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Computer underground Digest Sun May 4, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 34
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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, #9.34 (Sun, May 4, 1997)
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File 1--Legal Bytes 5. - CyberLaw Info
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File 2--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996)
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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: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 10:07:58 -0500 (CDT)
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From: pkennedy <pkennedy@IO.COM>
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Subject: File 1--Legal Bytes 5. - CyberLaw Info
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(MODERATORS' NOTE: We originally intended to distribute Legal
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Bytes over several issues, but that would disrupt the articles'
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continuity. Readers might also enjoy seeing what the full issue
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looks like. It's worth subbing to--another great Net resource!!))
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**********************************************
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** LEGAL BYTES **
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**********************************************
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Spring 1997, Volume 5, Number 1
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George, Donaldson & Ford, L.L.P.
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Attorneys at Law
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114 West 7th Street, Suite 1100
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Austin, Texas 78701
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(512) 495-1400
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(512) 499-0094 (Fax)
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gdf@gdf.com
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http://www.gdf.com
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----------
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Copyright 1997, George, Donaldson & Ford, L.L.P.
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(These articles may be re-distributed electronically,
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without editing and with proper attribution)
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----------
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David H. Donaldson, Jr., Publisher, dhdonald@gdf.com
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Peter D. Kennedy, Editor, pkennedy@gdf.com
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----------
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IN THIS ISSUE:
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1. THE SUPREME COURT AND CYBERSPACE --
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THE PENDING COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT CHALLENGES.
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2. OPEN GOVERNMENT AND ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS:
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IS E-MAIL A PUBLIC RECORD ... AND OTHER QUESTIONS.
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3. NBA LOSES FIGHT TO CONTROL "REAL-TIME" SPORTS INFORMATION.
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_________________________________________________________________
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1. THE SUPREME COURT AND CYBERSPACE --
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THE PENDING COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT CHALLENGES
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(This article was first published in Communications Lawyer,
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Vol.14, No.3 (Fall 1996)).
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This year's term will see the Supreme Court's maiden voyage
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into cyberspace. On March 19, 1997, the Court heard oral argument
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in a case dealing with Congress' own first stumbling steps to
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regulate speech on the Internet. Fresh from its trip through the
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wilds of regulating indecency on cable television, in the Denver
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Area Consortium case, 116 S.Ct. 2374 (1996), the members of the
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Court must now define constitutional boundaries in a decentralized,
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anarchic, expanding and ever-changing communications technology
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that no Founding Father could have envisioned. How will the
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Justices fare?
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The Communications Decency Act of 1996.
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Spurred by torrid and exaggerated reports of pervasive on-line
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pornography, Congress drafted, and then grafted onto the
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Telecommunications Act of 1996, the "Communications Decency Act"
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(CDA). A candidly content-based regulation of speech, the CDA
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prohibits transmitting obscenity and child pornography via computer
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communications -- something already illegal under federal and most
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state laws. The CDA ventures further, however, by prohibiting the
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transmission of "patently offensive" and "indecent" material over
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computer networks. Modeled after the "dial-a-porn" laws, the CDA
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sanctions violators with fines and up to two years in prison, but
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provides several "safe harbor" affirmative defenses to prosecution,
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discussed below.
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No one -- not even its defenders -- claims the CDA was
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elegantly or even consistently drafted. Its provisions regarding
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obscene material have so far gone unchallenged; the disputes have
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centered on its regulation of indecency. Two provisions are at
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stake. The first is section 223(a), which prohibits using, or
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knowingly permitting the use of, a telecommunications device to
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knowingly make, create, or solicit any "comment, request,
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suggestion, proposal, image or other communication which is obscene
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or indecent, knowing that the recipient of the communication is
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under 18 years of age." 47 U.S.C. s 223(a)(1)(B) & (2). The CDA
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supplies no definition of "indecent." The second is section
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223(d), which does not use the term "indecent," but prohibits
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using, or knowingly permitting the use of,
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an interactive computer service to display in a manner
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available to a person under 18 years of age, any comment,
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request, suggestion, proposal, image or other communication
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that in context, depicts, or describes, in terms patently
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offensive as measured by contemporary community standards,
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sexual or excretory activities or organs.
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47 U.S.C. s 223(d).
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As anyone who has spent time online knows, Internet
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communications do not easily lend themselves to confirmation of the
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participants' ages. World Wide Web home pages and Usenet
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newsgroups, for example, are generally available to anyone online;
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they neither target communications to subscribers, nor admit to
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easy methods of filtering out minors. On the other hand, unlike
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broadcast communications, most Internet communications are not
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pervasive. A user must take affirmative steps to receive or view
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information (unlike simply turning a radio or television dial),
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thus reducing the risk of inadvertent exposure to material that
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might offend. And most significantly, unlike other mass media,
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online publishing is not concentrated; it is radically
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decentralized, where everyone on the Internet is both audience and
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publisher -- to millions. Content-based regulations that impose
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liability depending on whether material is made "in a manner
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available" to seventeen-year-olds just do not sit well with the
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Internet's structure, nor with most of its denizens.
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The Legal Challenges.
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The Internet culture -- libertarian by nature -- reacted to
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the CDA's passage in predictable fashion. Usenet blistered with
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attacks on Congress and the President, and thousands of World Wide
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Web sites turned their backgrounds black and added blue ribbons in
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protest. The American Civil Liberties Union, initially slow to
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appreciate the Internet, teamed up with the on-line civil liberties
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pioneer, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and sued to enjoin the
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CDA in Philadelphia federal court on February 8, 1996, the very day
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President Clinton signed the bill into law. Eighteen other
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plaintiffs joined the ACLU and EFF in the case, entitled ACLU v.
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Reno. On February 15, District Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter issued
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a temporary injunction restraining enforcement of the indecency
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provision of the Act.[fn.1] Shortly thereafter, the American
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Library Association and twenty-five others filed suit in the same
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court, and their case was consolidated with ACLU v. Reno.[fn.2] On
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the same date that ACLU v. Reno was filed, Joe Shea, the editor and
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publisher of an electronic daily newspaper, filed a separate suit
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in the Southern District of New York (Shea v. Reno).[fn.3]
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Conservative groups such as Morality in Media lined up with the
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Justice Department, and during the Spring of 1996 the Philadelphia
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and New York federal courthouses rang with testimony about Web
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surfing and crawling, Internet search engines and indexes,
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cybersmut, anonymous remailers and blocking software with names
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like "NetNanny" and "SurfWatch."
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Under special provisions for expedited review included in the
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Act, three-judge District Court panels were convened to hear the
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ACLU and Shea cases. In Philadelphia, Judge Buckwalter, joined by
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Third Circuit Chief Judge Dolores K. Sloviter and District Judge
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Stewart Dalzell, heard evidence over a number of days on the ACLU's
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request for a temporary injunction, and ruled on June 11. The
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court's ruling consisted of joint findings of fact and three
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separate opinions, each finding both challenged sections of the CDA
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unconstitutional. All three judges concluded that the CDA
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effectively prohibited constitutionally-protected speech among
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adults, and was not narrowly tailored to justify the government's
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interest in protecting minors from indecent speech. Judges
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Buckwalter and Sloviter additionally concluded that the CDA's use
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of "indecent" and "patently offensive" was inherently vague and
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unconstitutional as well.
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The New York District Court followed suit on July 29, in a
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single opinion written by Second Circuit Judge Jose Cabranes,
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joined by District Judges Leonard Sand and Denise Cote. [fn.4]
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While the New York court did not conclude that the CDA was
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unconstitutionally vague, it agreed that the law's restrictions on
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indecent speech were overly broad, and were not saved by the
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government's attempt to limit the CDA's reach or by its safe harbor
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defenses. The Internet rang with celebration; the CDA's proponents
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declared that the Supreme Court would have the final word, and
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indeed it will.
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The Key Questions Facing the Supreme Court.
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The Supreme Court was almost certain to hear the government's
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appeal, as section 561(a) of the CDA specifically provides for
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expedited review "as a matter of right by direct appeal to the
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Supreme Court." These are the key questions it will likely face.
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1. Is the CDA Void for Vagueness?
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Judge Buckwalter, with Judge Sloviter joining, concluded that
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the CDA's definition of the speech at issue was too vague to
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enforce, particularly with criminal sanctions. Judge Buckwalter
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was skeptical of the government's claim that section 223(a)'s
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"patently offensive" language meant the same thing as section
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223(d)'s undefined use of "indecent," but even assuming they did,
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he concluded that this still left the regulated speech too poorly
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defined to be subject to criminal penalties under the Act. In FCC
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v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978), the Supreme Court had
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found the application of the FCC's indecency definition to George
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Carlin's seven dirty words routine constitutional. Judge
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Buckwalter distinguished Pacifica by noting that the Court had not
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considered a facial challenge to the FCC's definition of indecency.
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Is it likely that the Supreme Court will reject the similar
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definition of proscripted material in section 223(d) of the CDA?
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The New York District Court in Shea v. Reno ruled that the CDA
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was not unconstitutionally vague. Unlike the judges in ACLU v.
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Reno, Judge Cabranes had access to the Supreme Court's June 28
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ruling in Denver Area Consortium, where the justices struggled with
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the constitutionality of, among other things, the Cable Television
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Consumer Protection and Competition Act's regulation of indecent
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programming. While the Court did not produce a majority in that
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case, Justice Breyer's plurality opinion (joined by Justices
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Stevens, O'Connor and Souter) rejected an argument that the Cable
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Act's regulation of "patently offensive" materials was
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unconstitutionally vague. The other justices did not discuss
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vagueness, and even the plurality decision does not foreclose the
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issue, as the CDA carries criminal prohibitions -- which require
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the greatest definitional precision -- while the Cable Act's
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regulations only determined what material cable companies could
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keep off their leased access channels.
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2. What Level of Scrutiny Applies in Cyberspace?
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Whether an enactment is subject to "strict," "intermediate" or
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"rationality" review often predetermines its fate. Content-based
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regulations of speech are ordinarily subject to close scrutiny by
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the Court, but this has sometimes varied depending on the nature of
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the medium. Could the nature of the Internet permit a lower
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standard of review? The Justice Department at first appeared to
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think so, initially asserting in ACLU v. Reno that an
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intermediate-level scrutiny applied, similar to the standard used
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to evaluate indecency regulation of broadcast media in FCC v.
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Pacifica Foundation. Eventually, however, the government
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apparently did not contest that a stricter scrutiny along the lines
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of Sable Communications v. FCC, 492 U.S. 115 (1989), was
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appropriate, requiring proof that the regulations are narrowly
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tailored to advance a compelling governmental interest, and that
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was the standard applied in ACLU v. Reno.7 In Shea v. Reno, the
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court "easily" concluded that strict scrutiny under Sable
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Communications applied to regulation of the Internet.8
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It seems likely that some form of "strict" scrutiny will
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apply, although the exact formulation of the standard may be
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subject to debate. In Denver Area Consortium, a clear majority
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applied a strict standard to the FCC's indecency regulations, but
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did not settle on a particular formulation of that standard.
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Justice Breyer's plurality concluded that the regulations
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permitting cable operators to prohibit indecent material on public
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access channels failed to "satisfy this Court's formulations of the
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First Amendment's `strictest,' as well as its somewhat less
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`strict,' requirements." Justice Kennedy, joined by Justice
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Ginsburg, concluded that "at a minimum" the proper standard of
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review was "strict scrutiny," and expressed fear about setting
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adrift from recognized standards of review:
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When confronted with a threat to free speech in the context of
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an emerging technology, we ought to have the discipline to analyze
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the case by reference to existing elaborations of constant First
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Amendment principles. This is the essence of the case-by-case
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approach to ensuring protection of speech under the First
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Amendment, even in novel settings. The CDA rulings may provide the
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Court the opportunity to define, or retreat from, the common
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understanding that Pacifica and Turner Broadcasting System Inc. v.
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FCC indicate that the standard of review in content-based
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regulations depends upon the nature of the underlying technology.
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What relevance will such a rule have, anyway, in ten or even five
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years down the road, as meaningful distinctions between
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"broadcast," "cable" and "the Internet" become harder and harder to
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draw?
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3. What Is the Compelling Government Interest?
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Neither the challengers nor the three-judge panels questioned
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that the government had a compelling interest in keeping
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pornography away from minors; Judge Buckwalter did question,
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however, whether there was a compelling governmental interest in
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protecting minors from much of the material that falls within the
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corners of the CDA's prohibitions - such as graphic AIDS prevention
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education, news reports on genital mutilation or artistic but
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graphic portrayals of sexual topics. The Shea court treated
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essentially the same issue under its general "substantial
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overbreadth" analysis, and agreed that a compelling interest could
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be shown in restricting the distribution of at least some of the
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material prohibited by the CDA.
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4. Is the CDA Narrowly Tailored?
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Much of the evidence before the three-judge panels concerned
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the likely impact of the CDA on Internet communications. While the
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Justice Department argued that the CDA did not effect a "ban" on
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indecent communications between consenting adults, substantial
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evidence supported the challengers' contention that significant
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amounts of constitutionally-protected speech would evaporate from
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the Internet on account of the CDA. Judge Sloviter concluded that
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A wealth of persuasive evidence ... provided that it is either
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technologically impossible or economically prohibitive for many of
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the plaintiffs to comply with the CDA without seriously impeding
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their posting of online material which adults have a constitutional
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right to access. ... If it is not feasible for speakers who
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communicate via these forms of communication to conduct age
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screening, they would have to reduce the level of communication to
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that which is appropriate for children in order to be protected
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under the statute. The ACLU v. Reno court's factual findings about
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the nature of on-line communications, and the potential effect on
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those communications by the CDA, are particularly detailed.14
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The Justice Department attempted to minimize the CDA's impact,
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and defend its "narrow tailoring" on several grounds. The
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government first argued, relying on Congressional reports, that the
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CDA's scope was only meant to reach "commercial pornographers."
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None of the judges accepted this argument, as the CDA's language
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contains no such restrictions. Next, the government argued that
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the CDA only applied to material that met the legal definition of
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obscenity, which can be banned. The court declined the suggested
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judicial narrowing of the CDA's based on its language: the Act
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refers to both obscene and indecent material, and so the words
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cannot logically be read to have the same meaning, and the Act's
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"patently offensive" provision did not include two of the three
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essential elements of obscenity the obscenity test -- appeal to
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prurient interest and lack of serious artistic, literary, political
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and scientific value.
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Aside from these attempts at interpretive narrowing, the
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government's chief position was that two statutory defenses found
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in section 223(e) saved the CDA from constitutional infirmity.
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Section 223(e)(5)(A) provides a defense for those who, "in good
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faith," take "reasonable, effective, and appropriate actions under
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the circumstances," including any steps "feasible under available
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technology" to prevent minors' access to communications regulated
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by the CDA. Section 223(e)(5)(B) provides a defense for those who
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employ age-verification through use of a verified credit card,
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debit account, adult access code, or adult identification number.
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Neither the ACLU v. Reno nor the Shea v. Reno court found
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these defenses compelling; both concluded that substantial amounts
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of constitutionally-protected speech would remain subject to
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prosecution, even when the defenses applied. Judge Dalzell noted
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that while age-verification might be effective on the World Wide
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Web, such verification simply is not available for many unique ways
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of communicating on the Internet, such as Usenet newsgroups or
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bulletin boards, IRC ("chat") discussion channels, mail exploders
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and mailing lists. Judge Buckwalter emphasized the wide latitude
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the CDA's language would give prosecutors, and that the potential
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availability to some of affirmative defenses would not preclude
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prosecution. Both courts likewise concluded that other possible
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technological methods of screening information or recipients would
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be too unreliable, costly, or burdensome.
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Interestingly, both sides argued to some degree that the
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Internet would develop technology that would solve the other side's
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objections. The plaintiffs pointed out the burgeoning market in
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screening software for the audience, such as "NetNanny" and
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"SurfWatch." This software empowers parents to screen out Web
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sites and newsgroups from their children's access, without
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restricting their own (or others') access. While these software
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blockers may be imperfect, because they are always trying to keep
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up with new Internet sites with adult material, they do not
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restrict the ability of adults to reach each other with indecent,
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but constitutionally-protected, speech.
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The government stressed the development of speaker screening
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technology, including adult-registration procedures for Web sites,
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segregation of material into restricted directories, and
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yet-to-be-implemented "tagging" technology, which like the
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controversial "V-Chip," would enable those publishing "indecent"
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speech to implant codes in their communications. Sites and
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communications with such codes could be made inaccessible to
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minors.
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Can Developing Technology Save an Otherwise Unconstitutional
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Content-Based Law?
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At this stage, anyway, the Internet's own decentralized,
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anarchic structure has helped defeat the attempts to regulate it.
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Government regulations of on-line speech are particularly intrusive
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now, because the current methods of on-line communication do not
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lend themselves to identifying and targeting particular audiences.
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The state of current technology therefore helps protect freedom of
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speech on the Internet. As John Gilmore's famous quote says, "the
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Internet interprets censorship as damage and routes around it."
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But will a technology-grounded attack on government regulation
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invite a technology-based defense of those regulations? Soon after
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the ACLU v. Reno decision, CDA proponent Bruce Taylor of the
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National Law Center for Children and Families was confidently
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predicting that new and better software would reduce the cost of
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self-censorship to the point where the CDA (or its successor) would
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survive constitutional scrutiny -- an argument the three-judge
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panel's focus on technology may have invited.18 Is the Court
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entering an arena where the technology might permit more
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restrictions on speech?
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The Supreme Court ought to be bound by the record before it --
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a record that strongly supports the extensive impact on free debate
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the CDA would have on the Internet. But does a legal analysis that
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turns too finely on the nature of particular technology foretell a
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forever-evolving challenge to laws restricting free speech? Could
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a censorship law that is unconstitutional today become permissible
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as technology provides ways to more finely target "indecent"
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speech? Wouldn't this diminish the greatest benefit of the
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Internet: the ability of everyone, not just the wealthy or
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sophisticated, to reach a mass audience? Wouldn't it be ironic if
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continued technical developments became the reason for regulating
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the explosion of "robust, wide open debate" that the Internet's
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technology has itself spawned?
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As the Supreme Court surfs into cyberspace this Fall, it will
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do well to keep Justice Souter's advice in Denver Consortium in
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mind -- advice contained in a passage that easily could have been
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written about the Internet:
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I cannot guess how much time will go by until the technologies
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of communication before us today have matured and their
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relationships become known. But until a category of indecency
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can be defined both with reference to the new technology and
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with a prospect of durability, the job of the courts will be
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just what Justice Breyer does today: recognizing established
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First Amendment interests through a close analysis that
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constrains the Congress, without wholly incapacitating it in
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all matters of the significance apparent here, maintaining the
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high value of open communication, measuring the costs of
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regulation by exact attention to fact, and compiling a
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pedigree of experience with the changing subject. These are
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familiar judicial responsibilities in times when we know too
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|
little to risk the finality of precision, and attention to
|
|
them will probably take us through the communications
|
|
revolution. Maybe the judicial obligation to shoulder these
|
|
responsibilities can itself be captured by a much older rule,
|
|
familiar to every doctor of medicine, "First, do no harm."
|
|
|
|
Footnote 1: American Civil Liberties Union v. Reno, No. 96-963, 24
|
|
Media Law Rep. 1379, 1996 Westlaw 65464 (E.D. Pa. February 15,
|
|
1996).
|
|
Footnote 2: American Library Association v. U.S. Department of
|
|
Justice, No. 96-1458 (E.D. Pa.).
|
|
Footnote 3: Shea v. Reno, No. 96 Civ. 0976 (S.D.N.Y.).
|
|
Footnote 4: Shea v. Reno, 930 F. Supp. 916 (S.D.N.Y. 1996).
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
2. OPEN GOVERNMENT AND ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS:
|
|
IS E-MAIL A PUBLIC RECORD? ... AND OTHER QUESTIONS.
|
|
|
|
The federal government and every state has some form of open
|
|
records and open meetings law. These "government in the sunshine"
|
|
acts generally provide for three things: (1) they declare what
|
|
government records are open to public inspection and copying; (2)
|
|
they require public documents to be retained under a schedule; and
|
|
(3) they require government agencies to meet publicly, with prior
|
|
notice, rather than unannounced or behind closed doors.
|
|
|
|
Although we in the United States have had a long tradition of
|
|
open government, these sunshine statutes are relatively new, and
|
|
have been the subject of many hard legal fights. There is a
|
|
tension between the need to keep our public officials accountable
|
|
and the need to protect the privacy of some information in
|
|
government hands, particularly information about private citizens.
|
|
There is also the less legitimate desire of public officials to
|
|
work without the oversight and the inconvenience that come with
|
|
holding public meetings and disclosing records and information to
|
|
the public. These conflicting interests are still being worked out
|
|
in court decisions and in rulings by state attorneys general (who
|
|
are often charged with making the initial interpretation of a
|
|
state's open government laws).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Even as the contours of sunshine statutes continue to be
|
|
hammered out, changing technology has added a new twist: how to
|
|
deal with the advent of computerized records and electronic
|
|
communications. The widespread use of computers in government
|
|
offices raises new, interesting questions in all three core areas
|
|
of open government laws: public records, record retention and open
|
|
meetings. For instance:
|
|
|
|
Is Government Employee E-mail Really a Public Record?
|
|
|
|
Most open records laws define "public" documents very broadly.
|
|
|
|
Texas' provision, for example, is not atypical and declares
|
|
"information that is collected, assembled, or maintained under a
|
|
law or ordinance or in connection with the transaction of official
|
|
business" to be public information. Tex. Govt. Code s 552.002(a).
|
|
While the law provides for many exceptions, whether a document is
|
|
exempt from disclosure turns on its content, not its form; the
|
|
medium doesn't matter. Public information can be stored on paper,
|
|
or on "a magnetic, optical, or solid state device that can store an
|
|
electronic signal." Tex. Gov. Code s 552.002(b). Even if public
|
|
information is stored only in electronic form, it is still an open
|
|
record.
|
|
|
|
If electronic records can be public information, what keeps
|
|
e-mail between government employees from becoming "public
|
|
information"? Nothing, so long as the communication is the type
|
|
that would be subject to the open government laws if it was on
|
|
paper. Unlike the phone call that is not recorded, e-mail always
|
|
creates at least one electronic record on the mail server, often
|
|
more than one if there are intermediate servers, or the sender or
|
|
recipient keep copies. Although Texas has seen no official ruling
|
|
declaring government e-mail to be public, under its law the
|
|
conclusion seems inescapable that when a government employee's
|
|
e-mail relates to the "transaction of official business," it is
|
|
public information unless covered by one of the law's exemptions.
|
|
|
|
In Florida, this question was decided way back in 1989 --
|
|
ancient history, relatively speaking. A county commission was
|
|
computerizing its operation, and asked whether computer records and
|
|
e-mail between commissioners would be subject to the state's
|
|
government in the sunshine laws. The Florida Attorney General,
|
|
undoubtedly correctly, responded that computer-stored documents are
|
|
public and that electronic communications between public officials
|
|
would be subject to that state's open records laws. See 1980 Fla.
|
|
Op. Gen. 101, AGO 89-39.
|
|
|
|
While personal e-mail of government employees may not be
|
|
covered by the open records laws, e-mail reflecting official
|
|
business may well be, which is a good reason to be familiar with
|
|
your state's laws and to be careful what you "say" when dashing off
|
|
those quick electronic notes.
|
|
|
|
How Long Do We Have to Keep the Records?
|
|
|
|
Along with making public records available for inspection and
|
|
copying, government agencies also have to concern themselves with
|
|
maintaining public records. For instance, in Texas the Public
|
|
Information Act requires government agencies to determine a time
|
|
for keeping records, and to maintain document retention schedules.
|
|
Although it might take some work and space, maintaining paper files
|
|
is a fairly simple matter.
|
|
|
|
However, when it comes to electronically-stored documents, new
|
|
issues arise. The Texas act does not make exception for
|
|
electronically-stored records, so each agency responsible for
|
|
retaining and destroying public documents should consider reviewing
|
|
its treatment of stored computer data. Where are its records kept?
|
|
|
|
Are electronic documents stored for the requisite period of time?
|
|
Does the agency's document retention schedule deal with electronic
|
|
documents? Who makes sure (and who's going to answer for complying
|
|
with the law)? When requesting public information from an agency,
|
|
don't forget to ask for -- and insist upon -- a review of
|
|
electronic document storage as well as paper.
|
|
Why Can't the School Board Meet in a Chat Room?
|
|
|
|
Sunshine is a disinfectant -- for governments as well as
|
|
wounds. Another open government battleground are open meetings
|
|
acts: legal requirements that public business be transacted in
|
|
public meetings, with an agenda posted publicly some time prior to
|
|
the meeting. Typically, an open meetings statute prohibits a quorum
|
|
of a decision-making body from discussing policy outside a public
|
|
meeting and without prior notice of that meeting. Some officials
|
|
consider these requirements to be cumbersome, and the effect of a
|
|
violation can be drastic, resulting in the nullification of
|
|
business conducted, and even criminal penalties. As a result, open
|
|
meetings laws are strewn with clever attempts to conduct business
|
|
without complying with the laws..
|
|
|
|
All sorts of short-cuts have been tried to avoid a "meeting"
|
|
that might invoke the act's requirements: circulating memos;
|
|
round-robin discussions between individual government
|
|
representatives without a quorum ever being present at one time;
|
|
conference calls, and down the line. Generally, the courts and
|
|
attorneys general have spotted these tactics for what they are, and
|
|
held them to be violations of the open meetings laws.
|
|
As with government records, computers present a new issue and a new
|
|
temptation: does a government body "meet" under an open meetings
|
|
act when its members communicate by computer -- whether by e-mail
|
|
communications, postings on bulletin boards, or even through live
|
|
chat? Why should the members of a school board physically get
|
|
together when they can set up a chat room on America Online to
|
|
conduct business? Because it is probably illegal in most states.
|
|
|
|
Texas' Open Meetings Act would clearly prohibit a quorum of a
|
|
government body from discussing public business by computer,
|
|
because that discussion would not be "open to the public." In
|
|
fact, after the Texas Attorney General ruled that telephone
|
|
conference call meetings would violate the Open Meetings Act, it
|
|
required a special amendment to permit such meetings, and they
|
|
remain limited to emergencies. Florida's prescient Attorney
|
|
General in 1989 came to the same conclusion about computers,
|
|
declaring that electronic communications between commissioners
|
|
would be subject to that state's open meetings act, effectively
|
|
prohibiting a quorum from discussing official business on-line.
|
|
See 1980 Fla. Op. Gen. 101, AGO 89-39.
|
|
|
|
Even for computerphiles, this should not be thought of as a
|
|
bad thing. A public body "meeting" by computer raises the same
|
|
objections as "meeting" by conference call, and more: e-mail
|
|
leaves the public entirely out of the loop, and avoids the true
|
|
deliberation that our government bodies are supposed to be engaging
|
|
in. Even when a chat room is open, the public cannot easily attend
|
|
a "virtual meeting," and those without the technology or the
|
|
know-how of course are entirely left out. The deliberative process
|
|
and face-to-face contact is lost.
|
|
|
|
Computers are a terrific supplement to providing public access
|
|
to government information, and promise a similar advantage to
|
|
public participation in the democratic process. But they can't
|
|
supplant face-to-face deliberation, and most citizens still do not
|
|
have computers or on-line access. In the meantime -- and perhaps
|
|
forever -- all government agencies will have to concern themselves
|
|
both with paper and with electrons, and make sure that the
|
|
government does not become less open and responsive as it becomes
|
|
more efficient by using new technologies.
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
3. NBA LOSES FIGHT TO CONTROL "REAL-TIME" SPORTS INFORMATION.
|
|
|
|
Last issue, we reported on a startling legal ruling from the
|
|
federal court in New York City: the National Basketball
|
|
Association "owned" the "essence" of its professional basketball
|
|
games, and could prohibit the unauthorized publishing of
|
|
"real-time" basketball scores and statistics by others -- even
|
|
though that information cannot be copyrighted, and even though the
|
|
games were being broadcast live on television and radio. See It's
|
|
All in the Game: Who Owns "Real-Time" Sports Information?, Legal
|
|
Bytes Vol. 4, No. 2. The ruling startled many legal observers who
|
|
saw it as significantly expanding a narrow state law prohibition
|
|
against unfair competition. The NBA used the ruling to prohibit a
|
|
small company called STATS from contracting with Motorola to
|
|
provide real-time NBA game statistics through a pager system -- at
|
|
least without a paid license from the NBA.
|
|
|
|
The court's legal ruling raised some troubling questions: If
|
|
sports statistics cannot be copyrighted, as the NBA admitted, why
|
|
didn't the U.S. Copyright Act pre-empt and preclude a state-law
|
|
claim for "copying" of that information? How could the NBA control
|
|
the distribution of public information, which is almost universally
|
|
considered to be free to anyone who can put it to use? Why was the
|
|
considerable energy that STATS and Motorola put into compiling and
|
|
distributing the NBA statistics discounted? And what would be the
|
|
scope of this new intellectual property right, if it was indeed
|
|
there was a new right to own the "essence" of a live performance?
|
|
|
|
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals answered a number of these
|
|
questions on January 30, 1997, when it reversed the trial court
|
|
injunction. On appeal, the NBA lost, decisively. The Second
|
|
Circuit freed STATS to continue its pager service and to re-open
|
|
its "real-time" sports information site on America Online, and
|
|
wrote an opinion that is likely to set the pace in similar battles
|
|
over the ownership of valuable information.
|
|
|
|
First, the Court agreed with the trial judge that the NBA
|
|
games themselves could not be copyrighted under federal law. No
|
|
court has ever held otherwise, and the Second Circuit firmly held
|
|
that live, unrehearsed and participatory events like a basketball
|
|
game are not "works" that are "authored" under the Copyright Act.
|
|
The Court saw less legal significance in this conclusion than did
|
|
the trial judge, though. While Judge Preska had held that because
|
|
the games could not be copyrighted the Copyright Act did not
|
|
preclude New York law from stepping in to protect the
|
|
uncopyrightable "essence" of the game, the Court of Appeals
|
|
concluded that the Copyright Act still pre-empted state law
|
|
because, as applied to STATS, the interest that the New York
|
|
"unfair competition" law was protecting was the same as that
|
|
covered by the Copyright Act. Because the Copyright Act is
|
|
exclusive, state law protection is preempted: for those elements
|
|
of a sports contest - like statistics - that cannot be copyrighted,
|
|
there is no legal protection at all.
|
|
|
|
Or perhaps not quite none. The Second Circuit carefully left
|
|
room in New York law to prohibit the appropriation of "hot news."
|
|
Constrained to do so by the U.S. Supreme Court's 1918 ruling in
|
|
International News Service v. Associated Press, the Second Circuit
|
|
held that state law was not pre-empted under the Copyright Act, and
|
|
could be violated when (1) a person gathers or generates
|
|
information at a cost; (2) the information is time-sensitive; (3)
|
|
another person uses that information by "free riding" the first
|
|
person's efforts; (4) the second user is in direct competition with
|
|
the first; and (5) the ability of others to "free ride" on the
|
|
first person's efforts would "so reduce the incentive to produce
|
|
the product or service that its existence or quality would be
|
|
substantially threatened."
|
|
|
|
This limitation to New York's unfair competition law doomed
|
|
the NBA, but saved the Associated Press, which depends upon the old
|
|
INS v. AP decision to keep competitors from simply re-writing and
|
|
re-selling its news stories. The Court held that, unlike a
|
|
competing "hot news" service, STATS was not competing directly with
|
|
the NBA's live games, it was not providing a substitute for NBA
|
|
games live, and was not going to threaten the existence of the NBA
|
|
or reduce the NBA's incentive to continue to sponsor professional
|
|
basketball.
|
|
|
|
The Court's ruling now opens the field for competition in
|
|
providing "real-time" sports information, but leaves some lingering
|
|
questions. How far can a service go in reproducing the "facts" of
|
|
a live basketball game? Can the service show a court, and players
|
|
moving on the court, even simulating plays? Can the service use
|
|
"avatars" to represent the players? At some point, won't the
|
|
evolving technology allow for a product that in fact does compete
|
|
with the experience of watching a game? And would the STATS ruling
|
|
have been different if the sport at issue were baseball instead of
|
|
basketball, where statistics and strategy are a far bigger portion
|
|
of the enjoyment of the game?
|
|
|
|
=================================================================
|
|
ABOUT THIS NEWSLETTER
|
|
|
|
LEGAL BYTES is a service to the public. These articles are
|
|
summaries and brief discussions of current legal issues. They are
|
|
not exhaustive discussions of the topics, and by their nature
|
|
should not be relied upon as legal advice or used as a basis for
|
|
reaching a conclusion. If you have ideas or topics you would like
|
|
to see discussed in LEGAL BYTES, drop us a line.
|
|
|
|
All current and back issues of Legal Bytes are available at
|
|
George, Donaldson & Ford, LLP's home page at
|
|
http://www.gdf.com/lbytes.htm
|
|
|
|
For an electronic subscription to Legal Bytes:
|
|
|
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Send an e-mail to legal-bytes-Request@io.com and include the
|
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words "subscribe legal-bytes" in the _body_ of the message.
|
|
|
|
ABOUT GEORGE, DONALDSON & FORD, L.L.P.
|
|
|
|
George, Donaldson & Ford, L.L.P., is a Texas registered
|
|
limited liability partnership litigating and counseling clients in
|
|
a broad range of practice areas, including general business
|
|
litigation, intellectual property, trade secret, libel, invasion of
|
|
privacy, media and constitutional law.
|
|
|
|
Renea Hicks is Board Certified, Civil Appellate Law -- Texas
|
|
Board of Legal Specialization. All other attorneys in George,
|
|
Donaldson & Ford, L.L.P., are Not Certified by the Texas Board of
|
|
Legal Specialization.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Thu, 15 Dec 1996 22:51:01 CST
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 2--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996)
|
|
|
|
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
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|
|
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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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|
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The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
|
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or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
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60115, USA.
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|
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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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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
|
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LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
|
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|
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
|
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On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
|
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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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------------------------------
|
|
|
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #9.34
|
|
************************************
|
|
|