Timothy C. May wrote:
If it's only a contract, and forever only a contract, then I am less worried. But my point is that I fear the purely contractual status will not last.
I completely agree, if the labels, and their format, are mandated, then it is a bad thing.
(And, as I think it was Lucky Green who pointed out, what is to stop people who have _not_ entered into any contract with one of the (several?) PICS agencies from simply claiming a rating? If the PICS folks want to set up a system for digital signatures, compliance testing, etc., fine...so long as non-customers don't have to pay for it. Let the Hallelujah Brigade and the Dervishes subsidize their systems.)
'zactly. Signatures are pretty easy, and DSS is free. Compliance testing I'm not so sure about. They should be able to finance the whole project by suing label forgers :-)
Doubful. I contend that any such approach is bound to fail.
Suppose I describe a picture of adults having sex as "A joyful experience," or "Children need to look at this!"?
There simply is no "factual" description of a page. Every person will have their own descriptions. Mandating that words be "true" is the end of free speech as we know it.
You can label it however you want, Tim. But, most browsers won't recognize these ad-hoc labels, and many people will be blocked from your page. Which is fine, those people have chosen to not see pages that aren't labeled in a way that they understand, and that is as it should be.
Fraud? What happened to free speech? The assumption that there even exist "factual descriptions" (and presumably "false descriptions") is an incredibly pernicious idea, at least as regards free speech.
Again, the only fraud I would recognize would be if you created a label that used the trademark of a labeling company. I completely agree that you should be allowed to describe your page in any way you want, or not at all.
Of course, the most correct and consistent view is to just leave it for a market solution: some label, some don't, some label carelessly, some label anally [no content is implied! :-}), some label deceptively, some label clearly, and so on.
That's a really
Again, my concern is not that some bunch of folks initiate a PICS or SICS or LIKS system, but that it the legal system gets involved...I surmise that many lawmakers are already talking about this--this came up in connection with the CDA case, that a labelling system such as PICS could resolve some of the issues....I hardly expect that a fully voluntary system would meet the demands of the censors.
We'll just have to see about this, won't we. I'm betting that it will work. I think that you'll be able to set up your browser very easily to restrict it to only see the 5% of the pages that happen to be rated (these will be, naturally, from the big companies like Discover, Microsoft, McDonalds, and so on) and these companies will pressure the government to declare the problem solved, as the kids will be funneled to their sites. -- Thaddeus Beier thad@hammerhead.com Visual Effects Supervisor 408) 287-6770 Hammerhead Productions http://www.got.net/people/thad