies of American life.
-
- Which is why I work for an organization dedicated to ensuring that
- the First Amendment protections apply as strongly to digital
- discourse as they do to words printed in ink on the pulp of dead
- trees. The Internet levels the First Amendment playing field -- it
- makes Justice Holmes's "marketplace of ideas" something more than a
- metaphor. I'm excited about the Internet, because it could mean a
- Golden Age of American democracy.
-
- But not everyone is as excited as I am. Lobbyists for some
- religious-right groups have managed to persuade the Congress, and a
- significant segment of the American public, that the Internet is rife
- with pornography, not to mention other "dangers." They see in the
- Internet a future in which it will be a lot harder to impose a
- fundamentalist cultural agenda because when everyone is a publisher
- you need a lot more thought police.
-
- So they want to nip freedom of speech on the Net in the bud. And
- their tactic has been to add language to the Telecommunications
- Reform Act, now passed by both houses of Congress, that would
- restrict "indecent" or "patently offensive" speech on the Net.
-
- They like to say this is about pornography, Mr. President, but it's
- not. As you know, it's already illegal under state and federal law
- to distribute obscene materials either on the Net or off. And there
- are already laws protecting children from exposure to obscene
- materials or other materials deemed "harmful to minors."
-
- Their real agenda is not to protect children -- it's to silence
- adults. Their goal is to take the great library of the Internet and
- restrict us all to the children's room of that library. They've
- forgotten that the First Amendment was crafted precisely to protect
- disturbing, controversial, "offensive" speech -- after all, no one
- ever tries to ban any other kind.
-
- And tactically they have been very effective -- they got their
- restriction on "indecency" (a term the Supreme Court has never
- defined, despite what they say about FCC v. Pacifica) added to the
- very telecommunications bill that you and Vice President Gore were so
- eager to pass. The bill passed the House and the Senate by huge
- majorities on Thursday.
-
- Which is why I think you must veto it, Mr. President, on the grounds
- that its "indecency" restrictions violate the First Amendment. You
- were a professor of Constitutional Law once -- you know that
- "indecency" can't be constitutionally banned from any medium, and
- that there's no constitutional authority for Congress to have this
- degree of control over the content on the Internet.
-
- If you take this stand on principle, you won't have killed the
- telecommunications bill -- it's clear that Congress truly wants to
- pass it, and they'll surely pass some version of it shortly. And you
- won't win the support of the anti-"indecency" crowd -- they hate you
- and they're already working toward your defeat in November.
-
- But here's what you will do. First, you'll give Congress a chance to
- reconsider whether it truly wants to cripple freedom of speech on the
- Internet with ill-crafted, ill-considered, ill-justified restrictions
- on constitutionally protected speech. Second, and more important to
- me personally, you'll have proved that I was right to talk you up on
- the Internet in 1992. And you'll have proved to millions of Internet
- users that you're worth voting for again.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 2 Feb 1996 15:33:44 -0800 (PST)
- From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 7--New grassroots campaign - please adopt
-
- EFF's launched a Blue Ribbon Campaign for Online Free Expression. See
- http://www.eff.org/blueribbon.html
-
- The goal is to have an identifiable symbol of resistance, and to
- raise awareness among the general populace. Wear a blue ribbon, and
- put blue ribbon graphics on your homepages and such, please.
-
- I hope you'll all participate. It's also been proposed to turn
- (Netscape) WWW pages to a black background. No reason not to do both
- I guess.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 16 Dec 1995 22:51:01 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 16 Dec, 1995)
-
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- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.11
- ************************************
-
-
-