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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun June 29, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 51
- 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, #9.51 (Sun, June 29, 1997)
-
- File 1--The Work Has Just Begun
- File 2--The CDA and SafeKids.COM
- File 3--Extinguishing the CDA Fire
- File 4--AskAsia Covers Hong Kong Handover
- File 5-- CyberWire Dispatch Award for Meeks (fwd)
- File 6--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: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 05:38:02 -0700 (PDT)
- From: "Brock N. Meeks" <brock@well.com>
- Subject: File 1--The Work Has Just Begun
-
- Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
-
- ((Brock Meeks' work can also be found at:
- http://www.msnbc.com/news))
-
- Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
-
- Here's my commentary filed with MSNBC yesterday:
-
- The CDA is Dead, Now the Work Begins
-
- WASHINGTON - As a plaintiff in the lawsuit charging the Communications
- Decency Act was unconstitutional from jump street, I'm joining with
- millions of other Net users in cheering the Supreme Court's decision to
- strike down the law as a fundamental violation of First Amendment rights in
- cyberspace.
-
- And just as soon as everyone is finished patting themselves on the
- back they should just as quickly give themselves a swift kick in the ass
- because if you think the court's decision brings an end to this issue,
- you're sorely misguided. There's a hell of a lot of work still ahead.
-
- First let me toss out some congratulations:
-
- To the Supreme Court justices for winning the judicial slam-dunk
- contest. The wording of the court's opinion couldn't have been a more
- stinging indictment of a gutless Congress and administration that passed
- this bill simply because it was politically expedient. Here's part of the
- court's "in-your-face" decision: "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 the CDA pursues that interest by suppressing
- a large amount of speech that adults have a constitutional right to send
- and receive. 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."
-
- Second, love him or hate him, former Sen. Jim Exon, the father of
- the CDA, deserves to be recognized for bringing a legitimate issue to the
- national stage. He energized a host of forces, from advocates to industry,
- and in the wake of turmoil he left behind, many good things have happened:
-
- --Congress has become more hip to the Internet, though it still has a long
- way to go.
- --Advocacy in cyberspace has finally gelled in a way that was unthinkable
- before the CDA came on the scene.
- --Parents and educators are for the first time forced into looking at this
- problem seriously rather than hiding their heads in the sand.
- --Industry got off its lazy ass and began to find ways to solve a problem
- it knew was there but hoped no one would notice.
-
- BACK UP AND PUSH
-
- But enough congratulations. All advocates opposing this bill,
- including myself, should be ashamed that we let it get to this point in the
- first place. We will suffer for our sins for a very long time.
-
- Even as I type this column, Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., has
- announced she will soon introduce the "Childsafe Internet Act." Murray said
- that the court's ruling "leaves open a large vacuum. No one wants to return
- home after work to find a child downloading pornographic material." To
- solve this "dangerous" problem, as Murray puts it, she has a seven-point
- plan that includes:
-
- --Putting blocking software in the hands of every parent.
- --Creating a parental warning alongside copyright protections on each home
- page.
- --Creating incentives for Web page creators to rate their own pages for
- content.
- --Making it a criminal offense to mis-rate a Web site.
- --Making it a criminal offense to steal sites previously rated as
- child-safe.
- --Making it a felony for anyone to solicit or exploit child-safe chat
- rooms.
- --Creating an 800 number hot line where parents can rat out Web sites they
- believe carry harmful material. If you're a parent and your kid has access
- to the Internet you need to get involved in that process.
-
- There is so much wrong with this plan that it makes my head hurt.
- Seems to me there are First Amendment issues at risk in Murray's plan.
- (Require warning notices?) What does "steal" a Web site mean? (Murray
- provided no details to her announcement). And suddenly, stupidity - the
- mis-rating of a Web site - is going to be a criminal offense? Please spare
- me this kind of congressional "protection."
-
- This is what I mean by saying there is still much work to be done.
- Congress still doesn't get it. And if we all just sit back and rest on our
- laurels after the court's decision, we will likely find ourselves back at
- square one, fighting another unconstitutional bill. So everyone needs to
- work at educating their congressional representatives. Let them hear from
- you now and often.
-
- THE PARENT TRAP
-
- If you're a parent and your kid has access to the Internet you need
- to get involved in that process. Period. End of discussion. Any parent from
- this day forward who tries to use the excuse, "I can't even program my VCR
- - how can I oversee my child's use of the Internet" should be upbraided on
- the spot for abdicating their parental responsibilities.
-
- Parents could get away with seeing that flashing "12:00" on the VCR
- with no other ramifications other than some slight embarrassment. Not so
- with the Internet. We're talking children here: Your kids. My kids. Learn
- how to use the tools available that allow you to craft a reasonably safe
- environment for your kids on the Net. I say "reasonably" safe because
- nothing is perfect. In light of that, you'll have to take an additional
- step: Talk to your kids.
-
- Yes, talk. Get involved - they are your kids, after all. You didn't
- give your kids bikes without teaching them to ride and telling them where
- it was appropriate to ride. Same goes for the Internet. And it wouldn't
- hurt to have an open and frank discussion with your kids about sex, either.
- I realize this may be uncomfortable for a lot of people, but listen, folks,
- we don't have a choice anymore. There is a lot of crap out there on the
- Net. Talk to your kids about it; take the mystery out of it. If you get
- really desperate, saddle your kids with a really slow modem and make
- downloading porn more work than it's worth. (I'm only partially joking
- there.)
-
- HOLD INDUSTRY'S FEET TO THE FIRE
-
- An entire industry has sprung up around protecting kids from porn
- on the Internet. These are the so-called "blocking software" programs. Most
- of these programs are heinous in that they block much more than porn,
- including political speech, animal-rights activism sites and other sites
- that have nothing to do with porn. These programs, with their built-in
- political agendas ("we know what your kid should see, trust us") are a pock
- mark on our software industry. Fortunately, most of these programs allow
- parents to configure the software as it comes out of the box so that it
- suits your own values.
-
- The main problem is how these programs are constructed, blocking by
- URL or keyword, which means that sites dealing with "sex education" might
- be blocked because of the word "sex." A better approach is "direct address
- blocking" (DAB), such as is found in a new program called "X-Stop." DAB
- uses the numerical IP address of a site, instead of relying on the "word
- filtering scam," says Mike Kangior, government relations director for
- X-Stop. Now, X-Stop is no panacea, either: Someone in X-Stop's back room is
- deciding for you what sites get blocked and which ones don't. But at least
- these guys have a better software solution than simply blocking by the
- ineffective method of keywords.
-
- Finally, I believe that industry has missed a tremendous
- entrepreneurial opportunity throughout this entire debate over the CDA to
- create "family friendly" ISPs. These would be ISPs that promise to block
- access to certain areas of the Internet right at the server level. Granted,
- such services wouldn't be for everyone, but it's my guess that there is a
- large number of parents that would find such a service to be an oasis in a
- sea of uncertain content.
-
- CDA supporter Donna Rice Hughes of the Enough is Enough anti-porn
- activist group said that the court's decision "puts more of a burden on
- parents." I think that's the first thing she has said since this debate
- began two years ago that I've agreed with.
-
- The burden and responsibility of your children's experience on the
- Internet is now squarely in your hands. Rejoice in the extra work and
- continue to fight for the right to keep your job as a parent and tell
- Congress to stay the hell away.
-
- Meeks out...
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 27 Jun 1997 10:04:55 -0700
- From: Larry Magid <magid@latimes.com>
- Subject: File 2--The CDA and SafeKids.COM
-
- Safe Kids Online -- http://www.safekids.com
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- The Supreme Court's decision to strike down the Communications Decency Act
- (CDA) is a clear victory for free speech on the Internet. Congress, in an
- attempt to protect children from online pornography, passed a bill last
- year that would have denied adults the right to post and read material that
- is otherwise protected under our first amendment. With the court's
- decision, the freedoms enjoyed by other media also apply to cyberspace.
-
- Although Congress's response was overreaching and unworkable, most members
- of Congress who voted for the CDA did so in a sincere effort to protect
- children from potential dangers online. With or without the CDA, those
- dangers must be recognized, put into context and dealt with in a manner
- that maximizes child safety while continuing to protect adults.
-
- Cyberspace -- like society as a whole -- is primarily a positive place for
- children, adult and families, but like the rest of the world, it does have
- its dangers.
-
- These dangers, as well as positive steps that families can take are
- outlined in the brochure "Child Safety on the Information Highway" which is
- available in print (by calling 800 843-5678). It's also available several
- places online including the National Center for Missing Children's Web Site
- (www.missingkids.com) and my own child safety site, Safe Kids Online
- (www.safekids.com).
-
- SafeKids.Com also offers additional material about online child safety
- including links to companies that make filtering software, additional
- articles on this issue and links to organizations dedicated to protecting
- children on and off the net. Feel free to link to it or mention it in any
- upcoming stories on this issue. Also, please let me know if you have
- information on this subject that I can link to from SafeKids.Com.
-
- Best,
-
- Larry Magid
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 13:58:32 -0500
- From: Jonathan D. Wallace <jw@bway.net>
- Subject: File 3--Extinguishing the CDA Fire
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following is from Jonathan Wallace of The
- Ethical Spectacle. More information can be found on:
- http://www.spectacle.org))
-
- EXTINGUISHING THE CDA FIRE
-
- The Supreme Court's Masterful Reno v. ACLU Opinion
-
- Jonathan D. Wallace, Esq.
- jw@bway.net
-
- Jonathan Wallace is a New York-based executive and attorney who, as
- publisher of The Ethical Spectacle, was a plaintiff in Reno v. ACLU.
- He is the co-author, with Mark Mangan, of Sex, Laws and Cyberspace
- (Henry Holt, 1996), a book about Internet censorship.
-
- "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 these words, the Supreme Court closed its simple, clear and
- masterful opinion affirming the District Court's decision in ACLU v.
- Reno. The Communications Decency Act (CDA) is unconstitutional.
-
- The Supreme Court's decision will stand as one of the most important
- First Amendment decisions of the 20th century. The Court, whose
- freedom of speech jurisprudence has so often recently been fragmented
- and confusing, has issued a clear, logical and correct statement which
- will be the cornerstone of free speech decision-making into the next
- century.
-
- In its ruling, the Court hits a number of extremely important bases.
-
- The CDA is Unconstitutional
-
- The Justices agreed that the CDA violates the First Amendment due to
- its vagueness and overbreadth. Calling the CDA "a content-based
- blanket restriction on speech", they also noted its ambiguity ("each
- of the two parts of the CDA uses a different linguistic form") . They
- were very concerned that serious speakers on issues like "birth
- control practices, homosexuality," and "the consequences of prison
- rape" would be chilled by the CDA. The severity of its criminal
- penalties "may well cause speakers to remain silent rather than
- communicate even arguably unlawful words, ideas and images."
-
- The government argued that the CDA was not vague, since its indecency
- language overlaps part of the three-part Miller standard utilized in
- obscenity prosecutions. Both the CDA and the Miller standard hold that
- the material in question must be "patently offensive" under
- contemporary community standards. (Generally, obscenity is the most
- hard-core stuff; Reno v. ACLU leaves obscenity laws in place and deals
- only with the issue of non-obscene "indecent" speech.) The Court
- acerbly noted that a term which is not vague in context may be vague
- when standing alone. In a memorably droll footnote (fn. 38), it
- explained itself: "Even though the word 'trunk', standing alone, might
- refer to luggage, a swimming suit, the base of a tree, or the long
- nose of an animal, its meaning is clear when it is one prong of a
- three-part description of a species of gray animals."
-
- The Justices concluded that the CDA "unquestionably silences some
- speakers whose messages would be entitled to constitutional
- protection."
-
- Caging the Pacifica Monster
-
- Twenty years ago, the Supreme Court let a ravening monster out of its
- cage in its Pacifica v. FCC decision, popularly known as the "Seven
- Dirty Words" case. In Reno v. ACLU , the Court has put Pacifica back
- in its cage.
-
- Until Pacifica, the Court had always justified censorship of radio and
- television based on a doctrine known as "spectrum scarcity". In other
- words, the government's role in assigning frequencies in the scarce
- broadcast spectrum led to a role in reviewing content as well. In
- Pacifica, the Court unnecessarily resorted to a new, and
- extraordinarily muddy, new rationale, "pervasiveness". The fact that
- broadcast comes into the household, and that children turning a dial
- may stumble on indecent programming, justifies censorship of indecent
- speech, the Court said. Ithiel de Sola Pool, a prescient
- communications scholar, wrote in 1983 that the pervasiveness doctrine
- would someday be used to justify "quite radical censorship". This
- prediction almost came true in 1996. The pervasiveness doctrine was
- used by the religious right and their Congressional fellow-travelers
- as a major justification for passage of the CDA. The Supreme Court
- gave further grounds for anxiety by using pervasiveness as a rationale
- for censorship of non-scarce cable television in its Denver Area
- Educational Telecommunications Consortium v. FCC decision.
-
- The Court has now emphatically declared that the Net is not pervasive.
- (One attorney at the ACLU press conference on the day the decision was
- issued commented that Reno v. ACLU is Justice Stevens' penance for
- having written Pacifica.) The Court adopted the careful and thorough
- findings of the District Court, which it summarized as follows:
- "Though [indecent] material is widely available, users rarely
- encounter such content accidentally....." The existence of warning
- screens and document descriptions dictates that "'the odds are slim'
- that a user would enter a sexually explicit site by accident." Unlike
- radio and television, use of the Net requires "a series of affirmative
- steps more deliberate and directed than merely turning a dial."
-
- The Court specifically held Pacifica inapplicable to the Internet.
- That case, it noted, involved a civil order directed to the timing of
- an indecent program (after ten o'clock at night would have been
- acceptable, mid-afternoon was not.) The CDA, by contrast, was a
- criminal statute which would effectively chill much constitutionally
- protected speech. Moreover, there was a long history of broadcast
- regulation prior to Pacifica (here, the Court seems to be saying,
- somewhat tautologically, that you can regulate something if you have
- always regulated it.) "The Internet, however, has no comparable
- history."
-
- Using the word "invasive" in lieu of Pacifica's "pervasive", the Court
- concluded: "[T]he Internet is not as 'invasive' as radio or
- television." And, just in case anyone was in doubt, it added that the
- Net is not scarce, either: "[T]he Internet can hardly be considered a
- 'scarce' expressive commodity. It provides relatively unlimited,
- low-cost capacity for communications of all kinds."
-
- The Power of Analogy
-
- Until recently, courts analyzed new technologies by reference to
- older, similar ones. For example, in the last century the courts
- decided that the correct legal regime for the telephone could be
- determined by regarding it as a kind of telegraph. A strong analogy
- gives clear legal guidance and avoids messes; it saves everyone's
- time. For example, the telegraph analogy would deter a legislator from
- introducing a bill to apply rules to the telephone inconsistent with
- treatment of the telegraph.
-
- For the last quarter century, the Supreme Court has departed from the
- road of analogy where new media are concerned. Instead, it has taken
- the view that for freedom of speech purposes, every new medium is
- unique and presents particular problems. At the same time, it has
- issued a series of extremely muddy and fragmented decisions, from
- Pacifica through last year's Denver, in which the plurality said
- that selecting an analogy wasn't necessary and, in fact, would be of
- no help. This was reminiscent of the famous scene in Treasure of the
- Sierra Madre in which the bandits posing as federales exclaim, "We
- don't need no filthy badges". The Court defiantly announced that it
- don't need no filthy analogies to get its work done. This willful
- blindness to the usefulness of technological precedent has enabled the
- Court to trip all over itself , announcing that cable is not to be
- treated like broadcast television (Turner v. FCC I) and then saying
- that it is in fact to be treated like television (Turner II and Denver
- ). I worked with attorney Jamie Stecher to file an amicus brief in
- Reno v. ACLU on behalf of Jon Lebkowsky and SiteSpecific
- Incorporated urging the Court to cure its analogical deficiency and
- declare that the Net should be treated like print media.
-
- The dissenters, disturbingly, seem to adopt a geospatial analogy for
- the Net (one promoted, of course, by the term "cyberspace" itself) and
- discuss Net regulation as a "zoning" problem. I discuss the dissent
- further below.
-
- Unlike the District Court, which analogized the Net variously to print
- and the telephone, the Supreme Court decision doesn't rely on analogy
- to reach a result. However, the Court makes a couple of highly
- significant off-hand references: "The Web is thus comparable, from the
- readers' viewpoint, to....a vast library including millions of readily
- available and indexed publications...." And again: "Through the use of
- Web pages, mail exploders and newsgroups, [any Net user] can become a
- pamphleteer."
-
- The latter statement leads immediately to the Court's conclusion that
- "our cases provide no basis for qualifying the level of First
- Amendment scrutiny that should be applied to this medium." The "cases"
- referred to are Pacifica and some other pro-censorship precedents
- which the Court distinguishes as inapplicable to the Net. In the
- complex dance of Constitutional litigation, the Court applies
- standards of various strictness to determining the constitutionality
- of laws. Its highest standard of review is so-called "strict
- scrutiny", which says that to survive, a law must be based on a
- compelling government interest and use the least restrictive means
- of reaching the goal. Laws evaluated under a "strict scrutiny"
- standard rarely survive, so the battle is mostly won when you get the
- Court to agree to apply the "strict scrutiny" standard. By applying
- its highest standard to the Net, after referring to the Net as a
- library and Net users as pamphleteers, the Court is tacitly
- acknowledging that the Net should be treated like print media, which
- has always had the highest level of First Amendment protection.
-
- Elsewhere in the opinion, the Court takes a slight step back from this
- conclusion. It has long batted away almost every kind of restriction
- on the content of non-obscene print communications; as the District
- Court observed, Congress would not have been able to pass a "Newspaper
- Decency Act" with a straight face. Judge Dalzell of the District Court
- was emboldened to observe that the print-like nature of the Net led to
- the conclusion that "Congress may not regulate indecency on the
- Internet at all." The Supreme Court observes in its footnote 30:
- "Because appellees do not press this argument before the Court, we do
- not consider it." And the Court goes on in the footnote also to
- re-affirm that the government has a "compelling interest" in
- protecting minors from indecent, patently offensive speech. Thus, the
- Court leaves open the possibility that it may still tolerate a higher
- level of censorship for the Net than it has for print. Looked at this
- way, Reno v. ACLU may say nothing more than that the scattershot CDA
- fails where a more sniper-like approach may prevail.
-
- Sarcasm
-
- The Court is too polite to chastise Congress in plain language for
- holding no hearings while hastily passing an unconstitutional bill.
- Nonetheless, the opinion is full of hints of the Court's exasperation
- at Congress for wasting the taxpayers' money and everyone's time. In
- footnote 24, the Court quotes some un-named Representatives who
- thought that the CDA "would involve the Federal Government spending
- vast sums of money trying to define elusive terms that are going to
- lead to a flood of legal challenges..." And it goes on to quote
- Senator Leahy, who led the fight against the CDA: "The Senate went in
- willy-nilly, passed legislation and never once had a hearing, never
- once had a discussion other than an hour or so on the floor."
-
- Ratings Systems and Censorware
-
- As the euphoria induced by the Reno v. ACLU decision wears off, most
- free speech advocates are aware that more legislation and more court
- battles will follow. As noted above, the Court left the door open for
- Congress to pass a more narrowly drawn statute--and the same day of
- the decision, Senator Patty Murray (D-Wa.) announced legislation that
- would make a Net-rating system mandatory. President Clinton
- simultaneously called for "a V-chip for the Internet".
-
- Although no universally accepted rating system exists for Net content,
- the issue of ratings, and the related one of filtering software (I
- will mischievously use the pejorative term "censorware"), were
- constantly in the background at the ACLU v. Reno trial. Both sides
- made as much use as possible of the existence of ratings platforms
- such as PICS, ratings systems such as RSACi, and censorware such as
- Surfwatch. Our side argued that these alternatives made government
- intervention unnecessary, as parents could protect their children
- through selective application of these technologies. The government
- argued that the existence of these choices essentially rendered the
- CDA harmless, as speakers could defend themselves from criminal
- liability by giving an adult rating to their sites. The District Court
- didn't buy it, and in her opinion Chief Judge Sloviter made an
- oft-quoted statement that technology which doesn't yet exist cannot be
- used to save the constitutionality of a statute.
-
- The Supreme Court agreed. The CDA included a defense that the speaker
- has taken "good faith, reasonable, effective, and appropriate"
- measures to prevent indecent speech from reaching minors. Our side had
- contended that it would be virtually impossible to prove that one had
- met the four parts of this test, while the government rejoined that
- almost any user of a self-rating system would be protected by this
- provision. The justices noted: "It is the requirement that the good
- faith action must be 'effective' that makes this defense illusory. The
- Government recognizes that its proposed screening software does not
- currently exist."
-
- However, in its opening description of the Internet, the Court duly
- noted the existence of censorware, as the District Court had before
- it: "Systems have been developed to help parents control the material
- that may be available on a home computer with Internet access."
- Although the Court did not base any legal conclusions on this finding,
- some advocates have argued that this mention supports the theory that
- further government action is unnecessary due to the existence of these
- products.
-
- Some advocates of Net freedoms continue to promote the existence of
- voluntary ratings systems and censorware as important protections
- against further government intervention in our on-line rights. The
- danger is that legislation such as that proposed by Senator Murray
- will mandate ratings and the use of censorware. Once this happens, use
- of such systems and products is no longer voluntary, but becomes part
- of a system of government censorship. In all fairness, these advocates
- mainly agree that they would draw the line at government imposition of
- ratings or censorware. Their opponents argue that if you trumpet loud
- enough and often enough that something is good for you, sooner or
- later the government will attempt to make it mandatory.
-
- This issue was not before the Court, and nothing in the opinion can
- really be read as a comment on the constitutionality of such a scheme.
- I believe that Murray's bill or Clinton's promise of a V-chip for the
- Internet would fail due to prior case-law (most of it dealing with
- MPAA movie ratings) that prohibits the government adoption of private
- ratings systems. (For relevant case-law, see my paper on use of
- censorware in public libraries.).
-
- Community standards
-
- The Miller standard defines obscenity in terms of "contemporary
- community standards." This has led to results like the prosecution of
- Amateur Action sysops Robert and Carleen Thomas in Tennessee for
- posting materials on their California-based BBS which violated Memphis
- community standards.
-
- The CDA took a page from this book by defining indecent material
- similarly in terms of "community standards." Though the CDA's
- proponents claimed that it would create a consistent national standard
- for Internet indecency, the CDA was ambiguous. There was no way to
- determine from its language whether local standards were intended, as
- in the obscenity law, or whether the statute really intended a
- national standard , as in certain FCC regulations which refer to
- "contemporary community standards" for the broadcast industry. There
- was even disagreement among free speech advocates as to which kind of
- standard the CDA intended.
-
- The danger of applying local community standards to the Internet is,
- of course, that the most restrictive community gets to set the tone
- for the entire Net. (There is also the question of whether and how the
- standards of a single U.S. community could be applied to the global
- Internet.)
-
- Though the Justices didn't need to face this question directly, they
- drop some interesting hints. In their footnote 38, they state that the
- CDA clearly intended to apply Miller's local community standards
- approach, not set a national standard. (I agree with this finding; if
- Congress had wanted to, it could have more closely mirrored the FCC
- language by writing something like "contemporary standards for the
- Internet community"). Later, they observe that the community standards
- language "means that any communication available to a nationwide
- audience will be judged by the standards of the community most likely
- to be offended by the message."
-
- This suggests pretty strongly that Congress should stay away from
- community standards in any further Net legislation it considers. It
- also indicates that the Court may be ready to review the applicability
- of the Miller standard to prosecutions for Internet obscenity.
-
- The Heckler's Veto
-
- The overarching rationale of the CDA's supporters was that it was a
- necessary measure to protect our children. I personally had the
- questionable pleasure of debating Patrick Trueman of the American
- Family Association on national television, and he accused me of trying
- to promote the seduction of our children by pedophiles, simply because
- of my anti-CDA stand.
-
- Forty years ago, in the Butler v. Michigan case, the Court overturned
- a state law which banned the sale of books unfit for children, using
- the often-quoted phrase that such legislation burns down the house to
- roast the pig. In other words, while the protection of children is an
- extremely important goal, we will not do so by interfering with the
- legitimate rights of adults to speak, or listen to, matters not fit
- for children.
-
- The Court again confirmed that the government has a "compelling
- interest" in protecting children from indecency (a matter not
- seriously disputed, though the ACLU did make an attempt in the
- District Court to counter this on principle). Citing the Butler
- language, the Court said that the CDA, "casting a far darker shadow
- over free speech, threatens to torch a large segment of the Internet
- community."
-
- The CDA's ambiguous provisions included a section punishing anyone who
- attempted to send indecent material knowingly to a minor, or to a
- group knowing that a minor was included. While the CDA's advocates,
- like Patrick Trueman, painted graphic images of individual pedophiles
- sending indecent mail to susceptible targets, our side pointed out
- that every chat room, every Usenet group and every Web page may
- potentially be joined or viewed by minors, making the "knowledge"
- requirement meaningless. While the two dissenters, Justices O'Connor
- and Rehnquist, would have upheld the "specific child" provision of the
- CDA for one-on-one communications like those imagined by Trueman, the
- majority refused to rewrite the law to make it less vague. In so
- doing, they hit on the striking image of the "heckler's veto": "[A]ny
- opponent of indecent speech....might simply log on and inform the
- would-be discoursers that his 17-year-old child....would be present."
-
- The Dissent's Zoning Approach
-
- Justice O'Connor, joined by Chief Justice Rehnquist, concurred with
- the Court's overall holding on the CDA, but would have preserved the
- "specific child" provision as it applied to one-on-one situations.
- Their arguments in favor of preserving this one application of the CDA
- relied on a "zoning" analogy. Justice O'Connor wrote that she regarded
- the CDA "as little more than an attempt by Congress to create 'adult
- zones' on the Internet. Our precedent indicates that the creation of
- such zones can be constitutionally sound."
-
- She then cites a long list of state statutes prohibiting minors from
- entering pornographic theaters and bookstores, liquor stores, bars and
- poolhalls. " [A] zoning law is valid if (i) it does not unduly
- restrict adult access to the material; and (ii) minors have no First
- Amendment right to read or view the banned material." She agrees that
- applied to the Internet "as it exists in 1997", the CDA violates the
- first part of this test, restricting adult access to material. As for
- the second branch of the test, she holds that "the universe of speech
- constitutionally protected as to minors but banned by the CDA....is a
- very small one."
-
- She describes cyberspace as an area not yet "zoned" but eminently
- "zoneable": "[I]t is possible to construct barriers in cyberspace and
- use them to screen for identity, making cyberspace more like the
- physical world and, consequently, more amenable to zoning laws." But
- she agrees that the law cannot be upheld based on technology not yet
- available. "Until gateway technology is available throughout
- cyberspace, and it is not in 1997, a speaker cannot be reasonably
- assured that the speech he displays will reach only adults because it
- is impossible to confine speech to an 'adult zone'." Thus, the two
- partial dissenters hold hope out for a day in which laws like the one
- proposed by Senator Murray can create "adult zones" or, as free speech
- advocates would put it, "ghettoes" for disfavored speech.
-
- Conclusion
-
- The Reno v. ACLU opinion is a clear, strong statement which will serve
- as a bulwark for Net free speech determinations for many years to
- come. However, by stopping just short of a categorical statement that
- cyberspace should be treated like print media, it exposes the Net to
- at least one more battle, over mandatory ratings systems and
- censorware.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 23 Jun 1997 12:49:56 -0400
- From: Peter Suciu <peter@connors.com>
- Subject: File 4--AskAsia Covers Hong Kong Handover
-
- After 155 years of British colonial rule, Hong Kong will return
- to Chinese control as of July 1st. AskAsia will be providing
- coverage of this historical event at: http://www.askasia.org
-
- Join AskAsia to find out how this unprecedented historical event
- will affect people, the economy and the future of Hong Kong.
- Found in the Information/News section of AskAsia, Scenario92s for
- Hong Kong92s Future is designed to get people thinking about the
- transition, it92s potential outcome, and provide contextual and
- historical information to foster discussions. In addition,
- AskAsia provides Hong Kong related links to Asian newspapers,
- newsmakers, historical and reference information and breaking
- news stories.
-
- If you would like any additional information on AskAsia, please
- contact us via e-mail.
-
- Best,
- Peter Suciu
- New Media Specialist
- Connors Communications
- 212-807-7500
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed 18 Jun 1997 13:06:31 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Brock Meeks <brock@well.com>
- Subject: File 5-- CyberWire Dispatch Award for Meeks (fwd)
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: James Warren, in his 29 June '97 column
- in the Chicago Tribune, described Brock Meeks as "a mix of
- gonzo journalist Hunter Thompson and investigator Jack Anderson."
- Rather apt, and it's good to see the mainstream beginning to
- appreciate Brock's writing)).
-
- CyberWire Dispatch // Copyright (c) 1997 // June 17th //
-
- Jacking in from the "Envelope Please" port:
-
- New York--CyberWire Dispatch received the top award for "Best
- Online Feature" from the Computer Press Association during its
- 12th annual awards ceremony for its investigative story "Keys to
- the Kingdom" that exposed the hidden agendas hard coded into
- so-called blocking software programs.
-
- Dispatch immediately announced it was doubling its subscription
- because, hell, let's face it, you strike while the iron's hot.
- (Which is a saying I never understood. What difference does it
- make whether an iron is hot or not? Does the burning add any
- more to the displeasure of having a six-inch crater carved into
- your skull from the iron? Ah, but I digress...)
-
- The award makes Dispatch a back-to-back winner. Last year CWD won
- the top honor in the "Best Investigative Story or Series"
- category for its articles exposing the twisted story of Carnegie
- Mellon University undergrad Marty Rimm's attempt to pass off a
- flawed study of online pornography as a definitive case history.
- Dispatch also exposed Rimm's calculated and deceptive
- manipulation of Time magazine which resulted in the infamous
- "Cyberporn" cover story fiasco.
-
- The judges said CWD authors Brock N. Meeks and Declan McCullaugh
- "produced an investigative piece on a serious and important
- subject--a rare feat in any media. 'Keys to the Kingdom' revealed
- that parental control software--which ostensibly filters out
- pornographic Internet sites--actually restricts access to all
- types of material both innocuous and important. Thus, software
- users unwittingly restrict their rights of free speech and access
- to information. This story, colorfully written and packed with
- details, raised this important issue to the online community and
- resulted in high profile follow-ups with mainstream media such as
- the Washington Post, New York Times and the Wall St. Journal."
-
- In other words, the judges got it. Of course, "colorfully
- written" is a code word for "it was packed with profanity,
- twisted tales of drug and alcohol abuse and flirtation with a
- gender bending source." Kids, don't try this home...
-
- The software blocking controversy continues to this day, with few
- changes being made. One company, CyberPatrol, is now changing
- the way its software handles the blocking of sites so that it
- doesn't sweep in non-offending content. Currently, CyberPatrol
- truncates a blocked site's URL without regard for any other site
- that may be caught in that blocking net. For example, if
- CyberPatrol wants to block a URL with "cybersex" in the domain
- name, the company simply blocks on the word "cyber" meaning that
- a site called "cyber-highschool" would be caught in CyberPatrol's
- "CyberNot" list and therefore not accessible.
-
- At least CyberPatrol is working to eliminate the problem.
- Another nefarious software program, CyberSitter, refuses to
- acknowledge any hidden agenda in its blocking patterns.
- CyberSitter continues to block a host of sites that deal with
- topics other than pornography, such as the National Organization
- for Women and Peacefire.Org. The latter site has become a
- leading critic of CyberSitter and that critical voice appears to
- be the only reason why it's blocked by CyberSitter. Brian
- Milburn, president of Solid Oak Software which developed
- CyberSitter, continues to boast of how his program is being
- heavily used by Christian groups such as Focus on the Family. At
- the same time, Milburn is fond of sending out disparaging Email
- to his critics. When Dispatch wrote about Milburn's failed
- attempt to threaten this publication with legal action based on
- the bogus claims of copyright violation, Milburn wrote that
- Dispatch is "nothing more than a trickle of piss in the river of
- life." I'm sure Focus on the Family would love to put that quote
- in their brochures hawking Milburn's software to its membership.
-
- The Real Heroes
- ===============
-
- The real hero behind this award is "Red" our transvestite source
- that passed CWD what was essentially the smoking gun: the lists
- of block sites of several software programs. These lists of
- blocked sites are essentially trade secrets and are therefore
- encrypted. The lists are the ultimate "little black book" of
- every naughty site on the Net, hence the "keys to the kingdom"
- title of our piece. But Red was able to break the encryption and
- read the lists in plain text. What Red saw there shocked and
- dismayed him, er, her, er, whatever... and passed the lists on to
- CWD.
-
- The other hero here is Declan McCullaugh, currently the
- Washington Correspondent for Time magazine's "the Netly News."
- Declan did the majority of the reporting as I pointed him in this
- direction and that and let him run with it. Meanwhile, I was
- doing most of the heavy drinking, trying to grind out my copy on
- a daily basis for HotWired's Netizen where I was covering the
- most boring fucking presidential campaign since Rutherford B.
- Hayes beat whomever back in whatever year. Declan ground away at
- the story, dogging it like a crazed rat terrier. If not for his
- efforts, the story might still be unwritten.
-
- That the story might still be unknown had not CWD written it is a
- sad commentary on the state of "computer journalism." Where is
- all the hard nosed, down in the dirt investigative journalism
- when it comes to the computer and online industry? You have to
- look long and hard to find it.
-
- The San Jose Mercury News took home this year's award for "Best
- Investigative Story" for a story about how thieves are stealing
- chips. "No longer content to hijack a truck or bribe employees
- to look the other way, high-tech thieves have escalated into
- kidnapping, coercion and brutality to get their hands on
- components literally worth more than their weight in cocaine or
- gold," the judges wrote of the Merc's story. The Merc also
- walked away with the "Best Overall Coverage in a General Interest
- Newspaper" so it's not a big leap to see them cop the
- investigative award, as well.
-
- [Side Note: CWD's "Keys" article was originally entered in the
- investigative story category. Someone on the CPA committee
- moved it to the online feature category because the investigative
- category was for print only! Don't ask me why; CWD won in this
- category last year. Not to take away from the Merc's story, but
- boys, if CWD goes head-to-head with your chip story, CWD kicks
- your ass. We'll see you next year, same time, same place.]
-
- So where are all the investigative stories? The New York Times
- was no where to be found last night, neither was the Wall St.
- Journal or the Washington Post or Business Week. The fact is,
- journalists covering this industry give it too much of a free
- ride. Yes, there are scathing product reviews oooohhhh, now
- there is some top notch muckraking journalism.
-
- This industry is making profits that border on obscene. And when
- there is that much money at stake there is dirt, big time dirt.
- But few are looking. A concerted effort needs to be undertaken
- to hold this industry's feet to the fire, hell, we need to burn
- this industry down and rejoice in what rises from the ash.
-
- Thanks to judges for their efforts; wading through the more than
- 1,000 entries received this year must have been a grueling task.
- And thanks to the CPA committee for this award and for your hard
- work in putting the awards ceremony together. (I got riled up
- giving my speech last night and forgot to thank the CPA for the
- award.) And a special nod to Adaptec who ponied up the money
- for the whole event and to Dee Cravens, the company's vice
- president for communications, who had a few choice things to say
- about the shaky nature of "computer journalism" as well. Good on
- you, Dee, as CWD's Aussie readers like to say.
-
- Thanks to Declan for his hard work on the story and "fuck you" to
- Josh Quittner, who is El Heffe for Pathfinder.com and the real
- brains behind anything intelligent Time Inc. does in print or
- online dealing with cyberspace, for stealing Declan away from me
- before I made the jump to MSNBC as their chief Washington
- Correspondent.
-
- Thanks to Red for all his, er, her, er, whatever, efforts in
- bring this story to the public's eye. And thanks to my
- insightful and ballsy editors at MSNBC who continue to allow me
- to write CWD without any restrictions or constraints.
-
- Last but not least, a huge thanks to you, the CWD reader. You've
- made CWD into a publication like no other on the Net. You've
- supported Dispatch with your feedback, both positive and negative
- and have helped create a brand name for CyberWire Dispatch that
- is one of the most recognizable in Cyberspace. I owe you a lot
- and try to live up to that with each Dispatch.
-
- So, that said, when you get the bill in the mail doubling the
- subscription price for CWD, remember, it goes to a good cause,
- the furtherance of take no prisoners journalism in cyberspace.
- Pay the bill promptly, CWD is going for a "three-peat" in next
- year's awards.
-
- Meeks out...
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
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- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #9.51
- ************************************
-
-
-