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Date: 1999-06-19

US: Action gegen Zensurgesetz läuft an


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In den USA laufen gerade die ersten Aktionen gegen das
neue Zensurgesetz "Children's Internet Protection Act".
Filterzwang für staatlich geförderte Bibliotheken und Schulen.

post/scrypt: Wie uns die weissen Spatzen von einem
Netzknoten herunter gepfiffen haben, steht drüber morgen
genaueres in der FutureZone.

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A BRIEFING ON PUBLIC POLICY ISSUES AFFECTING
CIVIL LIBERTIES ONLINE from THE CENTER FOR
DEMOCRACY AND TECHNOLOGY
***********************************************************************
Volume 5, Number 11 June 18, 1999
============================================
=================

CONTENTS: (1) House Passes Library and School Internet
Censorship Legislation (2) Mandatory Filtering Is
Unnecessary and Unwise (3) Senate Committee Marks Up
Filtering Bill Next Week: Call Your Senator (4) Other Internet
Censorship Legislation Defeated (5) Subscription Information
(6) About the Center for Democracy and Technology

** This document may be redistributed freely with this banner
intact ** Excerpts may be re-posted with permission of
ari@cdt.org
___________________________________________________
____________________

(1) HOUSE PASSES LIBRARY AND SCHOOL INTERNET
CENSORSHIP LEGISLATION

Congress is rushing to censor the Internet again. On
Thursday, June 17, the House passed the 'Children's Internet
Protection Act' as an amendment to the juvenile justice bill,
which became the legislative equivalent of a Christmas-tree.
The Internet amendment, offered by Representative Bob
Franks (R-NJ), requires all schools and libraries receiving E-
rate funding to install and use filtering and blocking tools to
screen out Internet content that is obscene, child
pornography, or 'harmful to minors.'

At the last minute, in an effort to address constitutional
concerns, the amendment was narrowed to require the
filtering of child porn and obscene (i.e., constitutionally
unprotected) material all the time, but 'harmful to minors'
material only 'during use by minors.' What is harmful to
minors is to be defined on the basis of 'contemporary
community standards.'

The text of the Franks amendment can be found at
http://www.cdt.org/legislation/106th/speech/FRANKS_051.PD
F

The Senate-passed version of the juvenile justice bill contains
no filtering provision, setting up the need for a House-Senate
conference to reconcile differences between the bills. The
fact that the Senate bill contains gun control provisions
complicates matters.
___________________________________________________
____________________

(2) MANDATORY FILTERING IS UNNECESSARY AND
UNWISE

Parents, local schools and community libraries all over the
country are already developing effective ways to deal with the
variety of material available through the Internet; they do not
need Congress telling them how best to protect children.

The Franks amendment mandates a specific technological
approach to protecting kids online, hindering development
and deployment of other approaches. Instead of blocking or
filtering, 92% of school districts have already adopted
'acceptable use policies' for use of the Internet by children,
and 59% of those without such policies will have them by the
end of the next school year. Other technological options are
also available, including tools that warn a child about
inappropriate content, tools that limit use of the Internet to
times when children can be chaperoned by adults, special
browsers, tools that monitor a child's use of the Internet,pre-
selected 'greenspaces' of good content, and search engines
designed for children.

While user empowerment tools like filtering and blocking
software provide valuable choices to parents, they are not
capable of making precise determinations of what is obscene
or harmful to minors based on a myriad of local community
standards without blocking out appropriate material. Filtering
and blocking software can prevent users from accessing
important information, such as articles against pornography
and information on various forms of cancer, AIDS, or sexual
assault.

There is a world of difference between parents' choosing to
use filtering and blocking software to protect their children
versus the government's mandating the use of filters. Given
the overinclusiveness of many filters, their mandatory use on
library computers will inevitably result in adults' being denied
access to constitutionally protected information.

For more information about free speech online, see:
http://www.cdt.org/speech
___________________________________________________
____________________

(3) SENATE COMMITTEE MARKS UP FILTERING BILL
NEXT WEEK: CALL YOUR SENATOR

Meanwhile, the Senate is moving forward on filtering
legislation. On June 23 or 24, the Senate Commerce
Committee is due to consider S. 97, sponsored by the
Committee's chairman, Senator John McCain (R-AZ). The
bill would require local schools and libraries receiving e-rate
funding to install and use blocking or filtering software.
Presently, it does not have the 'during use by minors'
limitation of the Franks amendment.

Your Senators needs to hear from you. The most effective
and quickest way to make your voice heard is to call your
Senators' Washington offices. You can reach the U.S.
Senate switchboard at (202) 224-3121. Ask for your
Senators and tell their offices your concerns about S. 97.

If you feel tongue-tied, you could say something like this: "I'm
a constituent concerned about free speech on the Internet. I
oppose federal efforts to directly or indirectly censor speech
on the Web. S. 97 threatens free speech and the decision-
making power of local schools, libraries and communities by
requiring schools and libraries to install content filters on all
their computers, including computers used by adults. I want
to urge my Senator to oppose S. 97."
___________________________________________________
____________________

(4) OTHER INTERNET CENSORSHIP LEGISLATION
DEFEATED

Entertainment industry leaders, CDT, and other civil liberties
groups helped avert a disaster Thursday by persuading
Congress to reject other censorship amendments to the
juvenile justice bill.

One rejected amendment offered by Representative Henry
Hyde (R-IL) would have censored all media, not just the
Internet, by criminalizing any sale or disclosure to children of
sexually explicit or violent material that was deemed 'harmful
to minors.' Like the Child Online Protection Act of 1998, it
would have imposed a national standard and had the effect
online of denying adults access to lawful and useful material.

The text of the Hyde amendment can be found at
http://www.house.gov/rules/hyde_014.pdf.

Find out how your Member of Congress voted on the Hyde
amendment at CDT's newly expanded voting records
database at: http://www.cdt.org/votes

Also defeated was an amendment by Reps. Zach Wamp (R-
TN) and Bart Stupak (D-MI),which would have required labels
describing any violent conduct in all audio and visual
material, online and offline. The amendment would have
given the Federal Trade Commission the power to determine
what was an "appropriate" label and to fine anyone who sold
something without a label providing information 'needed to
judge the appropriateness of ... viewing [or] listening to ...
audio and visual media products ... by minors of various
ages."

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Relayed by Ari Schwartz ari@ctd.org
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edited by Harkank
published on: 1999-06-19
comments to office@quintessenz.at
subscribe Newsletter
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