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Date: 1998-05-04

Netz: Jakobiner streiten


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q/depesche 98.5.4.

Netz: Jakobiner streiten

Das Netz sei rein technisch als nicht kontrollierbar angelegt weshalb der
Überwachungs/Staat den Kampf um die elektronische Frontier von vornherein
verloren habe. Derlei Ansichten, wie sie John Perry Barlow, einer der
digitalen Gründerväter (EFF) ungebrochen verbreitet, stösst auf zunehmende
aggressive Kritik der jüngeren Jakobiner/Garde.
Barlow hat wegen flames bereits die legendäre well.com Mailinglist
verlassen & droht dies nun auch auf der renommierten nettime-list zu tun.


The Continuing Rise of Internet Legislation

Once thought impossible to censor, the Internet is being controlled
through a combination of government legislation and corporate regulation,
argues Julian McClements.

Since its development the Internet has seemed to offer the prospect of a
communications medium beyond the control of the world's governments. With
just a PC and modem, people are able to download a vast and diverse
quantity of information from anywhere in the world. Whether banned
political literature or hard pornography, the dissemination of this
material has evaded the legal controls that have shackled older media. But
now the US Congress is considering new legislation and this time the
online industry has conceded to the calls for state intervention.

During the next six months Congress will debate over fifty bills proposing
some kind of net regulation. Amongst them are:

- The Prohibition of Internet Gambling Act, banning the acceptance of
wagers over the Net. Convicted gamblers could face a $20,000 fine and up
to four years in prison.

- A new bill to prohibit commercial websites from distributing
pornographic material "harmful to minors". Websites can avoid prosecution
if they attempt to verify age by requiring visitors to present a credit
card, debit account number or PIN before gaining access to the site.
Dubbed by critics "CDA II", the bill has been formulated to address the
constitutional objections which brought down its predecessor.

- Legislation insisting that those schools and libraries must install
filter software on all PCs used for web browsing if they receive federal
funding for Internet connections.

Although none of these bills have yet been passed the general consensus is
that their progress is more likely to be affected by lobbying and judicial
action than by technological obstacles. Once considered irrelevant to the
bright new world of cyberspace, government legislation is now seen as
essential to the continuing development of the Internet as a medium for
commerce and information exchange.

Some libertarians have argued that the networking technology underlying
the Internet makes it intrinsically impossible for legal sanctions to be
applied to web content. The transmission of all information over the
Internet is split between many different channels, the sheer number of
which make it impossible for any agency to stop a message by blocking one
or more intervening points in the network. John Barlow, founder of the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, declared in his Digital Manifesto that
governments did not "possess any methods of enforcement we have true
reason to fear". Governments have been caricatured as virtual King
Canutes, vainly trying to stop an incoming sea of data by passing laws
that are unenforcible. The collapse of the Communications and Decency Act
in the US is cited as the classic example. Although struck down as
unconstitutional, many free-speech advocates argued that the CDA would
have quickly become irrelevant as millions of Internet users went to
foreign sites for the material denied to them on American servers.

What the digerati forget is that the Internet does not exist in some
autonomous dimension but is dependent on a complex physical infrastructure
maintained and administered by private corporations. Unlike the
cyberfrontiersmen at the EFF, companies do expect regulation and it is at
the corporate level that governments can affect what happens in
cyberspace.
By regulating the conduct of ISPs and corporate websites they will be able
to constrain the freedoms of Internet users to access information and
express themselves online.

The fact that the US government is capable of regulating the world's most
wired nation through the statute book should come as no surprise to those
sceptical that political problems can be dispelled by technical fixes. The
architecture of the Internet is no bona fide defence against state
censorship. Instead it is stimulating the growth of a more sophisticated
regime of regulation in which both government and the private sector
participate.

Technical arguments against Net censorship are not only untenable, they
degrade the defence of online speech. Those who emphasize the technical
obstacles to censorship do so to avoid actively engaging in the defence of
free expression. This is because free speech is a political issue and
politics is something that some would-be "libertarians" seem deeply
uncomfortable with.


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edited by Harkank
published on: 1998-05-04
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