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Date: 1999-06-26
US-Zensurgesetz passiert Senatskomitee
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q/depesche 99.6.26/2
updating 99.6.20/1
US-Zensurgesetz passiert Senatskomitee
In ziemlich verwässerter Form hat der Entwurf für ein
Jugendschutzgesetz mit Filterzwang für Schulen und
Bibliotheken das zuständige Komitee im US-Senat passiert.
Das Center for Democracy and Technology setzt seine
erfolgreiche "Call your Senator" Aktion bis zu einer
Abstimmung im Senat fort. Die Chancen, den Entwurf
vollständig zu Fall zu bringen, sind nicht schlecht.
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1) MANDATORY FILTERING FOR SCHOOLS & LIBRARIES
APPROVED BY SENATE COMMITTEE
The Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation
Committee held a markup today to discuss the Childrens'
Internet Protection Act (S.97) introduced by its chairman,
John McCain (R-AZ), and ranking Democrat, Ernest Hollings
(D-SC). The bill mandates that all schools and libraries
receiving federal e-rate assistance select a technology for
computers with Internet access that:
* blocks or filters obscene material, * blocks or filters child
pornography, and * may be -- but are not required to be --
used by local authorities to block or filter materials deemed
"inappropriate for minors."
The schools and libraries must then enforce a policy that
ensures that all minors use such technologies while on the
Internet.
This language is different from previous drafts of this bill in
several respects:
* It requires filtering or blocking only when minors are using
the computer. * It narrows the federal filtering requirement
from material deemed "harmful to minors" to obscene
material or child pornography, * It broadens the optional
filtering category to include a great deal of speech that is
protected by the First Amendment.
Senator McCain made it clear that such material determined
to be "inappropriate for minors" may include sites promoting
hate groups or other controversial material, although such
material in each of these categories is protected speech
under the First Amendment. The bill's only other amendment
refined the time period available to schools and libraries to
come into compliance with new law, if passed.
Senator John Kerry (D-MA) voiced concerns about the bill,
drawing attention to the way in which it infringes on the rights
of communities to self-determination regarding their own
access to the Internet and that of their children. However, the
Committee as a whole approved the bill by voice vote. A floor
vote has not yet been scheduled.
For more information regarding S.97 and the debate
surrounding free speech on the net, visit CDT's Free Speech
page at
http://www.cdt.org/speech/
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relayed by Ari Schwartz ari@cdt.org
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edited by
published on: 1999-06-26
comments to office@quintessenz.at
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