102 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
102 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
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PRODIGY STUMBLES AS A FORUM ... AGAIN
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By Mike Godwin
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On some days, Prodigy representatives tell us they're running "the Disney
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Channel of online services." On other days the service is touted as a
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forum for "the free expression of ideas." But management has missed the
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conflict between these two missions. And it is just this unperceived
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conflict that has led the B'nai B'rith's Anti-Defamation League to launch
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a protest against the online service..
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On one level, the controversy stems from Prodigy's decision to censor
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messages responding to claims that, among other things, the Holocaust
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never took place. These messages--which included such statements as
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"Hitler had some valid points" and that "wherever Jews exercise influence
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and power, misery, warfare and economic exploitation ... follow"--were the
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sort likely to stir up indignant responses among Jews and non-Jews alike.
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But some Prodigy members have complained to the ADL that when they tried
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to respond to both the overt content of these messages and their implicit
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anti-Semitism, their responses were rejected by Prodigy's staff of
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censors.
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The rationale for the censorship? Prodigy has a policy of barring messages
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directed at other members, but allows messages that condemn a group. The
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result of this policy, mechanically applied, is that one member can post a
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message saying that "pogroms, 'persecutions,' and the mythical holocaust"
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are things that Jews "so very richly deserve" (this was an actual
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message). But another member might be barred from posting some like
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"Member A's comments are viciously anti-Semitic." It is no wonder that the
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Anti-Defamation League is upset at what looks very much like unequal
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treatment.
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But the problem exposed by this controversy is broader than simply a badly
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crafted policy. The problem is that Prodigy, while insisting on its Disney
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Channel metaphor, also gives lip service to the notion of a public forum.
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Henry Heilbrunn, a senior vice president of Prodigy, refers in the Wall
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Street Journal to the service's "policy of free expression," while Bruce
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Thurlby, Prodigy's manager of editorial business and operations, invokes
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in a letter to ADL "the right of individuals to express opinions that are
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contrary to personal standards or individual beliefs."
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Yet it is impossible for any free-expression policy to explain both the
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allowing of those anti-Semitic postings and the barring of responses to
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those postings from outraged and offended members. Historically, this
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country has embraced the principle that best cure for offensive or
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disturbing speech is more speech. No regime of censorship--even of the
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most neutral and well-meaning kind--can avoid the kind of result that
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appears in this case: some people get to speak while others get no chance
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to reply. So long as a board of censors is in place, Prodigy is no public
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forum.
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Thus, the service is left in a double bind. If Prodigy really means to be
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taken as a computer-network version of "the Disney Channel"--with all the
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content control that this metaphor implies--then it's taking
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responsibility for (and, to some members, even seeming to endorse) the
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anti-Semitic messages that were posted. On the other hand, if Prodigy
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really regards itself as a forum for free expression, it has no business
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refusing to allow members to respond to what they saw as lies,
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distortions, and hate. A true free-speech forum would allow not only the
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original messages but also the responses to them.
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So, what's the fix for Prodigy? The answer may lie in replacing the
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service's censors with a system of "conference hosts" of the sort one sees
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on CompuServe or on the WELL. As WELL manager Cliff Figallo conceives of
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his service, the management is like an apartment manager who normally
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allows tenants to do what they want, but who steps in if they do something
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outrageously disruptive. Hosts on the WELL normally steer discussions
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rather than censoring them, and merely offensive speech is almost never
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censored.
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But even if Prodigy doesn't adopt a "conference host" system, it
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ultimately will satisfy its members better if it does allow a true forum
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for free expression. And the service may be moving in that direction
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already: Heilbrunn is quoted in the Wall Street Journal as saying that
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Prodigy has been loosening its content restrictions over the past month.
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Good news, but not good enough--merely easing some content restrictions is
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likely to be no more successful at solving Prodigy's problems than
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Gorbachev's easing market restrictions was at solving the Soviet Union's
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problems. The best solution is to allow what Oliver Wendell Holmes called
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"the marketplace of ideas" to flourish--to get out of the censorship
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business.
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--
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Rita Marie Rouvalis rita@eff.org
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Electronic Frontier Foundation | EFF administrivia to: office@eff.org
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155 Second Street | Flames to:
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Cambridge, MA 02141 617-864-0665 | women-not-to-be-messed-with@eff.org
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