
At 12:48 PM 5/6/96 -0700, you wrote:
PICS *doesn't*involve*the*page*designer*. this is an absolutely key component of its design.
This isn't exactly true (as you indicate later). PICS labels can be incorporated into the html <meta> tag by the content creator, it can be sent by way of the http server (using the 'get') or it can be collected from a third party label bureau.
I think is going to be far from the main use of ratings in the future)
However, self rating will be a significant use in the future, and it is the only way PICS is being used effectively today (at RSAC).
may be made by different organizations. they may be contradictory. this is a basic part of the design of PICS.
True.
2. everything in cyberspace must be rated by government agency X, and no pages are allowed to be transferred that do not have acceptable ratings.
the second is censorship. the first is free choice. the first is what PICS aims for. notice it accomplishes this through absolutely no action on the part of page designers. by the fact that they have a URL, the PICS standard uses that URL as a reference.
Two may be quite successfully accomplished using PICS. Europe (Germany and Nazis) and China/Singapore could make quite effective use of PICS if they require that all browsers in their country be sold with their rating (censorship) system included (and if they mandate that government label bureaus _must_ be used.) The reason self-rating is mentioned is to forestall the fear of mandated/arbitrary third party rating. Rather than some MPAA like system being imposed by the govt., the self-rating was a better political/strategic position. Also, self rating scales well until third party label bureaus are sufficiently developed. _______________________ Regards, Men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues, and can moderate their desires more than their words. -Spinoza Joseph Reagle http://farnsworth.mit.edu/~reagle/home.html reagle@mit.edu E0 D5 B2 05 B6 12 DA 65 BE 4D E3 C1 6A 66 25 4E