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-
- Computer underground Digest Wed May 8, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 34
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.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, #8.34 (Wed, May 8, 1996)
-
- File 1--LAWSUIT: Battle of the Briefs 5/4/96
- File 2--FLASH: FBI Reviewing CompuServe "Indecency"
- File 3--(fwd) THE REGULATORS MEET THE INTERNET
- File 4--censorship & FCC (fwd)
- File 5--ACLU Update of State Net.Censorship Legislation
- File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ApPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 5 May 1996 22:44:51 -0800
- From: telstar@WIRED.COM(--Todd Lappin-->)
- Subject: File 1--LAWSUIT: Battle of the Briefs 5/4/96
-
- Let the Battle of the Briefs begin!
-
- As Mission Specialist Declan McCullagh explains in his latest CDA update,
- the legal battle over the (un)constitutionality of the Communications
- Decency Act has moved outside the courtroom. Lawyers from both sides have
- now filed briefs with the court, and as you'll see below, the DoJ and their
- cronies are trying to pull off a major snow job.
-
- They would like us (and the court) to believe that the CDA's ban on
- "indecency" amounts to nothing more than a straightforward ban on
- pornography.
-
- But remember this: indecent speech IS NOT necessarily pornographic.
-
- Under the current definition of indecency upheld by the Supreme Court in
- FCC v. Pacifica, George Carlin's infamous "Seven Dirty Words" qualify as
- indecent speech. Indecent speech is not always polite, to be sure, but it
- ain't porn either. Quite often it's material with important social,
- artistic, or political value -- precisely the kind of stuff that the First
- Amendment was designed to protect.
-
- Also in this update:
- Confusion in the ranks: What's indecent?
- Theocratic right cites Rimm study in pro-CDA journal article
- Broad coalition files pro-ACLU brief
- What's next?
-
- Myriad thanks go out to Declan for passing along this update.
-
- Work the network!
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- Section Editor
- WIRED Magazine
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- Fight-Censorship Dispatch #9
- ---------------------------------------------------------
- The CDA Challenge: Battle of the Briefs
- --------------------------------------------------------
- By Declan McCullagh / declan@well.com / Redistribute freely
- ---------------------------------------------------------
-
- In this update: Anti-porn groups egg on the Justice Department
- Confusion in the ranks: What's indecent?
- Theocratic right cites Rimm study in pro-CDA journal article
- Broad coalition files pro-ACLU brief
- What's next?
-
-
- MAY 4, 1996 -- The CDA is a "work of art" that "is sensitive to the
- First Amendment," Bruce Taylor and Cathy Cleaver argue in an amicus
- brief supporting the DoJ filed in Philadelphia earlier this week.
-
- The two longtime anti-pornsters submitted this weighty 85-page legal
- document -- complete with over 100 pages of attachments including Jake
- Baker's notorious snuff story -- on Monday, the same day the ACLU,
- ALA, and the DoJ submitted their post-trial briefs, findings of fact,
- and proposed conclusions of law.
-
- I had asked Enough is Enough! to FedEx me the Taylor/Cleaver draft,
- but The Brucester himself showed up at my office with a copy the next
- afternoon, chipper and grinning and bouncing about. ("Hide your porn!"
- he yelled as he walked in.) Taylor was in town for smut-research and
- he clearly was proud of his completed legal object d'art.
-
- What else could it be, with such delectable oeuvres as this:
-
- Expecting children to locate hidden Easter eggs sounds reasonable
- and enjoyable, unless those who have hidden the eggs are aware that
- they are rotten. No reasonable person, who cares about the
- well-being of children, would leave it up to children to find and
- dispose of rotten eggs. In the world of online communications,
- parents will be left as children, hunting frantically for thousands
- upon thousands of rotten eggs in a cyberworld of indecency,
- scurrying to find all of them before children are contaminated. [p35]
-
- The arguments advanced in the brief -- a joint venture of Morality in
- Media, the National Law Center for Children and Families, the Family
- Research Council, Enough is Enough!, and the National Coalition for
- the Protection of Children and Families -- center around one concept:
- indecency means pornography.
-
- That idea stinks like, well, a rotten egg. Their argument, which
- mirrors the DoJ's, goes as follows:
-
- 1. The CDA merely "updates" and "amends" Federal obscenity statutes
- and dial-a-porn laws.
- 2. All the CDA does is require adults who use "patently offensive"
- sexual expression to "put electronic blinder racks" in front of
- their "pornography."
- 3. The test for "indecency" is not vague or overbroad and does not
- apply to "serious works of literature, art, science, and politics."
- 4. What is indecent "is well known to the public and the operators of
- mass communications media facilities." (If "indecency" is too
- vague, the CDA is unconstitutional.)
- 5. The court has an obligation "to interpret these sections
- narrowly." That is, the three-judge panel should *reinterpret*
- the CDA to affect only "prurient pornography." Taylor calls this
- "judicial narrowing," and when I spoke with him he insisted that
- it was what the court will do.
-
- Equating "indecency" with "pornography" is misleading, since courts
- have held that George Carlin's monologue and Allen Ginsberg's poetry
- can be regulated as indecent. As cyberlibertarian attorney Harvey
- Silverglate writes on the fight-censorship mailing list:
-
- My objection to the current debate is that they talk of "smut." My
- client, Allen Ginsberg, wants to broadcast some of the finest poetry
- written this century in this country.
-
- The "family values" brief concludes:
-
- Purely selfish motivations based on one's desire to rebel against
- the "government" and be free from society's code of conduct in
- "cyberspace" is NOT a legal justification that should be accepted by
- the courts...
-
- Criminal laws against distributing pornography to children have
- literally saved countless lives. These lives are needed not for any
- threat posed by men of good will, but rather by those who would
- exploit the vulnerable and impressionable for their personal gain...
- Senators Exon and Coats deserve thanks from every family in America
- and the CDA deserves to be upheld.
-
- Do I detect some pride of CDA authorship from Taylor and Cleaver?
- Though the Hon. Jim Exon *does* deserve our thanks -- for retiring.
-
-
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
- CONFUSION IN THE RANKS: WHAT'S INDECENT?
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
-
- The Justice Department and their anti-porn crusading allies can't even
- agree on who should be locked up under the CDA.
-
- On page 27 of his brief, Bruce Taylor cites the Amateur Action images
- and Jake Baker's explicit rape-and-murder story as examples of
- net.materials that are harmful to minors and that show "callous
- disregard for public decency."
-
- The EFF, a plaintiff in the ACLU coalition lawsuit, has Baker's story
- on its web site and has made it clear in an affidavit that they
- distribute such material online in the context of legal discussions.
-
- But the DoJ says in their post-trial brief filed on Monday: "It can be
- said that none of the plaintiffs' Web sites appear to engage in the
- type of speech which Congress has targeted in the CDA."
-
- So does Baker's story violate the CDA or not? Do you believe Taylor, a
- former Cleveland city prosecutor, a former senior trial attorney in
- the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section of the Criminal Division
- of the DoJ -- a guy who crows that he played "a central role in the
- development and passage" of the CDA?
-
- Or the DoJ attorneys, who are charged with enforcing it??
-
- Even the DoJ's own witnesses can't come up with a good working
- definition, as the ACLU illustrates in their post-hearing brief:
-
- The responses offered by government witnesses Schmidt and Olsen to
- the Court's questions illustrated just how freewheeling the
- subjective, discretionary judgments of police and prosecutors would
- be... Dr. Olsen opined that any of "the seven dirty words" made
- famous by the Pacifica decision, or their synonyms, could be
- subject to [the CDA] and should therefore be "tagged," as should
- nudes even if displayed on a museum web site.
-
-
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
- THEOCRATIC RIGHT CITES RIMM STUDY IN PRO-CDA JOURNAL ARTICLE
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
-
- Thanks to the American Center for Law and Justice, Marty Rimm's bogus
- cyberporn study just won't die.
-
- The ACLJ is a legal advocacy group for the theocratic right -- Pat
- Robertson's response to the ACLU. Says Robertson: "Someone has got to
- stop the ACLU in court, and that's what we're going to do." They're
- trying -- the ACLJ submitted Yet Another amicus brief over a week ago
- supporting the Justice Department's defense of the CDA.
-
- In the latest issue of the Journal of Technology Law and Policy, the
- ACLJ defends the CDA and uncritically cites Rimm's discredited study.
- A clue to the quality, honesty, and integrity of the ACLJ's
- scholarship can be found in the way the group argues that Rimm's
- "research" and TIME magazine's cover story provide evidence of "smutty
- sex and scatologica" and justification for net-regulation:
-
- {17} On June 26, 1995, Senator Charles Grassley spoke in support of
- his legislation, the "Protection of Children from Computer
- Pornography Act of 1995. [20] Speaking to the motivation for his
- bill, which would have amended the federal criminal code, Senator
- Grassley warned the Senate of "the availability and the nature of
- cyberporn." He advised the Senate on a Carnegie Mellon University
- study of visual images available on the Internet...
-
- Note the ACLJ's convenient fiction of the "Carnegie Mellon Study." The
- group never reveals that Rimm was an undergraduate passing himself off
- as a faculty member, that his study has no credibility outside
- theocratic right lobby groups, that the study itself is fraudulent,
- and that CMU is investigating Rimm for ethical violations.
-
- Somehow I'm not surprised that the authors of the ACLJ article, Jay
- Alan Sekulow and James Matthew Henderson, overlooked those details.
- Sekulow did not respond to email inquiries.
-
-
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
- BROAD COALITION FILES PRO-ACLU BRIEF
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
-
- Last month a broad coalition of professional groups, academics, ISPs,
- and individuals opposed to the CDA submitted a Brief of Amici Curiae
- in support of the ACLU lawsuit and motion for a preliminary
- injunction. That brief is now online.
-
- Represented by the Philadelphia law firm of Schnader, Harrison, Segal
- & Lewis, the coalition includes the Authors Guild, American Society of
- Journalists and Authors, Feminists for Free Expression, Palmer Museum
- of Art, Philadelphia Magazine, Psinet, Inc., and the Reporters
- Committee for Freedom of the Press.
-
- Some of my favorite excerpts:
-
- It is not only speakers on the Internet who feel the chill posed by
- the CDA. The millions who access speech on the Internet feel it as
- well. [...] Recipients of speech are equally entitled to protection
- under the First Amendment. That protection is afforded "to the
- communication, to its source and to its recipients both." Virginia
- State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, 425 U.S.
- 748, 756 (1976).
-
- Abuses involving "indecent" and "patently offensive" behavior also
- are perpetrated today, and the Internet is the quickest and most
- effective tool for exposing them. One wonders whether the
- disappearances or indeed the Holocaust would have occurred so brazenly
- if the Internet had been reporting on them twenty or sixty years ago.
-
-
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
- WHAT'S NEXT?
- +-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+-=-+
-
- The closing arguments for our case are scheduled for May 10, when the
- plaintiffs and the DoJ will present an expected four hours of closing
- arguments. The three-judge panel likely will issue a decision three or
- four weeks later, and appeals from either side go directly to the
- Supreme Court.
-
- What happens if we lose? The ACLU's Ann Beeson said on HotWired's Club
- Wired last week:
-
- Losing the facial challenge would not by any means end the matter --
- that is, we could still argue that the CDA is unconstitutional "as
- applied" to particular defendants that DOJ decided to prosecute.
- Of course, in the meantime we'd still see a huge chill on protected
- speech...
-
- It is clear that we have the facts on our side -- the much harder
- question is the law itself, and unfortunately, it is a rare day that
- a federal court will overturn an Act of Congress. (But I remain
- cautiously optimistic.)
-
- If you're near Philly, stop by the Federal courthouse at 7th and
- Market Streets at 9:30 am on Friday. The courtroom will be packed.
-
- Stay tuned for more reports.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------------
-
- We're back in court on May 10 for closing arguments.
-
- Mentioned in this CDA update:
-
- Excerpts from DoJ and anti-porn groups' CDA briefs:
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/dl?num=2387>
- Transcript of Olsen's "-L18" description and other testimony:
- <http://www.cdt.org/ciec/transcripts/April_15_Olsen.html>
- More on ACLJ and Rimm study:
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/dl?num=2328>
- Jake Baker story on EFF's web site:
- <http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/Baker_UMich_case/baker.story>
- ACLJ's "Cyberporn Alert Fact Sheet," dated December 14, 1995:
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/dl?num=485>
- Harvey Silverglate on Allen Ginsberg and "indecency":
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/dl?num=390>
- RFC -- Encoding indecent speech with a new MIME content-type:
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/dl?num=2301>
- ACLJ journal article <http://journal.law.ufl.edu/~techlaw/>
- ACLU post-hearing brief <http://www.aclu.org:80/court/cdaptbr.html>
- Pro-ACLU amicus brief <http://www.shsl.com/internet/186619.html>
- Fight-Censorship list <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/top/>
- Rimm ethics critique <http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~declan/rimm/>
- Int'l Net-Censorship <http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~declan/international/>
-
- This and previous Fight-Censorship Dispatches are available at:
- <http://fight-censorship.dementia.org/top/>
- <http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/EFF_ACLU_v_DoJ/>
- <http://www.epic.org/free_speech/censorship/lawsuit/>
-
- To subscribe to the fight-censorship announcement mailing list for
- future Fight-Censorship Dispatches and related discussions, send
- "subscribe fight-censorship-announce" in the body of a message
- addressed to:
- fight-censorship-announce@vorlon.mit.edu
-
- Other relevant web sites:
- <http://www.eff.org/>
- <http://www.aclu.org/>
- <http://www.cdt.org/>
- <http://www.ala.org/>
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-
- This transmission was brought to you by....
-
- THE CDA INFORMATION NETWORK
-
- The CDA Information Network is a moderated distribution list providing
- up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the
- Communications Decency Act. To subscribe, send email to
- <majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body.
-
- WARNING: This is not a test! WARNING: This is not a drill!
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 6 May 1996 17:40:03 -0700
- From: telstar@WIRED.COM(--Todd Lappin-->)
- Subject: File 2--FLASH: FBI Reviewing CompuServe "Indecency"
-
- Brace yourselves: The Department of Justice has entered into an unholy
- cabal with the American Family Association.
-
- A few weeks back I told you how religious fundamentalists from the American
- Family Association wrote a letter to Attorney General Janet Reno citing
- CompuServe for "potential violations of the Communications Decency Act."
-
- Now, as it turns out, the AFA has found a friend in President Clinton's
- Department of Justice. As you'll read below, the AFA's letter was passed
- along to Terry R. Lord, Acting Chief of the DoJ's Child Exploitation and
- Obscenity Section.
-
- Lord, in turn, referred the matter to the FBI "for further review."
-
- Lord goes on to say, "With the passage of the CDA in 1996, we are turning
- our attention to the distribution of indecency on the Internet... While
- current litigation on the constitutionality of the CDA precludes certain
- actions until the matter is resolved, rest assured that we will pursue all
- other available options."
-
- The cyberporn witch hunt is indeed gathering steam, DESPITE the Temporary
- Restraining Order issued by U.S. District Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter in
- February, blocking enforcement of the "indecency" provisions of CDA.
-
- Spread the word!
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- Section Editor
- WIRED Magazine
-
- =========================================
-
- American Family Association
-
- Washington D.C. Office
-
- PRESS RELEASE
-
- Contact: Patrick A. Trueman
- (202) 544-0061
-
- AFA Lauds Justice Department for Computer Porn Investigation
- CompuServe/H&R Block Complaint Referred to FBI
-
-
- For Immediate Release Thursday, May 2, 1996
-
- The Justice Department has referred a complaint filed by the American
- Family Association against H&R Block and CompuServe, a division of H&R
- Block, to the FBI for review of possible violations of the Communications
- Decency Act. The AFA had alleged in an April 1, 1996 letter to Attorney
- General Janet Reno that H&R Block/CompuServe violated the CDA by offering
- pornography and other sexually oriented material on it on-line service to
- its users, including children. The FBI's involvement in this matter was
- confirmed in a recent letter from Terry R. Lord, Acting Chief of the
- Justice Department's Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, in a letter
- to AFA's Patrick Trueman, who filed the complaint. (A copy of this letter
- is attached, below.)
-
- Trueman lauded Attorney General Reno for taking quick action to investigate
- H&R Block/CompuServe. "Every day that pornography is available on
- CompuServe more and more children will be harmed," said Trueman.
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- U.S. Department of Justice
- Criminal Division
-
- Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section
-
- 310 Washington Center
- 1001 G Street NW
- Washington, D.C. 20530
- (202) 514-5760, FAX: 202-514-1793
-
- April 29, 1996
-
- Dear Mr. Trueman:
-
- Your letters, dated April 1, and April 12, 1996, to Attorney General Reno
- concerning potential violations of the Communications Decency Act (CDA) by
- CompuServe, a division of H&R Block, Inc., has been forwarded to the Child
- Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), and we are happy to respond.
-
- CEOS has referred your letter and accompanying materials to the Federal
- Bureau of Investigation for further review. As you well know, the Section
- has overseen and personally conducted prosecutions of individuals and
- companies for the distribution of child pornography and obscenity via
- computer, and we have been very successful in this effort. Unfortunately,
- even as prosecutions and investigations continue, individuals are
- constantly looking for loopholes or alternative methods of distributing
- illegal material or ways to harm children. Therefore, we are constantly,
- and with the aid of federal law enforcement agents, reviewing the current
- state of this activity to determine the best methods of identifying,
- investigating, and prosecuting violators with the goal of deterring similar
- conduct. Your information regarding CompuServe is helpful in this regard
- and we appreciate your bringing it to our attention.
-
- With the passage of the CDA in 1996, we are turning our attention to the
- distribution of indecency on the Internet. As you correctly point out, the
- distribution of these materials has a deleterious effect on minors. While
- current litigation on the constitutionality of the CDA precludes certain
- actions until the matter is resolved, rest assured that we will pursue all
- other available options.
-
- Please feel free to refer any additional information which you consider
- relevant to this issue directly to us. We will review and forward it to
- the appropriate federal investigative agency. We hope this information is
- useful and we applaud your efforts on behalf of children and families.
-
- Sincerely,
-
-
- Terry R. Lord
- Acting Chief
-
- ###
-
- +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+-
- This transmission was brought to you by....
-
- THE CDA INFORMATION NETWORK
-
- The CDA Information Network is a moderated distribution list providing
- up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the
- Communications Decency Act. To subscribe, send email to
- <majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body.
-
- WARNING: This is not a test! WARNING: This is not a drill!
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 3 May 1996 14:01:02 +0100 (BST)
- From: Richard K. Moore <rkmoore@iol.ie>
- Subject: File 3--(fwd) THE REGULATORS MEET THE INTERNET
-
-
- I'm forwarding this excellent article by Craig Johnson to several
- lists. I hope you find it useful, and please accept my apologies if you
- consider it off topic or if someone else already forwarded it.
-
- My only nitpick with Craig is one of perspective... he describes
- Internet as being free of regulation currently, and being under threat of
- coming under the attention of the FCC, for the first time. I see this
- differently. I'd say that the Internet has always been conciously
- regulated by the FCC -- and in a very enlightened way.
-
- The decision was made (in the late sixties, I believe) to allow
- Tymshare, GE, GTE/Telenet, and others, to offer value-added communication
- services, and to pay only standard rates for the leased or dial-up
- communications facilities they required to provide their service (or their
- customers required to access them). Internet was one of the natural
- consequences of the existence of this open, value-added marketplace.
-
- Thus Internet has been the intentional beneficiary of the
- regulatory regime we've lived under prior to the so-called Reform bill.
- From this perspective, it is the Reform-bill's _deregulation_ that
- threatens Internet, in that it destabilizes existing arrangements, and
- gives more leeway to the big operators to determine pricing structures.
-
- Thus while Craig's interpretation seems to be that regulation -- of
- any kind -- is the enemy, I claim that appropriate regulation has been our
- safe-haven birthplace, and that appropriate regulation should be the
- positive goal we pursue -- with a healthy appreciation of the benefits
- we've derived from the previous regime.
-
- But these are only philosophical nitpicks -- many thanks to Craig
- for summarizing the situation and alerting us to the opportunity to
- influence the FCC. Brilliant work, as usual.
-
-
- Regards,
- rkm
- (please Cc: rkmoore@iol.ie if replying)
-
-
- _________________| forwarded message follows |__________________
-
- Date--Tue, 30 Apr 1996
- From--"Craig A. Johnson" <caj@tdrs.com>
- Subject--cr> Regulating the Internet
-
- It is highly recommended that those who are concerned about the
- coming communications regulatory regime read the FCC's recent NPRMs
- on "universal service" and "interconnection."
-
- --caj
-
- @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
-
- ANALYSIS-- FREE NET TELEPHONY
- +
- by Craig A. Johnson
- American Reporter Correspondent
- Washington
- 4/29/96
- net-regulation
- 1023/$10.23
-
- THE REGULATORS MEET THE INTERNET
- by Craig A. Johnson
- American Reporter Correspondent
-
- WASHINGTON -- Fears of Rambo-like regulation have spawned a sort
- of spring fever in the online world, with presumptive alarms and bulletins
- ricocheting all over the Net.
- Will the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) choke the
- Internet's wide-open pathways with regulatory underbrush? Will the
- petition filed by the Americas' Carriers Telecommunications Association
- (ACTA) on March 4 be granted, stopping Internet telephony or mandating
- access charges? (AR, No. 245 ) Or, even more catastrophically, will the
- Net somehow be swept under the FCC regime for telecommunications carriers?
- The answers, according to sources both inside and outside of the
- FCC, for the time being, are a qualified no. On April 19, the FCC gave
- its tentative response on the Net telephony problem, partially assuaging
- worries that new regulations will require access charges and tariffing for
- long distance voice over the Internet. Although the soft no from the FCC
- was reassuring, the wall protecting Internet voice as an "information
- service" has scores of cracks and may still crumble under the blows of a
- regulatory hammer.
- The issue was addressed in the FCC's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
- (NPRM) on "interconnection," or more formally, "implementation of
- the local competition provisions in the Telecommunications Act of
- 1996." The NPRM is as interesting for what it does not say as for
- what it does.
- Generally, it poses a lot of questions, on which parties will file
- comments, and on the basis of which the FCC will finalize rules in August.
- The agency sees the proceeding and the consequent rules as establishing
- "the 'new regulatory paradigm' that is essential to achieving Congress'
- policy goals."
- The visible fractures in the old regulatory regime stood out
- prominently in the interconnection notice. Two aspects of the proceeding,
- in particular, directly relate to Internet access and pricing regimes.
- First, the FCC made it clear that current access charges and
- interconnection regulations are "enforceable until they are superseded."
- The FCC said, in regulatory-ese, that it wanted comments on "any aspect of
- this Notice that may affect existing 'equal access and nondiscriminatory
- interconnection restrictions and obligations (including receipt of
- compensation).'"
- Translated, this means that Net telephone providers and users can
- breathe a little more easily for the time being. But, the call for
- comments on the existing "restrictions and guidelines" should not be taken
- for granted. It is precisely these regulations -- which exempt "enhanced
- service" providers, like Internet and online service providers from paying
- access charges for their usage of the facilities and network components of
- local exchange carriers (LECs) -- which are on the table in this
- proceeding and related ones.
- A second aspect of the interconnection proceeding relates directly
- to definitions. The Commission asks for comment "on which carriers are
- included under" the definition of "telecommunications carriers" offered in
- the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
- Critically, the agency asks: "How does the provision of an
- information service [as conventionally defined in the law and prior
- regulations], in addition to an unrelated telecommunications service,
- affect the status of a carrier as a 'telecommunications carrier?'"
- This is a call for commenters to address the issue of whether
- "information service providers," such as ISPs, who also provide
- "telecommunications services," should be treated as "telecommunications
- carriers" and therefore be subject to all, some, or none of the
- requirements of common carriers, including the payment of access charges
- and the filing of tariffs.
- In practical terms the FCC is asking the online community to
- persuade them that ISPs who permit Internet audio streaming applications,
- such as long distance voice, should not be considered under the same rules
- applying to "telecommunications providers."
- The FCC emphasizes that the interconnection rulemaking "is one of
- a number of interrelated proceedings," and explains that the answer to
- how, in which ways, and to what extent the Internet will be regulated will
- be a product of "the interrelationship between this proceeding, our
- recently initiated proceeding to implement the comprehensive universal
- service provisions of the 1996 Act and our upcoming proceeding to reform
- our Part 69 access charge rules."
- This should be seen as a warning flag that issues concerning
- access charges for the Internet have yet to be even taken up by the
- Commission, and will be one of the outcomes of several complex
- proceedings, with public comments invited from all consumer and business
- interests.
- The FCC NPRM and order establishing the joint federal-state
- universal service board, issued on March 8, for example, emphasizes the
- provision in the Telecommunications Act of 1996 which stipulates that
- "[a]ccess to advanced telecommunications and information services should
- be provided in all regions of the country." The FCC says that "commenters
- may wish to discuss Internet access availability, data transmission
- capability, ... enhanced services, and broadband services."
- In both this and the interconnection notices, the agency
- emphasizes its statutory authority to regulate the Internet. The news so
- far is relatively positive. The FCC claims it doesn't want to prematurely
- slap regulations on the Net which may stunt its remarkable growth and
- vitality.
- But the handwriting is on the wall -- in several different hands
- and scrawled over cracks. Arguments for Internet volume-based or
- per-packet pricing will be surely surface in comments in the FCC
- proceedings. The old argument for the "modem tax," which says that data
- bits should be priced differently than voice bits, will likely rear its
- scarred head.
- Internet access is on the charts and in the dockets at the
- Commission. It should have the same pride of place for all Internet
- activists and user group communities. The FCC is asking the Internet and
- computer user and business communities to wake up to an emergent
- regulatory regime in which the old comfortable dualities such as
- "information services" and "telecommunications services" -- which in the
- past have insulated the Internet from regulation -- may not be easily
- parsed. In short, the agency is begging for help in drafting the
- cyber-roadmaps for the future.
- (Note: Both the universal service NPRM and order and the
- interconnection NPRM can be accessed via the FCC's Web page --
- http://www.fcc.gov. Many of the comments for the universal service
- proceedings are also now available at the site.)
-
- -30-
-
- (Craig Johnson writes on cyber rights issues for WIRED.)
-
-
-
-
-
- The American Reporter
- "The Internet Daily Newspaper"
- Copyright 1995 Joe Shea, The American Reporter
- All Rights Reserved
- The American Reporter is published daily at 1812 Ivar
- Ave., No. 5, Hollywood, CA 90028 Tel. (213)467-0616,
- by members of the Society of Professional Journalists
- (SPJ) Internet discussion list. It has no affiliation
- with the SPJ. Articles may be submitted by email to
- joeshea@netcom.com. Subscriptions: Reader: $10.00
- per month ($100 per year) and $.01 per word to republish
- stories, or Professional: $125.00 per week for the re-use
- of all American Reporter stories. We are reporter-owned.
- URL: http://www.newshare.com/Reporter/today.html
- Archives: http://www.newshare.com/Reporter/archives/
- For more info on AR: http://oz.net/~susanh/arbook.html
-
- @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@
-
-
- ~ CYBER-RIGHTS ~
- ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~-~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
- Visit The Cyber-Rights Library, accessible via FTP or WWW at:
-
- ftp://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/nii/cyber-rights/Library/
- http://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/nii/cyber-rights/Library/
-
- You are encouraged to forward and cross-post list traffic,
- pursuant to any contained copyright & redistribution restrictions.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 3 May 1996 13:36:47 -0500 (CDT)
- From: Avi Bass <te0azb1@corn.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 4--censorship & FCC (fwd)
-
- FCC Chief Backs "No Rules" On Internet Expression
-
- LOS ANGELES - Federal Communications Commission chairman Reed Hundt
- appeared to advocate freedom of speech over the Internet when he
- addressed a Town Hall Los Angeles audience.
-
- Asked how rulemakers might guarantee freedom of expression over the
- Internet, he replied, "the best guarantee is to have no rules on that
- topic."
-
- Hundt, who was speaking broadly on U.S. communications reform and
- educational technology and television, did not elaborate on the
- Internet issue.
-
- Copyright, Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 1 May 1996 19:14:46 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 5--ACLU Update of State Net.Censorship Legislation
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
-
- AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
- NATIONAL HEADQUARTERS
-
- 1/96 Update of State Bills to Regulate Online Speech
-
- "If you think Congress is full of Luddites, just wait until you
- read what your state legislators have been up to . . . "
-
- BILLS THAT BECAME LAW IN 1995:
-
- Connecticut: House Bill 6883
- Creates criminal liability for sending an online message "with
- intent to harass, annoy or alarm another person."
- 6/95 Signed into law.
-
- Georgia: House Bill 76
- Prohibits online transmission of fighting words, obscene or
- vulgar speech to minors, and information related to terrorist
- acts and certain dangerous weapons.
- 3/95 Signed into law.
-
- Illinois: Senate Bill 838 (began as SB 747)
- Prohibits sexual solicitation of a minor by computer.
- 7/95 Signed into law.
-
- Kansas: House Bill 2223
- Expands child pornography statute to include computer generated
- images.
- 5/95 Signed into law.
-
- Maryland: Senate Bill 21
- Expands law that prohibits distribution of obscene material to
- minors to include online transmission.
- 4/95 Signed into law.
-
- Montana: House Bill 0161
- Expands child pornography statute to prohibit transmission by
- computer and possession of computer-generated child pornographic
- images.
- 3/95 Signed into law.
-
- New Jersey: Assembly Bill 38
- Expands child pornography statute to outlaw "computer programs"
- that depict child pornography.
-
- Oklahoma: House Bill 1048
- Prohibits transmission of obscenity, defined as harmful to
- minors, through online networks.
- 4/95 Signed into law.
-
- Virginia: Senate Bill 1067
- Expands harmful to minors statute to criminalize electronic
- transmissions of child pornography.
- 5/95 Signed into law.
-
- BILLS CONSIDERED OR STILL PENDING:
-
- Alabama: House Bill 100
- Prohibits electronic transmission of obscene materials to minors.
-
- California: Assembly Bill 295
- Expands obscenity and child pornography statutes to prohibit
- transmission of images by computer.
-
- Florida: Senate Bill 238
- Pornography Victims' Compensation Act. Creates private cause of
- action for victims of crimes related to pornography, including
- Florida's computer pornography statute.
-
- Maryland: Senate Bill 22
- Prohibits transmission of child pornography by computer and
- sexual solicitation of a minor by computer.
-
- Massachusetts: House Bill 1804
- Adds "inducement by computer" to the law prohibiting the luring
- of a minor for purposes of pornography.
-
- New York: Senate Bill 210C
- Prohibits the online dissemination of indecent materials to
- minors.
- 1/96 Both houses approved the bill, but they have not yet sent it to the
- governor's desk.
-
- Oregon: House Bill 2310
- Creates crime of electronically furnishing obscene material to
- minors.
- 1/95 House Committe on Judiciary. Reported unfavorably.
-
- Pennsylvania: House Bill 1727
- Makes it a crime to use a computer network to transmit
- information describing the production of explosives.
-
- Pennyslvania: House Bill 841
- Prohibits pornographic communications by computer to minors.
-
- Washington: Senate Bill 5466
- Prohibits electronic transmission of material deemed "harmful to
- minors."
- 5/95 Governor vetoed the bill.
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- For information on how to fight online censorship legislation in
- your state, contact Ann Beeson, ACLU, beeson@aclu.org, (212) 944-9800 x788.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
-
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- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.34
- ************************************
-
-
-