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-
- Computer underground Digest Thu July 10, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 55
- 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, #9.55 (Thu, July 10, 1997)
-
- File 1--Internet Law Heads-Up
- File 2--(fwd) Porn and the Liability of Internet Providers
- File 3--Green Card Spammer Laurence Canter Disbarred in Tennessee
- File 4--Star Wars, Fanfiction, and Big Eight Newsgroup Creation
- File 5--U.S. Justice Dept. Investigating Network Solutions
- 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: Mon, 7 Jul 97 12:06:36 -0400
- From: Internet Law Heads-Up <heads-up@webchoice.com>
- Subject: File 1--Internet Law Heads-Up
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- INTERNET LAW HEADS-UP #6
-
- by Les Black
-
- heads-up@webchoice.com
-
- July 1, 1997
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- Internet Law Heads-Up is alive and well! Welcome to the sixth
- issue of my periodic e-mail letter on how law and lawmakers are
- impacting the net.
-
- E-mail subscriptions to Internet Law Heads-Up are free. Please
- see the end of this letter for subscription information.
-
- Here's what's in this issue:
-
- 1. DING DONG THE CDA IS DEAD!
-
- 2. A CAT-BASED DOG
-
- 3. PICS AND CLICKS
-
- 4. CDA II?
-
- 5. WE ARE WINNING
-
- 6. THE FINE PRINT
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- DING DONG THE CDA IS DEAD!
-
- "The record demonstrates that the growth of the Internet has
- been and continues to be phenomenal. 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 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 United States Supreme Court, on June 26,
- 1997, laid to rest the government's final argument in support of
- the Communications Decency Act. The government had contended
- that the CDA is needed to foster the growth of the internet
- (we're from Washington and we're here to help you). The Court
- found this argument "singularly unpersuasive".
-
- The Court found the government's numerous other arguments
- unpersuasive, too.
-
- In holding that the CDA's "indecent transmission" and "patently
- offensive display" provisions infringe upon the protections of
- the First Amendment, the Supreme Court forged a landmark
- decision. Justices Scalia and Thomas, the Supreme Court's
- cultural conservatives, joined in the majority opinion with
- Justices Ginsburg and Souter, arguably the Court's cultural
- liberals. Preserving the right of free speech on the internet,
- it turns out, is both a conservative and a liberal tenet.
-
- The Supreme Court Justices, non-geeks who grew up when calcul-
- ation meant slide rules and cut-and-paste meant scissors and
- Elmer's, *got it*. Not just got it about freedom of speech -
- that's their realm. Got it about the net.
-
- A CAT-BASED DOG
-
- "The Internet is 'a unique and wholly new medium of worldwide
- human communication,'" writes Justice John Paul Stevens, citing
- the District Court decision that the Supreme Court affirmed.
- Significantly, unlike heavily-regulated radio and television,
- the internet should receive the full protection of the First
- Amendment, Justice Stevens writes, because prior cases "provide
- no basis for qualifying the level of scrutiny that should be
- applied to this medium." They got it.
-
- Well, seven of the nine Justices got it. In her concur-in-part
- dissent-in-part opinion, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, joined by
- Chief Justice Rehnquist, swallows the government's misguided
- analogy that a federal law criminalizing internet indecency is
- similar to a local zoning ordinance.
-
- Cyberspace, to Justice O'Connor, is a place, just like Chicago.
- "Cyberspace undeniably reflects some form of geography," she
- writes. But, as Internet Law Heads-Up #4 explained, Cyberspace
- is more like Gertrude Stein's Oakland - there's no there there.
-
- The internet is not a geographical location. It is, as Internet
- Law Heads-Up #1 called it, a Big Conversation. A Big
- Conversation that the First Amendment fully safeguards.
-
- To be fair, Justice O'Connor does admit that the "electronic
- world is fundamentally different" from the world of X-Rated
- flicks and peep shows that can be zoned away from *nice*
- neighborhoods. Then, however, she comes up with something
- called "user-based zoning", which is a contradiction, like a
- cat-based dog.
-
- Zoning, by its very definition, can not be user-based. Zoning
- is defined as government regulation of how you can use your land
- and your buildings. You can not create your own zoning.
-
- Justice O'Connor, undeterred by such logic, writes, "This
- user-based zoning is accomplished through the use of screening
- software (such as Cyber Patrol or SurfWatch) or browsers with
- screening capabilities, both of which search addresses and text
- for keywords that are associated with 'adult' sites and, if the
- user wishes, blocks access to such sites. The Platform for
- Internet Content Selection (PICS) project is designed to
- facilitate user-based zoning by encouraging Internet speakers to
- rate the content of their speech using codes recognized by all
- screening programs."
-
- Justice O'Connor calls these techniques "progress". But
- screening programs, while restricting access to some (but far
- from all) internet pornography, also intentionally filter out
- vital and legitimate web sites. And PICS may do worse.
-
- CLICKS AND PICS
-
- The darker practices of purveyors of screening software have
- come under increased scrutiny. CyberWire Dispatch, an e-mail
- letter, received an award last month from the Computer Press
- Association for its 1996 investigative story, "Keys to the
- Kingdom" by Brock Meeks and Declan McCullagh, that began the
- exposure of these practices.
-
- Cybersitter, for example, blocks such non-pornographic sites as
- now.org, sponsored by the National Association for Women,
- apparently because they endorse gay and lesbian rights.
- CyberPatrol blocks motherjones.com, the web site of Mother Jones
- magazine, allegedly because of its political extremism.
-
- When Peacefire, a youth anti-censorship group whose web site
- appears devoid of any pornography, publicized Cybersitter's
- willy-nilly approach to blocking sites it disagrees with,
- Cybersitter responded by blocking peacefire.org.
-
- *** Heads-Up Bookmark: For more examples of blocked sites, see
- <http://peacefire.org/censorware/CYBERsitter/blocked.shtml>.
- There you can use a search engine to "peek at the guts of five
- Net-filtering programs: CyberSitter, NetNanny, SurfWatch, The
- Internet Filter, and CyberPatrol." The search engine is
- maintained by Pathfinder, a mainstream web site operated by Time
- New Media, the online division of Time magazine. According to
- this search engine, Cybersitter is - you guessed it - also
- blocking pathfinder.com.
-
- With the exception of NetNanny, screening programs encrypt their
- list of blocked sites, frustrating objective evaluation of their
- agendas. But it appears relatively easy to crack their
- encryption. It appears relatively easy to crack their programs,
- too. One of my top-secret computer-whiz sources says, "I'm
- sorry, but censorware does not work at all. It just doesn't.
- There are a million ways to get around it."
-
- OK, this source is 14 years old, so what does he know? ;-)
-
- While screening censorware may be a keystone cybercop, PICS
- could be a censor's best friend. PICS (Platform for Internet
- Content Selection) is an HTML site labeling standard that allows
- individual users, Internet Service Providers and even whole
- countries to suppress site content by scanning invisible tags
- which identify what type of content the site contains.
-
- According to Lawrence Lessig, a professor at the University of
- Chicago Law School, PICS "will have a devastating effect on free
- speech all over the world." Writing in the July, 1997 issue of
- Wired magazine, Professor Lessig calls PICS "an extremely
- versatile and robust censorship tool - not just for parents who
- want to protect their kids, but for censors of any sort. PICS
- will make it easier for countries like China or Singapore to
- 'clean up' the Net; it makes it easier for companies to control
- what their employees can see; it makes it easier for libraries
- or schools to prevent patrons from viewing controversial sites."
-
- Sinister? Perhaps - until some enterprising cyberfreek hacks a
- workaround (which should take about 45 minutes).
-
- CDA II?
-
- Those of us who websurf for a living and, when we're not on the
- clock, websurf for giggles, know that, while cyberporn exists,
- it does not just ooze out of the internet on its own. As the
- Supreme Court stated in its CDA decision, "the 'odds are slim'
- that a user would enter a sexually explicit site by accident."
- By the time a teenager has figured out how to access smut in
- cyberspace, the same teenager has probably accessed more than a
- few dirty pictures in meatspace, too.
-
- But from the way some opponents characterize the ruling, you
- would think that the Supreme Court told pornographers that they
- can open their doors to children on the internet. For example,
- here is the opening sentence of a press release from the Family
- Research Council: "Today's ruling means that pornographers can
- open their doors to children on the Internet."
-
- In fact, there is a perfectly good CDA II already on the books.
- 47 USCA 223(a) provides in pertinent part:
-
- "Whoever (1) in interstate or foreign communications..., by
- means of a telecommunications device knowingly (i) makes,
- creates, or solicits, and (ii) initiates the transmission of,
- any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other
- communication which is obscene [words deleted], knowing that the
- recipient of the communication is under 18 years of age,
- regardless of whether the maker of such communication placed the
- call or initiated the communication; .... [or] (2) knowingly
- permits any telecommunications facility under his control to be
- used for any activity prohibited by paragraph (1) with the
- intent that it be used for such activity, shall be fined under
- Title 18, or imprisoned not more than two years, or both."
-
- Recognize this law? It's part of the Communications Decency Act
- with the words "or indecent" deleted by order of the Supreme
- Court. In its decision, the Supreme Court stated, "Appellees do
- not challenge the application of the statute to obscene speech,
- which, they acknowledge, can be banned because it enjoys no
- First Amendment protection.... Therefore, we will sever the term
- "or indecent" from the statute, leaving the rest of Section
- 223(a) standing." That's hardly letting pornographers "open
- their doors to children on the internet."
-
- The word "obscene" has a judicially-defined meaning. The word
- "indecent" has no set legal meaning, either by statutory
- definition or by court precedent.
-
- The vagueness of regulating indecency, Justice Stevens writes,
- "raises special First Amendment concerns because of its obvious
- chilling effect on free speech". With a potential penalty of
- two years in jail and a hefty fine, the CDA could have silenced
- even such speech as "a serious discussion about birth control
- practices" for fear that a minor might log on to the discussion
- and some prosecutor might find it indecent.
-
- The Supreme Court's historic decision makes a another
- content-based CDA unlikely. Most policy-makers within the
- Administration, and many members of Congress, have given up the
- notion of directly regulating internet indecency.
-
- Unfortunately, these same political leaders are now falling over
- themselves in a rush to promote the use of screening software
- and website labeling.
-
- Representative Edward Markey (D-MA) has filed a "Parental
- Empowerment Through Marketplace Solutions" Bill (h.r. 1964, sec.
- 103) which would mandate that ISP's offer screening software to
- their customers "either at no charge or for a fee that does not
- exceed the cost of such software to such provider." Senator
- Patty Murray (D-WA) says that she will introduce a "Childsafe
- Internet Act" which would give every parent with a computer
- "access to filtering software" and make it a crime to mis-rate
- web sites or "steal sites previously rated as childsafe". Other
- lawmakers are proposing similar bills, while the White House
- continues to call for a so-called V-chip for the internet.
-
- This time let's hope cooler heads prevail. And if Congress
- holds hearings on these ill-advised proposals, something they
- never did before passing the CDA, let's *help* cooler heads
- prevail by pointing out the limits and dangers of the proposals.
- Screening software and site labeling are ideas whose time has
- come - and gone.
-
- WE ARE WINNING
-
- The Supreme Court is not the only Court that has been busy
- protecting free speech on the internet.
-
- On June 20, 1997, the United States District Court for the
- Southern District of New York, in American Library Association
- v. Pataki (Docket #97 Civ. 0222 - LAP), enjoined New York State
- from enforcing its own CDA, calling it "an unconstitutional
- intrusion into interstate commerce" because the "unique nature
- of the Internet highlights the likelihood that a single actor
- might be subject to haphazard, uncoordinated, and even outright
- inconsistent regulation" by the 50 states.
-
- Judge Loretta Preska stated in her decision, "Typically, states'
- jurisdictional limits are related to geography; geography,
- however, is a virtually meaningless construct on the Internet."
-
- Judge Preska's decision includes a detailed discussion of how
- packet switches and caches apply to interstate commerce and
- refers to the "marvels" of the internet. Clearly, Judge Preska
- *got it* about the net.
-
- On the same day, United States District Court for the Northern
- District of Georgia, in American Civil Liberties Union of
- Georgia v. Miller (Docket #1:96-cv-2475-MHS), enjoined the state
- of Georgia from enforcing a law which would have made it a crime
- to use a pseudonym as an internet screen name or to use a
- trademark logo as a web link.
-
- Holding that the Plaintiffs are likely to prevail on the merits
- by proving "that the statute imposes content-based restrictions
- which are not narrowly tailored to achieve the state's purported
- compelling interest" and "that the statute is overbroad and void
- for vagueness", Judge Marvin Shoob supported the internet in
- granting the Plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction.
- Judge Shoob, too, *got it* about the net.
-
- *** Heads-Up Bookmark: The full texts of the New York, Georgia
- and Supreme Court internet law decisions are available online at
- <http://www.aclu.org/issues/cyber/hmcl.html>.
-
- Anyone who has ever stood up in a Courtroom and announced,
- "Ready to proceed, Your Honor", knows how much hard work goes
- before those words. Internet Law Heads-Up congratulates the
- lawyers and staff people, including some of my readers, who
- devoted so much energy to achieving victory in these cases.
-
- Yes, we are winning.
-
- We can pat ourselves on the back now. But, as Brock Meeks
- wrote on the day after the Supreme Court's CDA decision, "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."
-
- What's your response? I look forward to hearing from you at
- heads-up@webchoice.com. And I look forward to corresponding
- with you again soon.
-
- Virtually,
-
- Les Black, Attorney-at-Law
- Publisher, Internet Law Heads-Up &
- Les Black's Internet Publishing Legal Alert
- E-Mail: lesblack@webchoice.com
- Voice: (508) 544-3941
- Fax: (508) 544-3995
- Warwick, Massachusetts, USA
-
- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
-
- THE FINE PRINT.
-
- Internet Law Heads-Up welcomes your comments, questions, rants,
- raves and concurring or dissenting opinions. Please e-mail them
- to heads-up@webchoice.com.
-
- All original material in Internet Law Heads-Up is copyright 1997
- by Les Black. For permission to display, reproduce or
- distribute all or part of this issue, please contact Les Black
- at lesblack@webchoice.com.
-
- Internet Law Heads-Up is not intended to provide direct legal
- advice. Nothing contained in Internet Law Heads-Up is intended
- to invoke, establish or solicit an Attorney-Client relationship
- between Attorney Les Black and any recipient.
-
- For your free e-mail subscription to Internet Law Heads-Up,
- please send e-mail to heads-up@webchoice.com with Subscribe
- (Your Name) in the subject line.
-
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- with Unsubscribe (Your Name) in the subject line.
-
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- line and your new e-mail address in the body of your message.
-
- To request back issues of Internet Law Heads-Up, please send
- e-mail to heads-up@webchoice.com with Archives (Your Name) in
- the subject line and the number or date of the issue you want in
- the body of your message.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 6 Jul 1997 15:37:14 +0000
- From: David Smith <bladex@bga.com>
- Subject: File 2--(fwd) Porn and the Liability of Internet Providers
-
- This is from the July 1997 issue of the Ethical Spectacle
- (http://www.spectacle.org/797/netpics.html)
-
- Porn and the Liability of Internet Providers
-
- by Jonathan Wallace and Mark Mangan
-
- In late 1995, Bentley Ives, a manager for the U.S. Postal Service, had
- a great new idea for an Internet business: a service specializing in
- finding free smut. By December he had incorporated WebbWorld and,
- employing the help of two associates to handle the technical and
- administrative duties, set up the Netpics website. The three created
- no original content, but rather trolled the open channels of Internet
- newsgroups looking for pornographic pictures--pulling down nearly 6
- thousand a day--and making them available to subscribers for $12 a
- month.
-
- In June 1996 a California man tipped off the Fort Worth police and
- about debased porn peddlers in their midst who were distributing
- obscenity to the world. Perhaps a smut competitor himself or maybe
- just a worried citizen who didn't like the service he had subscribed
- to, the man gave the authorities the web address, www.netpics.com, and
- a password to access it.
-
- In mid February of 1997, the Fort Worth Vice Squad came looking for
- Ives. They searched his office seized his computer and arrested him
- for distributing obscenity and child pornography. After an eight month
- investigation the police found its fill of sexual images depicting
- groups, gays, lesbians, boys, girls, porn stars and senior citizens.
- They were looking for obscenity; however, among the nearly 1.5 million
- pictures that passed through the Netpics servers during this time,
- they also found some child pornography. After consulting a doctor at
- Cook Children's Medical Center they deemed four images to involve
- children under 15 and another of a girl under 11.
-
- Looking around the sparse office, the Police demanded to know where
- the big computer equipment was. Ives led them to the new office in
- Dallas, where he had recently moved to share space with the Internet
- service which provided Webbworld with access to the Net through its
- fat T3 feed. With the cooperation of the Dallas police, they arrived
- at the second office and cleaned out the place--seizing all 16 servers
- and more than a thousand pieces of computer equipment. According to
- the Netpics principals in an exclusive interview with Gene Crick of
- the Texas Telecommunications Journal, the police showed no discretion,
- taking "routers, monitors, software, data records and everything...
- desk, chair... they even took the pencils...."
-
- Ives was released on $52,500 bail after being arraigned on obscenity
- and child pornography charges. Between the two charges, one a
- midemeanor, the other a third degree felony, he faces up to 12 years
- in a state penitentary and up to $20,000 in fines. A couple months
- later the police caught up with the other two Netpics principals:
- Benjamin Brian Ellis and James Lewis Gurkin, III.
-
- Gurkin is a 31 year old owner of a security guard business and handled
- the payroll, bookkeeping, and other administrative duties, receiving
- 25% of the profits. Ellis, a 27 year old computer consultant, was the
- technical genius behind the company and received 50% of the profits.
- Ellis set up the servers, configured the systems and developed what
- Lieutenant Reflogal of the Fort Worth Police called an "outstanding
- program"--a piece of code that trolled the Usenet groups that carried
- pornographic images, downloaded the pictures, then uploaded them to
- their webservers, placing them in particular categories depending
- where they were found.
-
- Usenet is the name of a portion of the Internet which is essentially a
- conglomeration of electronic bulletin boards, most of which are
- unmoderated. Allowing users to anonymously post content, it represents
- a free-wheeling global discussion, broken up into thousands of
- different subjects. For those that want to discuss programming
- languages there are groups like comp.lang; for those that want to talk
- about cars there are groups like alt.autos and rec.autos; and for
- those that like to look at porn pictures, there's alt.sex.pictures,
- rec.nude, etc.
-
- There is no centralized control of Usenet. A message that is posted to
- alt.autos, for instance, is sent from server to server around the
- world and copied to all those which subscribe to this newsgroup.
- Anyone with an Internet connection and a newsgroup reader can freely
- sift through any and all newsgroups to which his Internet provider
- subscribes.
-
- With about 14 thousand newsgroups out there passing around terabytes
- of information daily, Ives decided to make a service that made finding
- porn in this global soup of information easy. Netpics also offered
- other services, such as email, web development and secure transaction
- services; however, the bread and butter for the company was smut.
- Plugging into an existing Internet Access Provider and configuring
- servers to subscribe to about 175 newsgroups devoted to porn, the
- tits, ass, penis, and vagina images started pouring in.
-
- Evidently aware that there were laws against obscenity and child
- pornography, the Netpics people announced on the site that "we do make
- an effort to keep illegal pictures out of our selection." But with
- over ten thousand new pictures floating through these groups every day
- and as many as 6,000 being added to the site, they were clearly not
- able to see every porn picture that passed through their servers, hard
- as they may have tried. At any one time Netpics had about 70,000
- pictures on its site, with images being sloughed off the servers every
- 3 to 4 days.
-
- The charges of obscenity and child pornography require that the
- offender "knowingly and willingly" possesses or distributes the
- material. In contrast, the Netpics principals argue that they never
- created any of the images that existed on the newsgroups, that they
- did not subscribe to the groups that were known to carry child porn,
- and that they actively sifted through pictures 3-4 hours a day looking
- for potentially illegal material. In the interview with Gene Crick the
- Netpics collective said, "we offered only the same Usenet lists and
- contents available on thousands of Internet servers around the world.
- And while we featured adult-oriented newsgroups, we took exhaustive
- measures to eliminate any content we felt might even resemble child
- pornography."
-
- Lieutenant Reflogal, formerly of the vice squad that conducted the
- investigation, says there was no doubt about what was on the
- newsgroups from which they were downloading, pointing out that one in
- particular had the words "teen fuck" in its address. "To me," he said,
- "'teen fuck' is pretty evident of what kind of pictures you're going
- to be getting." He added that the fact that they found child porn
- changed the nature of the charges brought, but not the vigor of the
- investigation: they were looking for obscenity.
-
- Netpics trafficked in obscenity, by almost any local community
- standard. The kinds of images which course through the more hardcore
- Usenet forums involve extreme sexual situations, portraying anal sex,
- oral sex, explicit penetration, dildos, orgies, and all kinds of
- deviant sexual activity.
-
- In 1973 the U.S. Supreme Court defined the term obscenity with a
- simple, subjective three-prong test, which said that the material must
- appeal to the prurient interest (turn you on), be patently offensive
- (gross you out), and be devoid of any scientific, artistic, literary,
- or political value--all this according to local community standards.
- Barring the local communities of 42nd Street, Manhattan and the
- neon-lit Las Vegas strips, it is a fair assumption to say that the
- more hardcore newsgroups on the Internet are obscene. So, in a sense,
- Sprint, MCI, AT&T, and all access providers which carry these
- newsgroups and allow these pictures to pass through their servers are
- as guilty as Ives.
-
- The fundamental question arising from this case is, what is the
- liability of Internet Service Providers? In the distributed world of
- the Internet, who is responsible for illegal material that is
- anonymously posted and passed around from computer to computer in
- massive streams of neverending data? Obscenity and child pornography
- are not the only kinds of material that present such problems. If
- chapter after chapter of Grisham's latest novel started appearing on
- newsgroups, could each and every ISP which which carried these
- newsgroups be held liable for copyright infringement?
-
- The Texas events must be viewed against a backdrop of current legal
- actions, threatened and real, against Internet service providers.
- Though Netpics was an attractive legal target for the prosecutor
- because it specialized in sex-related newsgroups, the acts its
- principals are accused of committing consist merely of having made
- these newsgroups available to users--the same "crime" committed by
- numerous other service providers, including large commercial ventures,
- small local companies, and universities.
-
- The responsibility of an online information provider for illegal
- information transmitted across its service by a third party is still
- heavily debated, though it appeared to be pretty well settled by a
- 1980's case, Cubby v. Compuserve. The plaintiff claimed that he had
- been libelled by false statements posted to a Compuserve forum by an
- anonymous user and sued Compuserve. In dismissing the case against
- Compuserve, a federal judge reached back more than thirty years to a
- Supreme Court case involving a bookstore owner. In that case, Smith v.
- California, the high court had ruled that the owner of a bookstore
- could not be held responsible for knowing the contents of every book
- in the store. Thus, he could not be convicted for selling illegal
- material unless there was actual proof he knew it was there in his
- store. Similarly, the plaintiff could not hold Compuserve responsible
- for the libel without first putting them on notice that the offending
- statement was there.
-
- Though now an ancient case in terms of the fast-moving world of the
- Internet, Cubby has been cited approvingly by most courts and
- commentators that have dealt with similar issues since, and there is
- little doubt that it has been generally adopted as the right rule for
- the Internet. All it actually requires is that a party--whether a
- prosecutor or a private plaintiff--complaining about material made
- available via an ISP put the service on notice of the objectionable
- material. If the service fails to act, the Cubby rule has been
- satisfied, and the complaining party is free to take action. If the
- complaining party fails to issue a warning, in any lawsuit or
- prosecution it later brings it will have the very tough--in many
- cases, insurmountable--task of showing that the defendant was
- personally aware of the objectionable material.
-
- The Texas prosecutor may possibly make use of an exception to Cubby,
- which derives from another online case called Stratton Oakmont v.
- Prodigy. This much-criticized case also involved a lawsuit for libel
- as a result of remarks posted on the Prodigy service. While endorsing
- the Cubby case, the Prodigy judge came to a different conclusion.
- Though the plaintiff here had failed to put Prodigy on notice before
- bringing the lawsuit, the judge let the case continue anyway because
- Prodigy had advertised itself as a family-freindly service in which
- user messages were carefully screened for illegal content. The Prodigy
- decision has been criticized for an illogical, even anti-social
- conclusion: if you attempt to keep your service clean and fail, you
- are in a worse legal position than if you do absolutely nothing. Most
- commentators agree that Prodigy is bad law--but the prosecutor may
- argue that the Netpics defendants should be convicted because they
- claimed to screen out all child porn from their service and failed to
- do so.
-
- Similar events involving ISP's are taking place on the international
- stage which are related to the Netpics case. Germany has just indicted
- a local Compuserve manager for distributing obscene material because
- Compuserve, as an ISP, grants access to the alt.sex newsgroups. Here,
- the facts more clearly support the defendants than in the Netpics
- case, as the German government cannot even make the claim that
- Compuserve pushed this material or encouraged users to concentrate on
- it.
-
- Gene Crick, who also sits on the board of Electronic Frontiers Austin,
- has been watching the Netpics case carefully. "Conviction in this case
- could shut down the Usenet; the images being prosecuted were also
- stored on other feed servers around the world. This means every Usenet
- provider could become an appealing target for political grandstanders
- and hungry tort lawyers," Crick says.
-
- Shutting down porn operations are very visible, politically popular
- cases for righteous minded law enforcement agencies. In shutting down
- Netpics, the Fort Worth police acted with broad strokes that may have
- violated certain Fourth Amendment protections concerning proper search
- and seizure; they also seemed to have created some jurisdictional
- entanglements as they stepped into Dallas to make the arrest. As of
- now, the members of Netpics have not yet been indicted and the police
- have said they would not seek action against any of the subscribers.
- If they do decide to carry through and prosecute, this could become a
- seminal case. If not, the police have still achieved their real
- goal--shutting down the Netpics servers.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 9 Jul 1997 21:49:06 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Keith Dreibelbis <dribbs@netspace.org>
- Subject: File 3--Green Card Spammer Laurence Canter Disbarred in Tennessee
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: We called the Board of Professional
- Responsibility in Tennessee today (615-361-7500) and confirmed
- that the press release is authentic. We were also told by the
- person involved in handling the case that Canter is now divorced
- from Martha Siegel and currently living in California.
-
- For those who've forgotten, Canter and Siegel were the infamous
- "Green Card" spammers who wrote an in-your-face book defending
- spamming as a way to make your fortune on the Internet. For more
- details, see CUD 7.50 (1975).))
-
- ---
-
- Date--9 Jul 1997 03:19:32 GMT
- From--"David E. Fox" <dfox@belvdere.vip.best.com>
-
- Due to popular demand (well, an email from Ron Newman - I guess that
- counts as popular demand) ;) I've been asked to post the verbatim
- letter.
-
- Actually, I got two letters - one that just says that the investigation
- concluded in a disbarment, and says that my cooperation and interest
- in assisting the legal profession is appreciated.
-
- The other one is the press release; that's the one I'm typing in.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- News Release
- Contact: William W. Hunt, III
- [Tennessee] Board of Professional Responsibility
- 615-361-7500
-
- June 16, 1997
-
-
- Arizona Attorney Disbarred
-
-
- On June 5, 1997, The Supreme Court of Tennessee entered an order
- disbarring Laurence A. Canter with law offices in Scottsdale,
- Arizona; Cupertino and San Rafael, California, but licensed to
- practice law in Tennessee. Mr. Canter also received a one year
- suspension to be served concurrently with a disbarment. This
- order was based on a recommendation of a hearing panel after a
- hearing in this case.
-
- Mr. Canter was fould guilty of numerous offenses of the
- Attorneys' Code of Professional Responsibility (Rule 8, Rules of
- the Supreme Court of Tennessee). In 1994 in an incident reported
- in the national media he placed an advertisement that appeared on
- more than 5,000 of the Internet's news groups as well as 10,000
- of E-Mail lists. The posting appeared on computer screens
- unsolicited and each reader was required to read at least a
- portion of the message. The hearing panel found that the posting
- violated Tennessee's advertising rules DR 2-101 and was an
- improper intrusion into the recipient's privacy violating
- Disciplinary Rule 1-102(A)(1)(5)(6).
-
- Mr. Canter also represented Mr. Shafgul Islam in an immigration
- matter. Mr. Canter failed to adequately communicate with Mr.
- Islam, charged Mr. Islam an improper non-refundable retainer,
- failed to return Mr. Islam his file and improperly demanded Mr.
- Islam provide him a "full release."
-
- Mr. Canter was also hired by Mr. A. M. Jaffee relative to an
- incorporation of a business and two immigration matters. Mr.
- Canter Failed to adequately communicate with his client,
- neglected his client's matters and mis-appropriated $350 he held
- in trust for his client.
-
-
- In a fourth matter, Mr. Canter withheld funds from the paycheck
- of an employee Sandra Colvis to pay taxes and health insurance
- premiums, misappropriated funds to his own use and failed to pay
- them to the proper authorities. The paychecks made out to Ms.
- Colvis were also returned for insufficient funds.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 10 Jul 1997 02:48:17 -0700
- From: Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>
- Subject: File 4--Star Wars, Fanfiction, and Big Eight Newsgroup Creation
-
- The policy of the current Big Eight newsgroup creation system on
- newsgroups devoted to fanfiction has recently been criticized
- here. (The Big Eight are the comp, humanities, misc, news, rec,
- sci, soc, and talk hierarchies.) Here's what that policy actually
- is and a little background on the reason for it.
-
- First of all, please realize that the Big Eight is not all of
- Usenet. It is just eight specific Usenet hierarchies; there are
- many, *many* more. Each hierarchy is created for a different
- purpose and has a different set of rules for creating new groups
- in that hierarchy.
-
- A major goal of the Big Eight is to provide a relatively small set
- of widely useful newsgroups that are maintained by a central
- newsgroup creation system. Ideally, every system carrying the Big
- Eight will have precisely the same set of newsgroups; solid
- propagation and consistency across different news servers are the
- major feature of this sort of approach to newsgroup creation.
- Obviously this procedure does *not* work for all topics, given
- that a voting procedure is involved (and therefore the possibility
- of a group being voted down for political reasons exists) and
- given that news administrators may not want certain types of
- groups created automatically without their review. This is
- precisely why alt.* was created originally; alt.* has a wide-open
- creation policy and therefore is home to the sorts of groups that
- couldn't be created in the Big Eight for whatever reason. (The
- tradeoff, of course, being that alt.* groups are often subject to
- manual review at each site and tend to be much less consistent
- across different news sites.)
-
- Now, about the proposed Star Wars stories group. Fanfiction
- (fiction using trademarked or copyrighted characters and
- backgrounds without the permission of the owners) has always been
- of questionable legality and subject to the occasional lawsuit in
- the United States and elsewhere. Due to the way intellectual
- property laws work in the United States, fanfiction *may* be
- illegal and if a news site is knowingly carrying a newsgroup
- devoted solely to fanfiction, it *may* be possible to sue them as
- well as the authors for the violation.
-
- No, it's probably not very *likely* that a news site would be
- sued. But this *has* been an often-stated concern by news
- administrators in the past.
-
- Keep in mind the purpose of the Big Eight, namely to create a set
- of useful newsgroups that can be created automatically at all the
- subscribing sites. Due to this *possible* legal concern, a large
- number of news administrators do not want newsgroups devoted to
- fanfiction automatically created on their news servers, and
- therefore would not be able to just let the Big Eight newsgroup
- creation process run automatically on their servers if the Big
- Eight includes those groups. This directly hurts one of the
- primary purposes of the hierarchies. Therefore, newsgroups which
- are devoted to fanfiction are against the rules of the Big Eight
- unless the proponent can show reasonable evidence that the groups
- would not cause a legal problem.
-
- Some proponents do in fact do precisely that.
- rec.arts.anime.creative exists because anime and manga companies
- do not, as a matter of general policy, prosecute fanfiction, so
- the legal concern is minimal. rec.arts.comics.creative exists
- because its charter requires that stories posted there use
- original characters. Other groups have been proposed with no
- problems before because they would have been for parody. The
- proponents of the Star Wars group were considering changing their
- charter to require parody or original characters and background,
- which would make the group fine under those rules.
-
- If a group can't fit under those rules, it most certainly isn't
- censored. It simply needs to be created in a different hierarchy
- that has looser rules, such as alt.*. People create fanfiction
- groups in alt.* routinely and some of them are quite successful.
-
- Also, please note that no *post* is refused. The newsgroup
- creation system has nothing to do with individual posts; it has to
- do with newsgroups. One can post pretty much anything one wishes
- to any unmoderated group, and the newsgroup creation system
- doesn't affect that in the slightest. The only thing this policy
- affects is whether a newsgroup devoted to fanfiction can be
- created in this particular set of hierarchies.
-
- Finally, this policy obviously doesn't affect discussion,
- including discussion of fanfiction, as should be obvious from the
- five existing discussion groups devoted to Star Wars. Discussion
- of fanfiction is certainly on-topic in rec.arts.sf.starwars.misc
- and absolutely nothing prevents it from being posted there.
-
- Hopefully this clarifies the situation somewhat. This policy,
- just like all other Big Eight newsgroup creation policies, tends
- to get discussed periodically on news.groups, and anyone with
- questions or concerns about it is certainly welcome to raise the
- issue there or contact me directly.
-
- --
- Russ Allbery (rra@stanford.edu) <URL:http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 10 Jul 1997 23:48:58 -0500
- From: jthomas@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
- Subject: File 5--U.S. Justice Dept. Investigating Network Solutions
-
- Source - The New York Times, 7 July '97
-
- U.S. Justice Dept. Investigating Network Solutions
-
- By AGIS SALPUKAS
-
- The Justice Department has begun an investigation into the
- practice of assigning Internet addresses to determine if the
- control that Network Solutions Inc. exercises over the process
- amounts to a violation of antitrust laws.
-
- The investigation was disclosed by the company Thursday in
- documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
- filing came as part of a proposed initial stock offering that is
- intended to raise $35 million.
-
- The investigation was first reported in The Washington Post on
- Sunday.
-
- Network Solutions, which is based in Herndon, Va., and is a
- subsidiary of Science Applications International Corp., has been
- the target of a growing chorus of complaints and two dozen
- lawsuits as the Internet has expanded and the competition for
- these addresses, or domain names, has grown more intense.
-
- <snip>
-
- Related Sites
-
-
- Network Solutions Inc.
- http://www.netsol.com
-
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- http://www.sec.gov
-
- The Washington Post
- http://www.washingtonpost.com
-
- Science Applications International Corp.
- http://www.saic.com
-
- National Science Foundation
- http://www.nsf.gov
-
- Copyright 1997 The New York Times
-
- ------------------------------
-
- 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)
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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-
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-
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- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #9.55
- ************************************
-
-
-