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768 lines
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Computer underground Digest Sun Nov 30, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 88
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #9.88 (Sun, Nov 30, 1997)
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File 1--Sen. Coats' Remarks (Fwd)
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File 2--American Library Association & "New CDA" (fwd)
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File 3--School District "Benches" Cheerleader Site
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File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 25 Nov 1997 20:37:03 -0800
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From: "James S. Tyre" <j.s.tyre@worldnet.att.net
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Subject: File 1--Sen. Coats' Remarks (Fwd)
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Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
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===============
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From--Filtering Facts <David_Burt@filteringfacts.org
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To--filt4lib@listserv.ci.escondido.ca.us
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Date--Wed, 26 Nov 97 04:15:44 +0000
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* List: filt4lib@listserv.ci.escondido.ca.us
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These remarks by Sen. Coats in the Congressional Record contain several
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criticisms of the ALA. They are very interesting:
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By Mr. COATS:
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S. 1482. A bill to amend section 223 of the Communications Act of
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1934 to establish a prohibition on commercial distribution on the World
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Wide Web of material that is harmful to minors, and for other purposes;
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to the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.
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PORN LEGISLATION
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Mr. COATS. Mr. President, during Senate consideration of the
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Telecommunications Act of 1996 I, along with Senator James Exon,
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introduced an amendment to the Act which came to be known as the
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Communications Decency Act or CDA. This amendment held forth a basic
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principle, that children should be sheltered from obscene and indecent
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pornography. There was spirited debate on the amendment. However,
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ultimately the Senate adopted the CDA by an overwhelming margin of 84
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to 16.
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On the very day that the President signed the Telecommunications Act
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into law, the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Library
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Association, along with America On-Line and other representatives of
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the computer industry, filed a law suit against the CDA in District
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Court. In short, the case ultimately came before the Supreme Court,
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where it was struck down.
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Mr. President, however much I disagree with the ruling of the Supreme
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Court, it is reality and as such, I have studied the opinion of the
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Court and come before my colleagues today to introduce legislation that
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reflects the parameters laid out by the Court's opinion.
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Mr. President, during Congressional consideration of the CDA,
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opponents of the measure took what I like to call an ostrich approach.
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They stuck their head in the sand and their rear end in the air.
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With companies like America on Line and Microsoft in the forefront,
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there came an indignant claim from the computer industry that there was
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no problem with pornography on the Internet. They claimed that there
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was very little pornography, and that what exists is difficult to find.
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However incredulous, this is what they claimed.
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Well, Mr. President, this ostrich appears to have extricated its head
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from the sand. For after the Supreme Court's ruling, the computer
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industry, along with so-called civil liberties groups, gathered for a
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White House summit to address the issue of pornography on the net, and
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what could be done about it. There are now panels and working groups,
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media discussions and industry alternatives all designed to address
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this problem of the proliferation of pornography on the Internet and
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the threat it poses to our children.
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Mr. President, let me congratulate the computer industry, and welcome
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them to the real world.
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And what is this real world? Mr. President, I turn now to the
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February 10 edition of U.S. News and World Report. The cover story is
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entitled, ``The Business of Porn.'' The article outlines in rather
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disturbing clarity the issue of pornography in America. ``Last year''
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[[Page S12147]]
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it states, ``America spent more than $8 billion on hard-core videos,
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peep shows, live sex acts, adult cable programming, sexual devices,
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computer porn, and sex magazines--an amount much larger than
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Hollywood's domestic box office receipts and larger than all the
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revenues generated by rock and country music recordings. Americans now
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spend more money at strip clubs than at Broadway, off-broadway,
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regional, and nonprofit theaters; at the opera, the ballet, and jazz
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and classical music performances combined.''
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This is truly alarming, and reflects poorly on the moral direction of
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the country. And, Mr. President, as the Internet continues to grow as a
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medium of communication and commerce in our society, its role in
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expanding the commerce of pornography increases exponentially.
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The Article goes on to say that: ``In much the same way that hard-
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core films on videocassette were largely responsible for the rapid
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introduction of the VCR, porn on and CD-ROM and on the Internet has
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hastened acceptance of these new technologies. Interactive adult CD-
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ROMS, such as Virtual Valarie and the Penthouse Photo Shoot, create
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interest in multimedia equipment among male computer buyers.'' It goes
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on: ``Porn companies have established elaborate Web sites to lure
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customers . . . Playboy's web site, which offers free glimpses of its
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Playmates, now averages about 5 million hits a day.''
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The Article quotes Larry Flint, who says he ``imagines a future in
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which the TV and the personal computer have merged. Americans will lie
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in bed, cruising the Internet with their remote controls and ordering
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hard-core films at the punch of a button. The Internet promises to
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combine the video store's diversity of choices with the secrecy of
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purchases through the mail.''
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Mr. President, there has been a virtual explosion of commerce in
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pornography on the Internet. Adult book stores, live peep shows, adult
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movies, you name it and it is there. It is available, Mr. President,
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not just to adults, but to children.
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And what does the computer industry, the ACLU, and the American
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Library Association tout as a solution to this problem? They tout self-
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ratings systems and blocking software. Opponents of the CDA, companies
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like America On-Line, the ACLU, the American Library Association, Larry
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Flint, have argued that there is no role for government in protecting
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children, that the Internet can regulate itself. The primary solution
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these people promote is system called PICs (Platform for Internet
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Content Selection), a type of self-ratings system. This would allow the
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pornographer to rate his own page, and browsers, the tool used to
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search the Internet, would then respond to these ratings. Aside from
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the ludicrous proposition of allowing the pornographer to self-rate,
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Mr. President, there is no incentive for compliance.
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I now turn to an editorial by writers in PC Week Magazine, a very
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prominent voice in the computer industry. The editorial is titled:
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``Web Site Ratings--Shame on Most of Us.'' The column discusses the
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lack of voluntary compliance by content providers with the PICs system:
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``We and many others in the computer industry and press have decried
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the Communications Decency Act and other government attempts to
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regulate the content of the Web. Instead, we've all argued, the
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government should let the Web rate and regulate its own content. Page
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ratings and browsers that respond to those ratings, not legislation,
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are the answers we've offered.''
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The article goes on, ``Too bad we left the field before the game was
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over.'' the article says, ``We who work around the Web have done little
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to rate our content.'' it states that, in a search of the Web, they
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found ``few rated sites.'' And that rated sites were the ``exception to
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the rule'' In other words, PICs does not work. It does not work,
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because there is no incentive for pornographers to comply.
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And what about blocking software? Mr. President, let me begin by
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pointing out the amazing level of deceit that proponents of this
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solution are willing to go to. The American Library Association, a
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principal opponent of the CDA, lined up with plaintiffs in challenging
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the Constitutionality of the Act. It was a central argument of the
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Library Association and their cohorts, that blocking software presented
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a non-governmental solution to the problem.
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However, Mr. President, if one logs onto the American Library
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Association Web site one finds quite a surprise. Contained on the site
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is a resolution, adopted by the ALA Council on July 2, 1997, that
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resolves: ``That the American Library Association affirms that the use
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of filtering software by libraries to block access . . . violates the
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Library Bill of Rights.'' Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that
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this Resolution be inserted into the Record.
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So, here we find the true agenda of the American Library Association.
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They represent to the Court that everything is O.K., that all we need
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is blocking software. Then, they turn around and implement a policy
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that says no-way.
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And what are the implications? I quote now from a February 12, 1997
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article in the Boston Herald. ``John Hunt, a parent from Dorchester,
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said he was furious to learn his 11-year-old daughter was able to view
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pornography yesterday while working on a school essay at the BPL's
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Copley Square branch.'' The article goes on: ``She said all the boys
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were around the computer and they were laughing and called the girls
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over to look at the pictures of naked people,'' Hunt said. ``I want to
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find out from these library officials what is going on.''
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The article goes on to tell the story of another parent, Susan
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Sullivan who said she was stunned when her 10-year-old son spent the
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afternoon researching a book report on the computer in the BPL's Adams
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Street branch, but ended up looking through explicit photographs
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instead.
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Ms. Sullivan says: ``I'm very, very upset because I have no idea what
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he saw on the screen. He said he was using the Internet to do a book
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report on Indians and he was able to access dirty pictures, pictures of
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naked people.''
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When the library spokesman was asked about parent's concerns, he
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dismissed them saying, ``We do have children's librarians but we do not
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have Internet police.''
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So here is the genuine concern of the American Library Association
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for children and their genuine support for blocking software as a
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solution.
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Again, Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that this article be
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made part of the record.
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However, Mr. President, this is a side issue. As I pointed out
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earlier, in the case of the computer industry, deceit and denial are
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tactics regularly employed by opponents of real child protections. The
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fact is, Mr. President, that the software does not work. In fact, it is
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particularly dangerous because it creates a false sense of security for
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parents, teachers, and children.
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I have here a transcript from Morning Edition on National Public
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Radio. It is from the September 12, 1997 program. The host, Brooke
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Gladstone is interviewing a 12-year-old named Jack. Ms. Gladstone asks
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Jack what he does when he bumps up against Net Nanny, a popular
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blocking software program.
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Jack replies: ``You go to hacking sites such as the Undernet, which
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is a site which you pay money to go a member{sic . And then, after
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that, you have full access to all these hacking, cracking and phreaking
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and credit card fraud and all these other tools.''
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Ms. Gladstone then asks Jack if kids use these services.
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Jack replies: ``A lot. I mean, you have kids at school who bring in
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3.5 inch disks saying hey, buddy, come here. I'll sell you this disk
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for $10 dollars. There's all the hacking stuff you'll ever need.
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Ms. Gladstone then goes on to discuss with Jack how he made money
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down-loading pornography and selling it to his school-mates, making
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$30.
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Jack describes the various methods by which he defeats the blocking
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software his parents have installed.
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Later in the interview, Ms. Gladstone interviews Jay Friedland,
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founder of Surf Watch, another well-hyped blocking software program.
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Mr. Friedland readily concedes that his software can be broken, even
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describing the ways to hack the program.
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In describing the security his product offers parents, he says:
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``It's a little bit like suntan lotion. It allows you to stay out in
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the sun longer, but you can still get sunburnt.'' Mr. President, this
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does not sound very reassuring to me.
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I ask unanimous consent that the full text of this article be
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inserted into the Record at the appropriate place.
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[[Page S12148]]
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The bottom line here is money. There are millions upon millions of
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dollars being made on the Internet in the pornography business. There
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is even more money being made marketing software to terrified parents,
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software that does not work.
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Let's look at the situation. You have the computer industry working
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to defeat laws designed to prohibit distribution of pornography to
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children. The solution that they promote is blocking software,
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manufactured by themselves. They are making tens- of-millions of
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dollars off of it. However, what we find out is that the software
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doesn't work. And all the while, you have companies like America On-
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Line out there, head in the sand, telling parents, schools, Congress,
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and the American public that there isn't a problem with pornography on
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the Internet. And the Internet Access Providers are pulling in the big
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bucks, providing access to the red light district.
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``The Erotic Allure of Home Schooling,'' that is the name of an
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article, published in the September 8 edition of Fortune Magazine. Mr.
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President, I have long been an advocate of home schooling. But, I must
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confess that its erotic allure has never been one of my motivations.
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It begins: ``Here's one of the Web's dirtiest words: Mars. Try
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searching for sites about the red planet lately, and you could land on
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a porn purveyor's on-line playground. What next?'' the article asks,
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``Smut linked to the keywords`home schooling'? Don't look now--it's
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already happened.''
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The article goes on: ``Perverse as these connections seem, they're
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right out of Economics 101, specifically the part about competition.
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Pornography sites are among the Web's few big moneymakers. There are
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thousands of them, from the R-rated to the boundlessly perverse. They
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compete furiously, and their main battleground for market share is
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search engines like Yahoo, Lycos, Excite, and Infoseek. Web surfers
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looking for porn typically tap into such search services and use
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keywords like ``sex'' and ``XXX.'' But so many on- line sex shops now
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display those words that their presence won't make a site stand out in
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a list resulting from a user's query. To get noticed, pornographers
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increasingly try to trick search engines into giving them top billing--
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sometimes called `spoofing'.''
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The article points out that: ``Search engine companies like Infoseek
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constantly develop new filters to defeat spoofing. But calls still come
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in from irate mothers and grade-school teachers who click on innocent-
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looking search results and find themselves on a page too exotic to
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mention.'' The article concludes: ``The Clinton Administration is
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encouraging efforts based on`voluntary restraint.' That's a lot to ask
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in the Web's open bazaar, where market share is the name of the game.''
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I ask unanimous consent that the full text of this article be
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inserted in the record at the appropriate place.
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Mr. President, it is not just a lot to ask. It is foolish and futile
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to ask. The bottom line is that, unless commercial distributors of
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pornography are met with the force of law, they will not act
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responsibly.
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I am here today to introduce legislation that will provide just such
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force of law.
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As I stated in my opening comments, the legislation I introduce today
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is designed to accommodate the concerns of the Supreme Court. This
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legislation is specifically targeted at the commercial distribution of
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materials harmful to minors on the World Wide Web.
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It states simply that ``Whoever in interstate or foreign commerce in
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or through the World Wide Web is engaged in the business of the
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commercial distribution of material that is harmful to minors shall
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restrict access to such material by persons under 17 years of age.''
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It is an affirmative defense to prosecution that the defendant
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restricted access to such material by requiring use of a verified
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credit card, debit account, adult access code, or adult personal
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identification number. The bill also calls upon the FCC to prescribe
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alternative procedures. The FCC is expressly restricted from regulation
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of the Internet, or Internet Speech.
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Further, the FCC and the Justice Department are directed to post on
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their Web sites information as is necessary to inform the public of the
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meaning of the term ``harmful to minors.''
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As I know that it will be of some concern to my colleagues that any
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legislation dealing with this topic takes into account the Supreme
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Court's ruling in the CDA, I would like to take some time now to
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examine the key precedents which the Court considered in its opinion on
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the CDA and how they relate to this bill.
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Central to the construction of this legislation is the Ginsberg case.
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This Court ruling upheld the constitutionality of a New York statute
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that prohibited the selling to minors under 17 years of age material
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that was considered obscene as to them even if not obscene as to
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adults. In Ginsberg, the Court rejected the defendant's argument that
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``the scope of the constitutional freedom of expression secured to a
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citizen to read or see material concerned with sex cannot be made to
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depend on whether the citizen is an adult or a minor.''
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In Ginsberg, the Court relied on both the state's interest in
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protecting the well-being of children, but also on the principle that
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``the parent's claim to authority in their own household to direct the
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rearing of their own children is basic in the structure of our
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society.''
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In the Court's opinion on the CDA, they laid out four differences
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between the CDA and the question contained in the Ginsberg case. As you
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will see, the legislation I introduce today carefully addresses each of
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these concerns.
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First, the Court points out that in the New York statute examined in
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Ginsberg, ``the prohibition against sales to minors does not bar
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parents who so desire from purchasing the magazines for their
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children.'' The Court interpreted the CDA to prohibit such activity.
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Though I must confess to my colleagues that I find it a disturbing
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proposition that a parent should so desire to purchase pornographic
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material for their children's consumption, it seems that this is a
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right that this Court feels compelled to protect.
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The legislation I introduce today places no restriction on a parent's
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right to purchase such material, and to provide it to their children,
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or anyone else. In fact, it places no restriction on any potential
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consumer of pornography. Rather, it simply requires the commercial
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purveyor of pornography to cast their message in such a way as not to
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be readily available to children.
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The Court's second issue relating to the Ginsberg case is that the
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New York statute applied only to commercial transactions. As I have
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previously stated, my legislation deals only with commercial
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transactions.
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Third, the Court points out that in Ginsberg, the New York statute
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combined its definition of harmful to minors with the requirement that
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it be ``utterly without redeeming social importance for minors.'' The
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Court goes on to express that the CDA omits any requirement that the
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material covered in the statute lack serious literary, artistic,
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political, or scientific value.
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This concern is addressed directly in my legislation, with a specific
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plank of the definition of harmful to minors requiring that the
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material in question ``lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or
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scientific value.'' Mr. President, I do not believe that it is possible
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to address a concern more directly.
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Finally, the Court states that the New York statute considered in
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Ginsberg defined a minor as a person under the age of 17, whereas the
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CDA applied to children under the age of 18, citing concern that by
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extending protection to those under 18, the CDA reached ``those nearest
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the majority.''
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Mr. President, here again I am confused my the rationale of the
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Court. For it is common practice in federal statute to recognize minors
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as those under the age of 18 years. However, the legislation I
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introduce today contains the same under 17 requirement established
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under Ginsberg.
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The second case of importance as relates to the Supreme Court ruling
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on the CDA is the Pacifica case. Though the specifics of this case are
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well- known to most by now, a summary might be helpful. In the Pacifica
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case, the Supreme Court upheld a declaratory order of the FCC relating
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to the broadcast of a recording of a monologue entitled ``Filthy
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Words.''
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The Commission found that the use of certain words referring to
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excretory or sexual activities or organs ``in an afternoon broadcast
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when children are in the audience was patently offensive'' and thus
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inappropriate for broadcast.
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[[Page S12149]]
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In considering the precedent established in Pacifica, and their
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relationship to the CDA, the Court outlined 3 concerns.
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First, the Court stated that, unlike in Pacifica where the content in
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question was regulated as to the time it was broadcast, the CDA made no
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such distinction. Further, the Court makes a rather curious distinction
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in stating that the regulation in question in the Pacifica case had
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been promulgated by an agency with ``decades'' of experience in
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regulating the medium.
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On the first point, the regulation of Internet content in the context
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of time is irrelevant, as a child may access or be inadvertently
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exposed to pornography any time he or she logs onto the Internet. That
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could be in the evening, when doing a research paper, or during class--
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working on an assignment, or at the public library. The simple fact
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that a child runs the risk of exposure any time presents a more
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substantial potential for harm than the time regulation approach
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approved in Pacifica, and calls for a higher level of control, not
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lower as the Court concluded.
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On the question of regulation by an agency with decades of
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experience, given the fact that the Internet is a very new medium of
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communication, it is a rather ludicrous distinction to make. No agency,
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short of the Defense Department, could demonstrate the historical
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relationship to the Internet that the FCC can with broadcast radio.
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Surely the Supreme Court would not advocate Defense Department
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regulation of the Internet.
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Further, given the concern among supporters of the Internet regarding
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government regulation of the medium, it would seem preferable to have a
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clearly defined statute, enforced by the Justice Department, as opposed
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to a regulatory regime, which would be enforced by an unaccountable
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federal agency and subject to bureaucratic creep. During debate and
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negotiations on passage of the CDA, opponents raised strong concerns
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that the FCC not be given any regulatory authority over the Internet.
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It was this opposition to a regulatory solution that resulted in a very
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restricted agency roll.
|
|
Though the FCC is expressly prohibited from regulating content under
|
|
the legislation I introduce today, a specific provision is made for the
|
|
FCC to prescribe a method of restricting access that would function as
|
|
an affirmative defense to prosecution.
|
|
As such, this legislation provides the benefit and flexibility of an
|
|
evolving agency regulation, whereby as technology evolved and new and
|
|
more effective means of access restriction emerge, the Commission could
|
|
modify the regulation, without the creation of a regulatory regime with
|
|
expansive FCC authority over the Internet and speech.
|
|
The Court goes on to point out that in Pacifica, the Commission's
|
|
declaratory order was not punitive, whereas there were penalties under
|
|
the CDA. Here, it is important to distinguish the difference in scope
|
|
between this legislation and the CDA.
|
|
A principal concern of the Court with the CDA, was that the CDA dealt
|
|
with both commercial and non-commercial communications. As such, the
|
|
cost and technology burdens necessary to restrict access that would be
|
|
imposed by the CDA on non-commercial speakers, according to the opinion
|
|
of the Court, would be prohibitive. The result would be, in the Opinion
|
|
of the Court, that speech would be chilled.
|
|
The legislation I introduce today is strictly limited to the
|
|
commercial distribution of pornography on the World Wide Web. The
|
|
commercial distributors of pornography on the Web already use the very
|
|
mechanisms (credit cards and PIN numbers) that are required under this
|
|
bill. The difference between the status quo and this bill is that
|
|
pornography distributors would be required to cease to give away the
|
|
freebies that any child with a mouse could gain access to.
|
|
As such, Court concerns regarding the potential chilling effect to
|
|
non-commercial speech that they perceived under the CDA is moot. The
|
|
scope of this legislation does not extend to the non-commercial
|
|
speaker. Secondly, this legislation imposes no new technological or
|
|
economic burden on the commercial operator. It simply imposes a control
|
|
on the manner of distribution and provides penalties for violations.
|
|
Mr. President, there is a long tradition of fines and penalties for
|
|
violations of laws governing the commercial distribution of
|
|
pornography. This legislation is simply a continuation of these
|
|
principles. In fact, the very treatment of fines in penalties under
|
|
this legislation, mirrors those under dial-a-porn, which have been
|
|
upheld by the Supreme Court.
|
|
Finally, under an examination of Pacifica, the Court points out the
|
|
differences between the level of First Amendment protection extended to
|
|
broadcast and the Internet. Mr. President, I must say that however much
|
|
I differ with the opinion of the Court on this question in general, I
|
|
would simply point out that the harmful to minors standard has
|
|
traditionally been used, and has been constitutionally upheld, as a
|
|
standard for regulating print media. Print media is extended the
|
|
highest level of First Amendment protection. As such, this legislation
|
|
clearly accounts for the Supreme Court's concerns in this area.
|
|
The Court also examines the precedents established under Renton. The
|
|
Renton case dealt with a zoning ordinance that kept adult movie
|
|
theaters out of residential neighborhoods. It did so based on the
|
|
``secondary effects'' of the theaters--such as crime and deteriorating
|
|
property values. It was the Court's opinion that the CDA treated the
|
|
entire universe of cyberspace rather than specific areas or zones.
|
|
Further, the Court seemed preoccupied that the CDA dealt with the
|
|
primary, not the secondary effects of pornography.
|
|
The legislation I introduce today deals with a narrow zone of the
|
|
Internet, commercial activity on the World Wide Web. Though there is
|
|
tremendous economic activity in pornography on the Web. The cyber-
|
|
geography of this bill is very limited.
|
|
Mr. President, on this question of primary and secondary effects, I
|
|
must differ with the Court and would like to go into this question in
|
|
some detail.
|
|
The underlying principle which the Senate supported by a vote of 84
|
|
to 16 in adopting the CDA, and which is embodied in the legislation I
|
|
introduce today is articulated in New York versus. Ferber: ``It is
|
|
evident beyond the need for elaboration that the State's interest in
|
|
`safeguarding the physical and psychological well-being of a minor' is
|
|
compelling.''
|
|
There is no question that exposure to pornography harms children. A
|
|
child's sexual development occurs gradually through childhood. Exposure
|
|
to pornography, particularly the type of hard-core pornography
|
|
available on the Internet, distorts the natural sexual development of
|
|
children.
|
|
Essentially, pornography shapes children's sexual perspective by
|
|
providing them information on sexual activity. However, the type of
|
|
information provided by pornography does not provide children with a
|
|
normal sexual perspective. As pointed out in Enough is Enough's brief
|
|
to Court on the CDA, pornography portrays unhealthy or antisocial kinds
|
|
of sexual activity, such as sadomasochism, abuse, and humiliation of
|
|
females, involvement of children, incest, group sex, voyeurism, sexual
|
|
degradation, bestiality, torture, objectification, that serve to teach
|
|
children the rudiments of sex without adult supervision and moral
|
|
guidance.
|
|
Ann Burgess, Professor of Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania,
|
|
states that children generally do not have a natural sexual capacity
|
|
until between 10 and 12 years old. Pornography unnaturally accelerates
|
|
that development. By short-circuiting the normal development process
|
|
and supplying misinformation about their own sexuality, pornography
|
|
leaves children confused, changed and damaged.
|
|
As if the psychological threat of pornography does not present a
|
|
sufficient compelling interest, there is a significant physical threat.
|
|
As I have stated, pornography develops in children a distorted sexual
|
|
perspective. It encourages irresponsible, dehumanized sexual behavior,
|
|
conduct that presents a genuine physical threat to children. In the
|
|
United States, about one in four sexually active teenagers acquire a
|
|
sexually transmitted disease (STD) every year, resulting in 3 million
|
|
STD cases. Infectious syphilis rates have more than doubled among
|
|
teenagers since the mid-1980's. One million American teenage girls
|
|
become pregnant each year. A report entitled ``Exposure to Pornography,
|
|
Character and Sexual
|
|
|
|
[[Page S12150]]
|
|
|
|
Deviance'' concluded that as more and more children become exposed not
|
|
only to soft-core pornography, but also to explicit deviant sexual
|
|
material, society's youth will learn an extremely dangerous message:
|
|
sex without responsibility is acceptable.
|
|
However, there is a darker and more ominous threat. For research has
|
|
established a direct link between exposure and consumption of
|
|
pornography and sexual assault, rape and molesting of children. As
|
|
stated in Aggressive Erotica and Violence Against Women, ``Virtually
|
|
all lab studies established a causal link between violent pornography
|
|
and the commission of violence. This relationship is not seriously
|
|
debated in the research community.'' What is more, pedophiles will
|
|
often use pornographic material to desensitize children to sexual
|
|
activity, effectively breaking down their resistance in order to
|
|
sexually exploit them.
|
|
A study by Victor Cline found that child molesters often use
|
|
pornography to seduce their prey, to lower the inhibitions of the
|
|
victim, and as an instruction manual. Further, a W.L. Marshal study
|
|
found that: ``87 percent of female child molesters and 77 percent of
|
|
male child molesters studied admitted to regular use of hard-core
|
|
pornography.''
|
|
Given these facts, Mr. President, any distinction the Court makes
|
|
regarding the effects of pornography on children seems to miss the very
|
|
point of the state's compelling interest. For the sanctity and security
|
|
of childhood is what these efforts are all about.
|
|
As I have stated before in addressing this subject, childhood must be
|
|
defended by parents and society as a safe harbor of innocence. It is a
|
|
privileged time to develop values in an environment that is not hostile
|
|
to them. But this foul material on the Internet invades that place and
|
|
destroys that innocence. It takes the worst excesses of the red-light
|
|
district and places it directly into a child's bedroom, on the computer
|
|
their parents bought them to help them with their homework.
|
|
I urge my colleagues to support this legislation, and yield the
|
|
floor.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Mon, 24 Nov 1997 08:25:13 -0600
|
|
From: Donald Cress <T30DAC1@WPO.CSO.NIU.EDU>
|
|
Subject: File 2--American Library Association & "New CDA" (fwd)
|
|
|
|
The American Library Association sent out the following
|
|
notice regarding recent attempts to bring the substance of
|
|
the Communications Decency Act back to the table. Please
|
|
review the notice.
|
|
|
|
Subject--CDA Again
|
|
|
|
=================================================================
|
|
ALAWON Volume 6,
|
|
Number 102
|
|
ISSN 1069-7799 November 20,
|
|
1997
|
|
|
|
American Library Association Washington Office Newsline
|
|
|
|
In this issue: (101 lines)
|
|
|
|
COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT SUCCESSOR INTRODUCED
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT SUCCESSOR INTRODUCED
|
|
|
|
At the end of the first session of the 105th Congress, Sen. Dan
|
|
Coats (R-IN) introduced legislation to prohibit commercial
|
|
distribution on the World Wide Web of material that is "harmful
|
|
to minors" under the age of 17. S. 1482, introduced on November
|
|
8, is intended, according to its sponsor, to reflect the
|
|
parameters laid out by the Supreme Court in its decision on the
|
|
Communications Decency Act.
|
|
|
|
The "harmful to minors" definition in the bill includes material
|
|
that "taken as a whole and with respect to minors, appeals to a
|
|
prurient interest in nudity, sex or excretion; depicts,
|
|
describes, or represents, in a patently offensive way with
|
|
respect to what is suitable for minors, an actual or simulated
|
|
sexual act or sexual contact, actual or simulated normal or
|
|
perverted sex acts, or a lewd exhibition of the genitals; and
|
|
lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific
|
|
value." The bill would provide a defense to any prosecution that
|
|
the defendant restricted access by requiring a credit card, adult
|
|
access code or ID number.
|
|
|
|
Although the legislation addresses only commercial activity on
|
|
the Web, ALA is mentioned several times in Sen. Coats' remarks,
|
|
including the following in the Congressional Record (November 8,
|
|
p. S12147):
|
|
|
|
And what about blocking software? Mr. President, let me
|
|
begin by pointing out the amazing level of deceit that
|
|
proponents of this solution are willing to go to. The
|
|
American Library Association, a principal opponent of the
|
|
CDA, lined up with plaintiffs in challenging the
|
|
Constitutionality of the Act. It was a central argument of
|
|
the Library Association and their cohorts, that blocking
|
|
software presented a non-governmental solution to the
|
|
problem.
|
|
|
|
However, Mr. President, if one logs onto the American
|
|
Library Association Web site one finds quite a surprise.
|
|
Contained on the site is a resolution, adopted by the ALA
|
|
Council on July 2, 1997, that resolves: "That the American
|
|
Library Association affirms that the use of filtering
|
|
software by libraries to block access . . . violates the
|
|
Library Bill of Rights." Mr. President, I ask unanimous
|
|
consent that this Resolution be inserted into the Record.
|
|
|
|
So, here we find the true agenda of the American Library
|
|
Association. They represent to the Court that everything is
|
|
O.K., that all we need is blocking software. Then, they turn
|
|
around and implement a policy that says no-way.
|
|
|
|
The words Sen. Coats left out (indicated by the . . .) in his
|
|
reference to the ALA resolution were: "to constitutionally
|
|
protected speech." However, the full text of ALA's July 2
|
|
Resolution on the Use of Filtering Software in Libraries
|
|
(www.ala.org/alaorg/oif/filt_res.html) was appended to his
|
|
remarks.
|
|
|
|
Although no action was taken on this bill before the first
|
|
session adjourned, S. 1482 will carry over to the second session
|
|
beginning January 1998. The issue can be expected to generate
|
|
considerable attention in an election year.
|
|
|
|
TO LOCATE SEN. COATS' BILL AND INTRODUCTORY REMARKS:
|
|
|
|
-Sen. Coats' bill can be found through Thomas at thomas.loc.gov.
|
|
One method is to use the QUICK SEARCH TEXT OF BILLS 105th
|
|
CONGRESS: Search by Bill Number: S. 1482. A free copy will be
|
|
mailed upon request from the Senate Document Room, phone 202/
|
|
224-7860, specify bill S. 1482.
|
|
|
|
-Sen. Coats' introductory remarks are in the Congressional Record
|
|
(November 8, pp. S12146-54). The remarks are also available
|
|
online through Thomas and GPO Access (one interface is GPO Gate
|
|
at the University of California at
|
|
www.gpo.ucop.edu/search/crfld.html). However, Coats' remarks are
|
|
currently grouped electronically with remarks on "Northern
|
|
Ireland/Border Counties Free Trade, Development and Security Act"
|
|
and therefore seem mislabeled.
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
ALAWON is a free, irregular publication of the American Library
|
|
Association Washington Office. To subscribe, send the message:
|
|
subscribe ala-wo [your_firstname] [your_lastname] to listproc
|
|
@ala.org. To unsubscribe, send the message: unsubscribe ala-wo
|
|
to listproc@ala.org. ALAWON archives at http://www.ala.org/
|
|
washoff/alawon. Visit our Web site at
|
|
http://www.alawash.org.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Wed, 19 Nov 1997 05:57:45 -0800
|
|
From: "Meeks, Brock" <Brock.Meeks@MSNBC.COM>
|
|
Subject: File 3--School District "Benches" Cheerleader Site
|
|
|
|
Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
|
|
|
|
>From this weeks WWWashington column at
|
|
http://www.msnbc.com/news/wwwashington.asp
|
|
|
|
|
|
Paranoia Benches Cheerleader Web Site
|
|
|
|
WASHINGTON-Internet paranoia isn't limited to the clueless United
|
|
States Congress. The latest additions to the lineup of the Net
|
|
paranoid are the Owen J. Roberts School district in rural
|
|
Pennsylvania and the newspaper that serves the community of
|
|
Bucktown. The school district, supported by near-sighted
|
|
newspaper editorials, have deemed that Noxema cover girl images
|
|
of cheerleaders at the Owen J. Roberts high school are too much
|
|
of a temptation to an imagined army of Internet perverts.
|
|
Result: the district nixed a request to host the cheerleader web
|
|
site. Reaction: the cheerleaders up a renegade site of their
|
|
own.
|
|
|
|
Later in the story the newspaper is quoted as saying the web site
|
|
is a "dangerous idea" because although a picture is worth a
|
|
thousand words... "[A] picture of a cheerleader on the Internet
|
|
could lead to thousands of words reporting a tragedy if it sets
|
|
off a psychopath who then lives out his violent Internet dreams."
|
|
|
|
No... I'm not making this up.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
|
|
|
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
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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:
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|
|
|
SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
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|
Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
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|
|
|
DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
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|
|
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6436), fax (815-753-6302)
|
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
|
60115, USA.
|
|
|
|
To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
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Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
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(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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------------------------------
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|
|
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #9.88
|
|
************************************
|
|
|