Another even more subtle problem is inline images, can you say that a page with an inline image sourced from a foreign site must obey the foreign jurisdiction. I would assert this is so, because the web surfer's *browser* imports the relevant parts of the page from whatever locations (and jurisdictions) they are in, and displays them as one page.
Inline images are not references -- they are part of the page being retrieved.
<img src="http://www.dcs.ex.ac.uk/~aba/obscura/rsa.gif"> So that the image is *imported* by the *viewer*, and not supplied by www.obscura.
Inlined images are just a convenient way of chunking. The image is imported by the viewer because the server, as part of the base document, told it to do so. You might be able to fool an ignorant court, but it still doesn't change the fact that Lance has a document that in the natural course of operation of the Web, exports crypto. I would advise him to edit the page so it reads Click <A HREF="http://www.dcs.ex.ac.uk/~aba/obscura/rsa.gif">here to see a picture of the shirt. Heck, the very word, "inline" gives it away. /r$