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-
- Computer underground Digest Thu June 26, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 50
- 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
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #9.50 (Thu, June 26, 1997)
-
- File 1--USSC Upholds CDA Overturning (AP first report)
- File 2--Syllabus of Supreme Court CDA Decision
- File 3--EFF press release on CDA Decision
- File 4--Plaintiff welcomes result in CDA case
- File 5--CDA: It's Not Over Yet
- File 6--Cato praises Supreme Court CDA Decision
- File 7--Family Research Council on CDA decision
- File 8--White House Statement on CDA Decision
- File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 09:33:56 -0500 (CDT)
- From: Avi Bass <te0azb1@corn.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 1--USSC Upholds CDA Overturning (AP first report)
-
- June 26, 1997
- Court Nixes Internet Smut Provision
- Filed at 10:15 a.m. EDT
-
- WASHINGTON (AP) -- Congress violated free-speech rights when it
- tried to curb smut on the Internet, the Supreme Court ruled today.
- In its first venture into cyberspace law, the court invalidated a
- key provision of the 1996 Communications Decency Act.
-
- Congress' effort to protect children from sexually explicit
- material goes too far because it also would keep such material
- from adults who have a right to see it, the justices unanimously
- said.
-
- The law made it a crime to put adult-oriented material online
- where children can find it. The measure has never taken effect
- because it was blocked last year by a three-judge court in
- Philadelphia.
-
- ``We agree with the three-judge district court that the statute
- abridges the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment,''
- Justice John Paul Stevens wrote for the court.
-
- ``The (Communications Decency Act) is a content-based regulation
- of speech,'' he wrote. ``The vagueness of such a regulation raises
- special First Amendment concerns because of its obvious chilling
- effect on free speech.''
-
- ``As a matter of constitutional tradition ... we presume that
- governmental regulation of the content of speech is more likely to
- interfere with the free exchange of ideas than to encourage it,''
- Stevens wrote.
-
- Sexually explicit words and pictures are protected by the
- Constitution's First Amendment if they are deemed indecent but not
- obscene.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 15:07:27 -0500
- From: cudigest@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Computer underground Digest)
- Subject: File 2--Syllabus of Supreme Court CDA Decision
-
- From: the CIEC homepage at: http://www.ciec.org
-
- -------------------
-
- Syllabus of Supreme Court Decision
-
- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
-
- Syllabus
-
- RENO, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE UNITED STATES, et al. v. AMERICAN CIVIL
- LIBERTIES UNION et al.
-
- Appeal from the United States District Court for The Eastern District
- of Pennsylvania
-
- No. 96-511. Argued March 19, 1997 -- Decided June 26, 1997
-
-
-
- Two provisions of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (CDA or Act)
- seek to protect minors from harmful material on the Internet, an
- international network of interconnected computers that enables
- millions of people to communicate with one another in "cyberspace" and
- to access vast amounts of information from around the world. Title 47
- U. S. C. A. '223(a)(1)(B)(ii) (Supp. 1997) criminalizes the "knowing"
- transmission of "obscene or indecent" messages to any recipient under
- 18 years of age. Section 223(d) prohibits the "knowin[g]" sending or
- displaying to a person under 18 of any message "that, in context,
- depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by
- contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory activities or
- organs." Affirmative defenses are provided for those who take "good
- faith, . . . effective . . . actions" to restrict access by minors to
- the prohibited communications, '223(e)(5)(A), and those who restrict
- such access by requiring certain designated forms of age proof, such
- as a verified credit card or an adult identification number,
- '223(e)(5)(B). A number of plaintiffs filed suit challenging the
- constitutionality of ''223(a)(1) and 223(d). After making extensive
- findings of fact, a three judge District Court convened pursuant to
- the Act entered a preliminary injunction against enforcement of both
- challenged provisions. The court's judgment enjoins the Government
- from enforcing '223(a)(1)(B)'s prohibitions insofar as they relate to
- "indecent" communications, but expressly preserves the Government's
- right to investigate and prosecute the obscenity or child pornography
- activities prohibited therein. The injunction against enforcement of
- '223(d) is unqualified because that section contains no
- separatereference to obscenity or child pornography. The Government
- appealed to this Court under the Act's special review provisions,
- arguing that the District Court erred in holding that the CDA violated
- both the First Amendment because it is overbroad and the Fifth
- Amendment because it is vague.
-
- Held: The CDA's "indecent transmission" and "patently offensive
- display" provisions abridge "the freedom of speech" protected by the
- First Amendment. Pp. 17-40.
-
- (a) Although the CDA's vagueness is relevant to the First Amendment
- overbreadth inquiry, the judgment should be affirmed without reaching
- the Fifth Amendment issue. P. 17.
-
- (b) A close look at the precedents relied on by the
- Government--Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S. 629; FCC v. Pacifica
- Foundation, 438 U.S. 726; and Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 475
- U.S. 41--raises, rather than relieves, doubts about the CDA's
- constitutionality. The CDA differs from the various laws and orders
- upheld in those cases in many ways, including that it does not allow
- parents to consent to their children's use of restricted materials; is
- not limited to commercial transactions; fails to provide any
- definition of "indecent" and omits any requirement that "patently
- offensive" material lack socially redeeming value; neither limits its
- broad categorical prohibitions to particular times nor bases them on
- an evaluation by an agency familiar with the medium's unique
- characteristics; is punitive; applies to a medium that, unlike radio,
- receives full First Amendment protection; and cannot be properly
- analyzed as a form of time, place, and manner regulation because it is
- a content based blanket restriction on speech. These precedents, then,
- do not require the Court to uphold the CDA and are fully consistent
- with the application of the most stringent review of its provisions.
- Pp. 17-21.
-
- (c) The special factors recognized in some of the Court's cases as
- justifying regulation of the broadcast media--the history of extensive
- government regulation of broadcasting, see, e.g., Red Lion
- Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.S. 367, 399-400; the scarcity of
- available frequencies at its inception, see, e.g., Turner Broadcasting
- System, Inc. v. FCC, 512 U.S. 622, 637-638; and its "invasive"
- nature, see Sable Communications of Cal., Inc. v. FCC, 492 U.S. 115,
- 128--are not present in cyberspace. Thus, these cases provide no basis
- for qualifying the level of First Amendment scrutiny that should be
- applied to the Internet. Pp. 22-24.
-
- (d) Regardless of whether the CDA is so vague that it violates the
- Fifth Amendment, the many ambiguities concerning the scope of its
- coverage render it problematic for First Amendment purposes. For
- instance, its use of the undefined terms "indecent" and "patently
- offensive" will provoke uncertainty among speakers about how the
- twostandards relate to each other and just what they mean. The
- vagueness of such a content based regulation, see, e.g., Gentile v.
- State Bar of Nev., 501 U.S. 1030, coupled with its increased
- deterrent effect as a criminal statute, see, e.g., Dombrowski v.
- Pfister, 380 U.S. 479, raise special First Amendment concerns
- because of its obvious chilling effect on free speech. Contrary to the
- Government's argument, the CDA is not saved from vagueness by the fact
- that its "patently offensive" standard repeats the second part of the
- three prong obscenity test set forth in Miller v. California, 413 U.S.
- 15, 24. The second Miller prong reduces the inherent vagueness of its
- own "patently offensive" term by requiring that the proscribed
- material be "specifically defined by the applicable state law." In
- addition, the CDA applies only to "sexual conduct," whereas, the CDA
- prohibition extends also to "excretory activities" and "organs" of
- both a sexual and excretory nature. Each of Miller's other two prongs
- also critically limits the uncertain sweep of the obscenity
- definition. Just because a definition including three limitations is
- not vague, it does not follow that one of those limitations, standing
- alone, is not vague. The CDA's vagueness undermines the likelihood
- that it has been carefully tailored to the congressional goal of
- protecting minors from potentially harmful materials. Pp. 24-28.
-
- (e) The CDA lacks the precision that the First Amendment requires when
- a statute regulates the content of speech. Although the Government has
- an interest in protecting children from potentially harmful materials,
- see, e.g., Ginsberg, 390 U. S., at 639, the CDA pursues that interest
- by suppressing a large amount of speech that adults have a
- constitutional right to send and receive, see, e.g., Sable, supra, at
- 126. Its breadth is wholly unprecedented. The CDA's burden on adult
- speech is unacceptable if less restrictive alternatives would be at
- least as effective in achieving the Act's legitimate purposes. See,
- e.g., Sable, 492 U. S., at 126. The Government has not proved
- otherwise. On the other hand, the District Court found that currently
- available user based software suggests that a reasonably effective
- method by which parents can prevent their children from accessing
- material which the parents believe is inappropriate will soon be
- widely available. Moreover, the arguments in this Court referred to
- possible alternatives such as requiring that indecent material be
- "tagged" to facilitate parental control, making exceptions for
- messages with artistic or educational value, providing some tolerance
- for parental choice, and regulating some portions of the Internet
- differently than others. Particularly in the light of the absence of
- any detailed congressional findings, or even hearings addressing the
- CDA's special problems, the Court is persuaded that the CDA is not
- narrowly tailored. Pp. 28-33.
-
- (f) The Government's three additional arguments for sustaining the
- CDA's affirmative prohibitions are rejected. First, the contention
- that the Act is constitutional because it leaves open ample
- "alternative channels" of communication is unpersuasive because the
- CDA regulates speech on the basis of its content, so that a "time,
- place, and manner" analysis is inapplicable. See, e.g., Consolidated
- Edison Co. of N. Y. v. Public Serv. Comm'n of N. Y., 447 U.S. 530,
- 536. Second, the assertion that the CDA's "knowledge" and "specific
- person" requirements significantly restrict its permissible
- application to communications to persons the sender knows to be under
- 18 is untenable, given that most Internet forums are open to all
- comers and that even the strongest reading of the "specific person"
- requirement would confer broad powers of censorship, in the form of a
- "heckler's veto," upon any opponent of indecent speech. Finally, there
- is no textual support for the submission that material having
- scientific, educational, or other redeeming social value will
- necessarily fall outside the CDA's prohibitions. Pp. 33-35.
-
- (g) The '223(e)(5) defenses do not constitute the sort of "narrow
- tailoring" that would save the CDA. The Government's argument that
- transmitters may take protective "good faith actio[n]" by "tagging"
- their indecent communications in a way that would indicate their
- contents, thus permitting recipients to block their reception with
- appropriate software, is illusory, given the requirement that such
- action be "effective": The proposed screening software does not
- currently exist, but, even if it did, there would be no way of knowing
- whether a potential recipient would actually block the encoded
- material. The Government also failed to prove that '223(b)(5)'s
- verification defense would significantly reduce the CDA's heavy burden
- on adult speech. Although such verification is actually being used by
- some commercial providers of sexually explicit material, the District
- Court's findings indicate that it is not economically feasible for
- most noncommercial speakers. Pp. 35-37.
-
- (h) The Government's argument that this Court should preserve the
- CDA's constitutionality by honoring its severability clause, '608, and
- by construing nonseverable terms narrowly, is acceptable in only one
- respect. Because obscene speech may be banned totally, see Miller,
- supra, at 18, and '223(a)'s restriction of "obscene" material enjoys
- a textual manifestation separate from that for "indecent" material,
- the Court can sever the term "or indecent" from the statute, leaving
- the rest of '223(a) standing. Pp. 37-39.
-
- (i) The Government's argument that its "significant" interest in
- fostering the Internet's growth provides an independent basis for
- upholding the CDA's constitutionality is singularly unpersuasive. The
- dramatic expansion of this new forum contradicts the factual
- basisunderlying this contention: that the unregulated availability of
- "indecent" and "patently offensive" material is driving people away
- from the Internet. P. 40.
-
- 929 F. Supp. 824, affirmed.
-
- Stevens, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Scalia,
- Kennedy, Souter, Thomas, Ginsburg, and Breyer, JJ., joined. O'Connor,
- J., filed an opinion concurring in the judgment in part and dissenting
- in part, in which Rehnquist, C. J., joined.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 11:52:56 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 3--EFF press release on CDA Decision
-
- Press Release
-
- Contacts: Mike Godwin, Staff Counsel, +1 415 436 9333 or 1 510 548 3290
- Stanton McCandlish, Program Director, +1 415 436 9333
- Shari Steele, Staff Counsel, +1 301 375 8856
-
- Washington, DC -- "As a matter of constitutional tradition, in the absence
- of evidence to the contrary, we presume that governmental regulation of the
- content of speech is more likely to interfere with the free exchange of
- ideas than to encourage it. The interest in encouraging freedom of
- expression in a democratic society outweighs any theoretical but unproven
- benefit of censorship."
-
- With this ringing reaffirmation of the American people's fundamental right
- to freedom of expression, the United States Supreme Court ruled Thursday
- that the Communications Decency Amendment censorship provisions of the
- Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996 regarding so-called "indecent"
- content are unconstitutional on their face, and that free speech on the
- Internet merits the highest standards of Constitutional protection. The
- decision marks a major victory in the Electronic Frontier Foundation's
- ongoing efforts to ensure that the long-standing American principles of
- freedom of expression be preserved and extended to the Internet.
-
- The extremely broad reach that the CDA would have had was reflected in the
- range of plaintiffs who joined together to challenge the law. The EFF was
- a leading party in a coalition comprising such diverse organizations as
- Apple, Microsoft, the American Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic
- Privacy Information Center, Barnes & Noble, and journalists such as Brock
- Meeks, in challenging the Communications Decency Amendment (CDA) which
- would have banned a broad range of First Amendment-protected speech from
- the public spaces of the Internet. These groups are united today in
- celebration of the Supreme Court's decision to strike down a law that
- would have criminalized this constitutionally protected speech on the
- Internet and other online forums.
-
- The Court's ruling in Reno v. ACLU affirmed the unanimous decisions of
- Philadelphia and New York federal courts, rejecting the controversial
- "decency" amendment to the Telecommunications Reform Act of 1996 as an
- unconstitutional violation of the First Amendment. The Court's opinion
- firmly establishes that the Constitution's guarantees of freedom of speech
- and of the press apply on the Internet.
-
- Members of the technology and publishing industries, as well as civil
- liberties watchdog groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the
- ACLU, hailed the Court's decision as a victory for everyone who uses
- computer communications. "Today marks a victory for all Americans, and we
- think it's appropriate for everyone to celebrate the Court's recognition of
- the free-speech significance of the Internet," said Lori Fena, executive
- director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "What this means is that
- the responsibility for controlling our content lies on us -- the citizens
- and the parents -- and this is a call for all of us once again to
- demonstrate how we can trusted to use this medium responsibly," she said.
- "This means that the parents, rather than the government, are empowered to
- make the choices about Internet content."
-
- Mike Godwin, EFF staff counsel, stated, "The CDA would have abridged one
- of the freedoms that Americans treasure most, and a freedom that is
- central to any democratic society. The Supreme Court recognized, as had
- the District Court, that this law was a wholly inappropriate exercise of
- governmental power under the Constitution."
-
- Esther Dyson, EFF chairman, noted that the decision stands for one of
- EFF's principal positions regarding free speech online: "We believe in
- free speech at the source -- and in the empowerment of any audience for
- that speech to control what they see and hear.
-
- "The Court's decision takes the responsibility for controlling and
- accessing speech on the Net out of the hands of government and puts it
- back where it belongs: in the hands of parents and other individuals," she
- said. "Individuals have the technical means to make their own choices
- about what they and their children read and see," Dyson noted.
-
- EFF has long noted that such low-cost technical solutions, together with
- existing anti-obscenity laws, offer a less intrusive and more efficient
- answer to questions about protecting children in the online world.
-
- "The government kept saying that this was a crisis that required harsher
- censorship in the online world than in any other communication medium,"
- Godwin said. "In fact, EFF and the other plaintiffs in this case showed
- that it's possible to promote both freedom of speech and family values --
- that the two goals don't oppose each other. By its decision today, the
- Court expressly acknowledged that reality."
-
- The constitutional challenge to the Communications Decency Act was grounded
- in a series of basic arguments, including that law is unconstitutionally
- overbroad (criminalizing protected speech), and that it it is
- unconstitutionally vague (making it difficult for individuals and
- organizations to comply).
-
- The Court also reaffirmed the lower court's findings a) that the character
- of this new medium means that any attempt at content regulation for the
- Internet must meet the strictest Constitutional requirements under the
- First Amendment, and b) that filtering technologies provided a less
- restrictive means to achieve Congress's stated goal of protecting
- children.
-
- "We applaud today's Supreme Court decision declaring the CDA
- unconstitutional," said Michael Sears, vice president and general manager
- of SurfWatch Software, a division of Spyglass Inc. "After our testimony
- in Philadelphia last year, I believe that we convinced the court that
- parental control software like SurfWatch is a much more effective and less
- restrictive solution than excessive government regulation."
-
- Referring to the Court's four-decade-old anti-censorship decision in
- Butler v. Michigan, the Supreme Court stated the speech restriction at
- issue there amounted to "burn[ing] the house to roast the pig." In his
- opinion for the Court, Associate Justice John Paul Stevens wrote that
- "[t]he CDA, casting a far darker shadow over free speech, threatens to
- torch a large segment of the Internet community."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 11:42:43 -0400
- From: jw@bway.net
- Subject: File 4--Plaintiff welcomes result in CDA case
-
- Plaintiff Welcomes Supreme Court Decision in ACLU v. Reno
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- Contact: Jonathan Wallace
- (212)513-7777 day
- (718)797-9808 evening
- jw@bway.net
-
- NEW YORK, June 26, 1997--Jonathan Wallace, a plaintiff in the
- ACLU v. Reno case, welcomed the Supreme Court ruling today.
-
- "Its a sweeping victory," said Wallace, publisher of The Ethical
- Spectacle (www.spectacle.org) and co-author with Mark Mangan of
- Sex, Laws and Cyberspace (New York: Henry Holt: 1996) on Internet
- censorship. "The Court has accorded the Internet the broadest
- possible protection."
-
- In the ruling, the seven justice majority agreed with the
- District Court that the Internet is not "invasive" like broadcast
- media and cable. While a child may stumble on an indecent
- television program, accessing content on the Internet requires
- too many steps for society to be equally concerned about the Net.
- Additionally, the Court said, warning screens and the
- availability of other measures to individual parents make the
- Communications Decency Act unneccessary and therefore
- unconstitutional.
-
- "This means that the Court is prepared to treat the Internet like
- print media, which has always been considered sacred in First
- Amendment law," Wallace said.
-
- He congratulated the ACLU attorneys and other lawyers who
- represented the plaintiffs. "They worked hard and did a
- tremendous job on this, educating the District Court and the
- Supreme Court in the meaning of the new medium," Wallace said.
-
- The Ethical Spectacle is a monthly Web-based newsletter focusing
- on the intersection, or collision, of ethics, law and politics in
- our society. Wallace joined the ACLU case as a plaintiff because
- of his concern that socially valuable material in the
- publication, such as a compilation of Holocaust material
- (http://www.spectacle.org/695/ausch.html) might be considered
- indecent under the Communications Decency Act.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 11:37:32 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Audrie Krause <akrause@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: File 5--CDA: It's Not Over Yet
-
- June 26, 1997
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- Contact: Audrie Krause
- Phone: 415-775-8674
- E-mail: akrause@igc.org
-
- NetAction Applauds CDA Ruling; Cautions More Free Speech Attacks
- On Horizon
-
- SAN FRANCISCO - NetAction applauded today's U.S. Supreme Court
- decision rejecting the Communications Decency Act (CDA) as
- unconstitutional, but cautioned free speech advocates not to
- become complacent.
-
- "This is not the end of it," warned Audrie Krause, Executive
- Director of NetAction. "Local libraries are increasingly coming
- under attack by the Christian right for providing Internet access
- to citizens in their communities."
-
- While today's Supreme Court victory and similar decisions issued
- recently by state courts in New York and Georgia may put a halt
- to direct attempts to censor Internet content, indirect attacks
- are likely to increase, according to Krause.
-
- "Instead of demanding that Internet access be banned outright,
- would-be censors are now pressuring local public libraries to add
- filtering software to computers that allow library patrons to go
- online," Krause said.
-
- "These filters are a far more insidious form of censorship," she
- added, since many citizens have no way of accessing the Internet
- except through computers in their public libraries.
-
- In addition to banning access to pornographic Web sites, most of
- the filtering software on the market today bans access to sites
- with information about AIDS and safe sex practices, birth
- control, and sexuality. Some even ban sites containing political
- speech, such as the site hosted by the National Organization for
- Women (NOW).
-
- "Many of the proponents of filtering software are intent on
- denying citizens access to ideas and values that differ from
- their own," said Krause.
-
- "It is unfortunate that the debate over Internet censorship was
- framed around the issue of access to pornography," she added.
- "What is really at issue is whether the Christian right can
- impose its values on all citizens in cyberspace."
-
- This will become more apparent, Krause predicted, as the
- censorship debate moves from legislative arena to the local
- libraries serving our communities.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 14:01:53 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
- Subject: File 6--Cato praises Supreme Court CDA Decision
-
- Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date--Thu, 26 Jun 1997 14:56:35 -0400 (EDT)
- From--Robin Hulsey <rhulsey@cato.org>
- To--rhulsey@cato.org
-
- June 26, 1997
-
- Cato scholars praise Supreme Court decision protecting Internet
- liberty
-
- "The First Amendment does not discriminate between bits and ink,"
- said Tom W. Bell, director of telecommunications and technology
- studies at the Cato Institute. Bell praised the Supreme Court's
- decision today striking down the Communications Decency Act as
- unconstitutional. "Today the Supreme Court has confirmed that
- speech on the Internet deserves no less protection than speech on
- paper."
-
- According to Bell, "Today's decision protects not only free
- speech, but also free markets. The Internet industry thrives
- because politicians have largely refrained from meddling with
- entrepreneurs. Consumers have enjoyed constantly improving
- access, increasingly rich content and continually decreasing
- costs. The CDA threatened to end all that growth and innovation."
-
- Solveig Bernstein, Cato's associate director of
- telecommunications and technology studies and author of "Beyond
- the Communications Decency Act: Constitutional Lessons of the
- Internet" (Cato Policy Analysis no. 262), explained that Congress
- will not be able to "fix" the CDA. "Because legislators cannot
- define 'indecent' clearly and coherently, no regulation of
- computer network indecency, however carefully tailored, can pass
- constitutional scrutiny."
-
- Some lawmakers, Bernstein noted, have proposed a "harmful to
- minors" standard to regulate Internet content. "Such a vague
- standard would unconstitutionally chill Internet
- speech-especially the sort of spontaneous and casual speech that
- the Internet facilitates between unsophisticated and
- noncommercial speakers," she explained.
-
- Moreover, observed Bernstein, we don't need a political fix to
- prevent children from accessing adult information on the
- Internet. "The private sector has already demonstrated that it
- can solve the perceived problem with such devices as software
- filters that screen out offensive material and Internet service
- providers that provide access only to child-safe materials."
-
- Bell said that responsibility for Internet monitoring must rest
- with parents. "Responsible parents would let their kids wander
- alone through the Internet no sooner than they would let them
- wander alone through Los Angeles."
-
- Bell and Bernstein are both available to the media for comment on
- today's Supreme Court decision.
-
- Contact:
- Tom W. Bell, director of telecommunications and technology
- studies, 202-789-5283
- Solveig Bernstein, associate director of telecommunications and technology
- studies, 202-789-5274
- Dave Quast, director of public affairs, 202-789-5266
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 13:59:53 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
- Subject: File 7--Family Research Council on CDA decision
-
- Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: June 26, 1997
- CONTACT: Kristin Hansen, (202) 393-2100
-
- COURT REAFFIRMS GOVERNMENT'S INTEREST IN PROTECTING CHILDREN FROM
- PORN, BUT STRIKES CDA AS TOO BROAD
-
-
- WASHINGTON, D.C. -- "Today's ruling means that pornographers can
- open their doors to children on the Internet. But pornographers
- beware: this will not be the last word on protecting children
- from your corrupting influence," Family Research Council Legal
- Policy Director Cathy Cleaver said Thursday. "While Reno v. ACLU
- said that the specific provisions of the CDA are too broad, the
- Court also said that more narrowly tailored provisions could be
- upheld."
-
- Cleaver made her comments as the Supreme Court issued its ruling
- striking down the Communications Decency Act (CDA). Cleaver
- continued, "Parents still have no legal recourse to protect their
- children from being sent a Penthouse centerfold. This is not
- good news for the thousands of families who discover every day
- that their children have accessed offensive and disgusting
- material on the internet.
-
- "At the same time, the Court has opened the door to new
- legislation protection children. Americans should urge Congress
- to take another look at the issue and draft a more narrowly
- defined statute.
-
- "But now, the flood gates remain open to purveyors of smut. With
- no legal liability for those who pursue children with graphic
- images and language on the internet, we need to act fast and
- firmly to ensure that our country does not give pornographers
- special rights."
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION OR INTERVIEWS,
- CONTACT THE FRC PRESS OFFICE.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 26 Jun 1997 16:41:58 -0500
- From: jthomas2@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
- Subject: File 8--White House Statement on CDA Decision
-
- Source - http://www.whitehouse.gov
-
- THE WHITE HOUSE BRIEFING ROOM
-
- _________________________________________________________________
-
- June 26, 1997
-
- STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
-
-
- Message Creation Date was at 26-JUN-1997 13:10:00
-
- THE WHITE HOUSE
- Office of the Press Secretary
- For Immediate Release June 26, 1997
-
- STATEMENT BY THE PRESIDENT
-
- Today, the Supreme Court ruled that portions of the
- Communications Decency Act
-
- addressing indecency are not constitutional. We will study its
- opinion closely.
-
- The administration remains firmly committed to the provisions --
- both in the CDA and elsewhere in the criminal code -- that
- prohibit the transmission of obscenity over the Internet and via
- other media. Similarly, we remain committed
-
- to vigorous enforcement of federal prohibitions against
- transmission of child pornography over the Internet, and another
- prohibition that makes criminal the use of the Internet by
- pedophiles to entice children to engage in sexual activity.
-
- The Internet is an incredibly powerful medium for freedom of
- speech and freedom of expression that should be protected. It is
- the biggest change in human communications since the printing
- press, and is being used to educate our
-
- children, promote electronic commerce, provide valuable health
- care information, and allow citizens to keep in touch with their
- government. But there is material on the Internet that is clearly
- inappropriate for children. As a parent, I understand the
- concerns that parents have about their children accessing
- inappropriate material.
-
- If we are to make the Internet a powerful resource for learning,
- we must give parents and teachers the tools they need to make the
- Internet safe for children .
-
- Therefore, in the coming days, I will convene industry leaders
- and groups representing teachers, parents and librarians. We can
- and must develop a solution for the Internet that is as powerful
- for the computer as the v-chip will be for the television, and
- that protects children in ways that are consistent with America
- ,s free speech values. With the right technology and rating
- systems - we can help ensure that our children don ,t end up in
- the red light districts of cyberspace.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
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- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #9.50
- ************************************
-
-
-