Computer underground Digest Sun Feb 23, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 11 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 Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala Ian Dickinson Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest CONTENTS, #9.11 (Sun, Feb 23, 1997) File 1--SUPREMES: CIEC Brief Filed (CDA news) File 2--Eleven CDA briefs filed: "Last Words," from The Netly News File 3--info on abuse.net File 4--(Fwd) conference - policing the internet, report File 5--Sanford Wallace (the "Spam King") to Start Own Spam Service File 6--Cyber Promotions, Evil, Evil, EVIL File 7--Press release: Metaphor brief filed in CDA case File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996) CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 21 Feb 1997 10:48:08 -0800 From: --Todd Lappin-- Subject: File 1--SUPREMES: CIEC Brief Filed (CDA news) THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK February 21, 1997 It's a one-two punch... Shortly after the ACLU filed a CDA brief with the Supreme Court, the other major group of CDA opponents in this case -- the Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition [CIEC] -- also filed their brief. The following Trial Bulletin gives a basic rundown of the CIEC brief, as well as pointers to a Web site where you can read the document in its entirety, and suggestions as to what you can do to get involved in this milestone legal action. Work the network! --Todd Lappin--> Section Editor WIRED Magazine =================================== Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition Update No. 17 February 20, 1997 ----------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.cdt.org/ciec/ ciec-info@cdt.org ----------------------------------------------------------------- CIEC UPDATES are intended for members of the Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition. CIEC Updates are written and edited by the Center for Democracy and Technology (http://www.cdt.org). This document may be reposted as long as it remains in its entirety. ------------------------------------------------------------------ ** 56,000 Netizens Vs. U.S. Department of Justice. ** * The Fight To Save Free Speech Online * Contents: o CIEC Plaintiffs File Supreme Court Briefs in CDA Appeal o How to Remove Yourself From This List o More Information on CIEC and the Center for Democracy and Technology -------------------------------------------------------------------- CITIZENS INTERNET EMPOWERMENT COALITION FILES BRIEF WITH SUPREME COURT IN CDA APPEAL The Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition (CIEC) today filed its brief before the United States Supreme Court in the legal challenge to the Communications Decency Act (CDA), a law imposing broad content regulations on the Internet. The full text of the brief, along with detailed background on the case, can be found at http://www.cdt.org/ciec/. The CIEC plaintiffs urged the Supreme Court to agree with a lower court ruling that the CDA violates the First Amendment by imposing restrictive, TV-broadcast style content regulations on an inherently democratic medium. Among other things, the CIEC argues: * The Internet is a unique communications medium that deserves free speech protection at least as broad as that enjoyed by print medium. * Individual users and parents -- not the government -- should decide what material is appropriate for their children, and; * Simple, inexpensive user empowerment technology is the only effective and constitutional way of limiting the access of minors to material on the Internet. The Communications Decency Act was ruled unconstitutional by a special panel of three federal judges in Philadelphia in June of 1996. Plaintiffs in the CIEC include the American Library Association, civil liberties groups, America Online, CompuServe, Prodigy, Microsoft, Apple, the Recording Industry Association of America, the American Society of Newspaper Editors, the Newspaper Association of America, WIRED Magazine, and over 56,000 individual Internet users. The lead plaintiff in the case is the American Library Association (a full list is attached below). The CIEC law suit, also known as ALA v. DOJ, was consolidated with a similar case brought by the American Civil Liberties Union and 20 other plaintiffs, known as ACLU v. Reno. The cases will be argued together before the Supreme Court on Wednesday March 19 at 10:00 am ET. The Supreme Court's decision is expected in late June or early July. The Government filed its brief with the Supreme Court on January 20, 1997. The full text of that document, along with amicus briefs filed by conservative "pro-family" groups and Members of Congress who supported the CDA can be found online at http://www.cdt.org/ciec/ ------------------------------------------------------------------- WHAT YOU CAN DO It's not to late to become a part of this landmark case! Internet users who support the free flow of information online and believe that individual users and parents, NOT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, are the best and most appropriate judges of what material is appropriate for themselves and their children can JOIN THE CITIZENS INTERNET EMPOWERMENT COALITION. It's easy and it's free. Help us fight for the future of the Internet as a viable means of free expression, education, and commerce. Visit: http://www.cdt.org/ciec/join_ciec.html --------------------------------------------------------------------- BACKGROUND ON THE COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT The Communications Decency Act, enacted in February 1996, made it a crime punishable by up to $250,000 and 2 years in prison to "display" or "make available" any "indecent" or "patently offensive" material on a public forum online. Because the Internet is a global medium with no centralized point of control, and because every user of the Internet is a publisher with the capacity to reach millions of people, broad government content regulations pose a serious threat to the free flow of information online and the First Amendment rights of all Americans. Judge Steward Dalzell, in his opinion declaring the Communications Decency Act unconstitutional in June, noted that the Internet is a unique communications medium that allows users tremendous control over the Information they receive. Dalzell stated: "If the goal of our First Amendment jurisprudence is the 'individual dignity and choice' that arises from 'putting the decision as to what views shall be voiced largely into the hands of each of us', then we should be especially vigilant in preventing content-based regulation of a medium that every minute allows individual citizens actually to make those decisions. Any content-based regulation of the Internet, no matter how benign the purpose, would burn the global village to roast the pig." While supporters argue that the law is designed to protect children from so-called "pornography" on the Internet, 2 separate Federal Courts have agreed that they law goes far beyond that and would ban otherwise constitutionally protected materials. Under the CDA, classic fiction such as the "Catcher in the Rye" or "Ulysses", AIDS and Sex education materials, rap lyrics, the "7-dirty words" and other material which, while offensive to some, enjoy full First Amendment protection in print, would be illegal if posted on a public forum on the Internet. The outcome of this legal challenge will have far reaching implications. At stake is nothing less than the future of the First Amendment in the information age. Please continue to visit the CIEC web page for the latest news and information on the case (http://www.cdt.org/ciec) ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Feb 1997 15:56:05 -0500 From: Declan McCullagh Subject: File 2--Eleven CDA briefs filed: "Last Words," from The Netly News Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu The Netly News Network http://cgi.pathfinder.com/netly/editorial/0,1012,671,00.html Last Words by Declan McCullagh (declan@well.com) February 21, 1997 Attorneys for the groups challenging the Communications Decency Act submitted their final briefs to the Supreme Court yesterday. It was free speech advocates' last chance to shore up their case before the nation's highest court hears oral arguments on March 19. Nine other organizations, from Playboy to the National Association of Broadcasters, filed separate briefs supporting the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Library Association lawsuits that last June won a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of the law. The "amicus" briefs were surprising -- not so much for what they asserted, but for the unlikely coalition that authored them. Ann Beeson, attorney for the ACLU, told me yesterday that the purpose of her group's brief was to "reframe what the case is really about," and respond to arguments the Justice Department made last month. In a 55-page brief, the government had argued that the threat of accidentally viewing porn online deters would-be netizens. It asserted the CDA was a "cyberzoning" ordinance that would keep users from stumbling across sexually explicit images. "We were able to (rebut) that very confidently because of the strength of the lower court's opinion," Beeson said, referring to the Philadelphia district court's 409 separate factual findings. The briefs totaled more than 500 pages of dense arguments against the CDA, peppered with references to obscure broadcasting and obscenity cases. I sat down with pizza and mint tea last night and waded through the heap of documents. (And now, as the sun rises on D.C., I'm still not finished.) I started with the ACLU. The group's 65-page filing blasted the "government's eleventh-hour effort to salvage" the law. The DoJ is wrong to contend users are scared away by indecent material: "The government introduced no evidence at trial to support this assertion." The ACLU and ALA briefs also assail the "cyberzoning" concept, saying that previous Supreme Court zoning cases have nothing to do with speech and instead regulate only the physical location of adult movie theaters. Stressing Supreme Court precedents, the Association of National Advertisers argues that parents, not government, should decide what children may and may not see: "Today, would-be regulators of speech routinely attempt to dress up censorship in the cloak of protection of children." The group worries that the court will back away from recent rulings providing greater protection for commercial speech. The broadcasters, too, are uneasy -- and they have good reason. Arguing against the CDA, netizens have painted cyberspace as wildly different from the heavily regulated broadcast medium. The Net isn't like radio or TV, the argument goes, since it doesn't suffer from invasiveness or spectrum scarcity -- the two justifications used for FCC regulation. In other words, the number of "broadcasters" online is not limited the way TV stations are, and web pages don't leap out at you as radio programs could. CBS, NBC and ABC detest this argument. They've never agreed that these reasons grant the FCC so much regulatory authority, and they want the court to overrule -- or at least not reaffirm -- its decision in the stifling 1969 Red Lion case. That case, anathema to broadcasters, upheld the constitutionality of the "fairness doctrine," which holds that broadcast media must present both sides of controversial issues. As justification, the justices came up with the concept of spectrum scarcity, which was used in later Supreme Court decisions to restrict broadcasters' rights to air "indecent" material. Whether the court affirms or strikes down the CDA, the broadcasters want to make sure the justices don't endorse Red Lion; indeed, they'd like to see it rejected. Still more groups weighed in. Site Specific, a consulting firm, declares that "the proper analogy for cyberspace is print." The American Association of University Professors headed a group that submitted arguments on a CD-ROM, a first-ever for the court. The Chamber of Commerce, that mainstay of Main Street American life, points out that 37 million Americans are wired at work -- and under the CDA, businesses may be liable for what their employees say online. The number of e-mail messages is unthinkably high: Firms originated 350 billion messages in 1996. "In view of both the volume of messages on interactive computer services and their often 'real time' nature, employers are incapable of" checking employees' messages, the brief says. And what of employees who are minors? Companies that hire 16- and 17-year-olds would be in trouble. To the Feminists for Free Expression, the genderless Internet is "key to achieving gender equality," which the CDA threatens. "Feminist expression is inherently controversial," the group argues, and the act would muzzle netizens who wanted to discuss cases of sexual harassment. Even newsworthy cases such as Paula Jones v. Bill Clinton would be verboten: "Court opinions... could be prohibited under the CDA. The allegations in the Jones suit, for example, describe sexual activities and organs in terms that might be considered patently offensive in some communities." The Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press describes "endless examples of newsworthy topics that arguably fall within the purview of the statute and that could subject journalists to criminal sanction for doing their jobs." After all, nearly 800 newspapers have online editions, and profane language is newsworthy. Consider a recent example: the now-public audiotapes of President Nixon swearing at Democratic party contributors. The irascible folks at annoy.com joined the chorus. The CDA overrides parents' wishes, they say: "Some parents affirmatively wish their children to have access to... information about avoiding sexually transmitted diseases." Besides, the federal government has no business regulating indecency in the first place; that wasn't the purpose of the Constitution's "commerce clause." Playboy's brief reminds the court that the magazine has never been found obscene, pornographic or harmful to minors by any court --but the web site would be criminalized by the CDA. As technologies converge, its brief says, Playboy is worried that the Net will have weaker free speech protections than print enjoys. Together, the 11 briefs represent a broadside assault on the CDA, one the law is unlikely to survive, legal experts say. In a way, the government deserves some sympathy. The Justice Department faces the unenviable task of justifying an intolerably unconstitutional law passed for political gain and defended for election-year cover. Perhaps Sen. Jim Exon was too late. If he had introduced the bill years earlier, the Internet wouldn't have been defended by such a dazzling constellation of groups. The Net has at last become strong enough to repel this initial attack. ---------------------- Courtesy of: The Netly News Network Washington Correspondent http://netlynews.com/ ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 21 Feb 1997 21:59:06 -0600 (CST) From: Avi Bass Subject: File 3--info on abuse.net >Subject--Welcome to abuse.net (ffhggtc) >Welcome to the abuse.net message forwarding system. Although this >service is provided without charge to the Internet community (with the >exceptions detailed below) you have to register once before you can >use it. Registration is very easy, but please read the instructions >before you try to do it. We regret that we have to make all of our >users go through the registration process, but it's the only way we >know to discourage miscreants from sending spam through the abuse.net >forwarder. (It took about three days for them to discover the >previous version that didn't have registration.) > >HOW DOES ABUSE.NET WORK ? > >Once you've registered, when you send a message to @abuse.net, >the system here automatically re-mails your message to the best >reporting address(es) we know for that domain. For many domains it's >postmaster@, for some it's abuse@, for some it's >something else. Some particularly unpleasant domains ignore all their >mail; when we're aware of that we use the address for their >next-level-up provider. > >When we don't know anything about the domain, by default we mail to >postmaster at that domain and all suffixes of that domain, so if you >sent mail to a.b.com@abuse.net, we'd re-mail that to postmaster@a.b.com >and postmaster@b.com. > >Not being omniscient, we don't know about every domain on the net. >Our current list is on the web site at http://www.abuse.net. If you >know of a reporting address not on our list, please tell us about it >at update@abuse.net. > >HOW DO I REGISTER ? > >Please read the terms of service below. If you accept them, reply to >this message and put "I accept" in the FIRST line of your response to >indicate your assent. Please be sure the subject line of the response >contains the subject line of this message, including the code in >parentheses, since that's the way we know who you are. Once your >acceptance is received, you're registered permanently, unless we >change the terms of service in which case you'll have to re-register. >If you don't accept the terms, don't reply and you'll never hear from >us again. > >TIPS FOR REPORTING ABUSIVE USENET OR E-MAIL MESSAGES > >* Send a copy of the entire abusive message, including all of the >header lines, particularly the "Received:" lines. (Many mail programs >including Pine and Eudora don't show or send all the headers unless >you specifically tell them to.) If the message is very long, you can >cut off the message in the middle, so long as you're sure you're >sending all the headers. > >* Be polite and to the point. > >* Don't make any threats unless you intend to carry them out. > >HOW PRIVATE IS ABUSE.NET ? > >Not particularly. At the moment, we only keep copies of messages to >which we send responses (the first message from each user, and the >registration response), but we reserve the right to keep copies of any >messages we need to. Like all mail systems, we log the "to" and >"from" addresses of all messages. > >Once your message is sent off to the administrator of the domain >you're complaining about, it's up to him, her, or it, what to do with >it. > >ABUSE.NET TERMS OF SERVICE > >1. You agree to use abuse.net only A) to report abusive behavior by >Internet users, or B) to communicate with abuse.net management with >questions, comments, or suggestions about the operation of abuse.net. > >2. You agree not to use abuse.net for any other purpose. In >particular, you agree not to send any commercial solicitations, chain >letters, or other mail sent to multiple recipients ("spam"), nor to >send messages intended to harass or annoy any person ("mail bombing"). >If you send any messages in violation of this section, you agree to >pay I.E.C.C., the operator of abuse.net, a processing fee of $100 per >message plus any attorneys' fees and collection costs. You agree that >this processing fee is reasonable in view of the work involved and >resources expended in the handling of such messages. > >3. You agree that although abuse.net attempts to deliver all validly >addressed messages to an appropriate administrator, it makes no >promises about whether, when, or to whom your messages will be >delivered. You agree that abuse.net may keep copies of any messages >received from you. > >4. You agree that these terms are binding on you from the time you >send a message accepting them. You agree that if you subsequently >decide not to accept these terms, you will send no more messages to >abuse.net. > >Regards, >John Levine, abuse-meister ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 19 Feb 1997 19:56:08 +0000 From: David Smith Subject: File 4--(Fwd) conference - policing the internet, report Felipe Rodriguez, managing director of an Internet provider in the Netherlands, wrote the following report concerning a conference entitled "Policing the Internet" ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- From--felipe@xs4all.nl () Date--17 Feb 1997 10:26:23 GMT Conference report - Policing the Internet The conference was organized by the Association of London Government. The aim of the conference was to define a European approach to combating pornography and violence on the Internet. I was invited by a friend, Prof. A. Dirkzwager, who was attending the conference for the Dutch digital citizens movement, and thought I would also be interested in attending. The speakers of the conference included five radical feminist activists, three police officers, representatives from the European parliament, British Telecom and the British Internet Watch foundation; an organization that is supposed to start regulating providers. Here is a short report of some of the content at the conference, the report is by no means complete but gives an indication of the color and tone of this conference. The agenda of the radical feminist speakers at the conference was a protest against pornography in general. These respected women activists argued for a complete ban on pornography inside and outside the Internet, referring to the damage that pornography causes to women. An endless amount of examples of pornography, child-pornography and other adult content was made, usually making no distinction between them. Most called for tough controls on the Internet, to prevent the distribution of adult material, even if this material would be legal in the non-digital society. It was said that Internet technology will lead to an escalation of violations of womens rights, and that free-speech absolutism is setting the standard on the Net. The argument of censorship on the Net was countered by speaker Nel van Dijk, member of the European parliament. She gave a pro-speech and anti-censorship lecture, defending democratic values and civil liberties and noting that England lacked a constitution and legal guarantees that protect freedom of speech and other civil liberties. Martin Jauch, superintendent of the metropolitan police, clubs and vice, gave the most revealing lecture of the conference. He explained how British providers where threatened by his unit, in order to censor their newsfeed. The providers where assembled and where told that if they would not comply with the demands of Jauchs unit, their offices would be raided, and essential equipment would be confiscated as evidence. This is the British interpretation of industry self-regulation, if the providers do not comply with the demands of the police, theyll be prosecuted.These methods resulted in a removal of a number of adult newsgroups, like alt.sex.anal, on the servers of British providers. It did not matter that most of the articles in these groups would not be considered a violation of British law, the groups had to be completely removed. Martin Jauch went on to stress the importance of rating and labeling systems, and the need for filtering information that would be considered offensive to some. An important justification against all forms of pornography in Martins speech seemed to be that this material is being used to desensitize children before theyre being abused by child-abusers. And that women where often used against their will to produce pornography. An argument that was repeatedly stressed at the conference was that kids use the Internet, and that they may be confronted with al this harmful content. Martin made it very clear that any information on the Internet that was illegal under British Law would not be allowed by him on the Net and must be banned by self-regulation of providers. Martin did not say what would be done about information thats illegal in Britain, but not in other countries, like Holland and Sweden. If providers do not comply with the demands of Martins unit, they may be liable for prosecution, and his unit will bust their offices and take away their equipment. Under these threats providers have not much choice, other than comply with everything that theyre told. This is what is supposedly called selfregulation in England and Germany. At the start of his speech Martin said he was no expert about the Internet, and that in his opinion this did not matter; hed force the internet providers to comply with his demands and British law. Karlhein Moewes of the Munich police designed his speech to have a high impact. Without speaking much he showed slide after slide of child-pornography. His speech was obviously designed to arouse a feeling of disgust. After about 20 minutes of pictures of abused children and other violence he was requested by the conference chair to refrain from showing any further slides. Anyone that does not know anything about the Internet would believe it was full of these kind of pictures, and would not hesitate to immediately call for tough repression on the Net. Glyn Ford, member of the european parliament, gave a lecture about the current developments in the european parliament. Currently a draft report is being made about policing the Net, this report will be finished in a few months and then most certainly implemented as european law. Policy will mostly be based upon a previously published paper, Illegal and harmful content on the Internet. Glyn Ford can be emailed for information about how to receive the latest draft-policy report, his email address is glynford.euromp@zen.co.uk. Overall the conference seemed to stress the importance of policing the Internet, although most speakers where not very experienced Net users. It seems clear that the British want to implement a policy of industry selfregulation and content labelling and filtering. To ensure the effectiveness of this policy the British want to implement these policies in a European context. It seems that this goal is being heavily promoted in the european parliament, and a substantial British lobby is going on to pursue the british agenda regarding the Internet. Some of the attendees courageously tried to defend the argument of free-speech, but where agressively countered by the chair of the conference with the words; but you cannot mean that you want to allow child pornography and smut on the Net ?! The chair of the conference, Sue Cameron, optimistically concluded that there was an obvious consensus that something had to be done about the smut on the Internet. I may have missed this process of consensus; three of the speakers were absolutely not prepared to endorse censorship of the Net, and none of the attendees I spoke to was prepared to endorse this so called consensus. In a private conversation with Ms. Cameron after the conference she admitted to hardly ever having used the Net. -- Felipe Rodriquez - XS4ALL Internet - finger felipe@xs4all.nl for - Managing Director - pub pgp-key 1024/A07C02F9 ------------------------------ Date: 21 Feb 1997 00:46:31 GMT From: hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com (Lisa or Jeff) Subject: File 5--Sanford Wallace (the "Spam King") to Start Own Spam Service ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The next two posts come from TELECOM Digest, V 17, #48. TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but not exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to various telecom forums on a variety of public service systems and networks including Compuserve and America On Line. It is also gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. Subscriptions are available to qualified organizations and individual readers. Write and tell us how you qualify: * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu * ====== The {Philadelphia Inquirer} reported (2/19/97, Business Page 1) that Sanford Wallace, notorious for his unsuccessful court actions against Compuserve and AOL, will open his own service for mass mailings. Most online services and ISPs prohibit bulk e-mailings and will terminate such customers. Wallace is president of Cyber Promotions. He charges $50 for a 3 line ad packed with other ads, to $2,500 for a one-time 40 line exclusive e-mail addresses Wallace has amassed. [I can't believe paying customers respond to these things, at least enough to pay the cost.] Some critics say unsolicited e-mail should be deemed illegal under the federal regulations that prohibit unsolicited faxes. [Sounds good to me!] Private Citizen, a 2,000 member junk-mail fighting organization in Naperville, Ill, has set up a WWW page (http://www.ctct.com) where those who wish to be removed from Cyber Promotions' mailing list can leave their email addresses. Wallace said he was cooperating with them. IMHO, such guys like Wallace ought to be thrown in jail for trespassing. Unlike a letter mailed to my house or business, which costs me nothing, email DOES cost me. I pay for my online time, and time spent filtering through junk email and Usenet posts costs me. If my ISP has to increase his system size to accomodate the increased junk traffic, those costs get passed on to me. It is well known that junk email clogs the Internet because (1) a lot of messages are undeliverable from old addresses and generate returns, and (2) the spammers use forged headers, so the returned mail (and complaints from recipients) get bounced back. So, what starts out as a single message can mushroom, and we Internet users are paying for it. Wallace has also shown incredible arrogance and disrespect to people. He has filed lawsuits (and lost) demanding he be allowed to invade private space. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Feb 1997 10:32:57 EST From: Danny Burstein Subject: File 6--Cyber Promotions, Evil, Evil, EVIL Per an Associated Press story 20-Feb-1997: New Network Makes Bulk E-Mail Easy By JENNIFER BROWN Associated Press Writer PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- It's about to get much easier for advertisers to send junk e-mail on the Internet. Cyber Promotions Inc. will launch the first bulk e-mail friendly Internet provider in the nation on March 17. It will allow computer users to send millions of commercial ads -- also known as spam -- for a single monthly fee. (The article continues with a discussion of how spammers are frowned upon by most ISPs and how they get their accounts canceled left and right as soon as they start their little pursuits.) "What people are doing is jumping around from one (Internet provider) toanother, and they don't have a secure home. We're going to give them a home," said Cyber Promotion founder Sanford Wallace. (snip) Wallace, known as the "Spam King," said Cyber Promotions is an extension of the Internet advertising service he has run since 1994. The company sends up to 4 million e-mail ads each day. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 20 Feb 1997 21:53:30 -0500 From: Jonathan Wallace Subject: File 7--Press release: Metaphor brief filed in CDA case Free Speech Advocates File "Metaphor" Brief With Supreme Court FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Contact: Jamie Stecher SJPDad@aol.com (212)355-4000 Jon Lebkowsky, an Austin-based Internet activist and author, and SiteSpecific Inc., a New York City new media company, have filed a friend of the court brief with the United States Supreme Court, supporting the findings of the District Court in Reno v. ACLU, the Communications Decency Act (CDA) case. "We believe the lower court was completely correct in finding that the CDA was unconstitutional," Lebkowsky said. In their brief, filed by attorney Jamie Stecher of New York City, the parties argue that the Supreme Court should recognize that emerging electronic media, such as the Internet, require and deserve the same kind of First Amendment protection from government censorship that is traditionally accorded to newspapers, magazines and books. The brief argues that the Court has erred in recent years by failing to recognize that, for constitutional purposes, the Internet is a metaphorical printing press. "When confronted with new technology, courts proceeded most wisely when they apply a settled body of case law that was developed for an analogous technology," Stecher commented. "For example, in the last century, when courts in the United States and England were confronted with lawsuits concerning a new medium called the telephone, they ruled that the telephone was like an existing medium --the telegraph -- and by using this analogy adapted decisions made in cases involving the telegraph to the new medium. Not only did the analogy provide a firm basis for deciding the first telephone cases, but it provided an important sense of predictability to the new medium. Last June, however, a four-Justice plurality of the Supreme Court went seriously astray when it decided an important case pertaining to free speech on cable television, Denver Area Educational Communications Coalition v. FCC, without specifying whether cable should be treated for constitutional purposes like broadcast media, or print media, or something else. It is hard to see how a court can correctly determine *how* to regulate something without first deciding *what* it is." Jonathan Wallace, co-author with Mark Mangan of Sex, Laws and Cyberspace (Henry Holt, 1996) and a plaintiff in Reno v. ACLU, welcomed the filing of the brief. "In the book, we say that 'Cyberspace is a constellation of printing presses and bookstores," Wallace noted. "This brief helps to address a gap in the government's logic. Would you really treat Catcher in the Rye differently between paper covers and in electronic format? That's what one Congressman suggested, the day the CDA passed. Finding that the Internet is a form of print media will forestall that possibility. If a particular law would, like the CDA, be unconstitutional if applied to books and magazines, it shouldn't be constitutional for the Net either." The Supreme Court will hear arguments in Reno v. ACLU on March 19th. The amicus brief will be available Friday, Feb. 21 at http://www.spectacle.org/cda/amicus.html. ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 15 Dec 1996 22:51:01 CST From: CuD Moderators Subject: File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996) Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are available at no cost electronically. CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line: SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS. The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115, USA. 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