Re: PICS is not censorship
At 03:52 PM 12/8/96 -0800, Lucky Green wrote:
Let's put the question if something like PICS will be mandated aside for the moment. Do you agree that sites that deliberately mislabel their content, will eventually face legal action? If so, then PICS should not be considered truly voluntary.
Self-labeling is useless without regulation and punishment - there's too much incentive to treat the label like a marketing tool. My hunch is that courts will never allow compulsory labeling at the level that most people would want - my bet is that labeling re visual depictions of nudity/sex can be mandated, but that labeling re editorial/political content can't be. (I'm not saying I think a fair reading of the Constitution says that, I'm saying I think that's the compromise that judges will come up with.) And labeling that keeps kids from seeing female breasts but lets them find out about where to get abortions, or how to do their own at home*, or that lets kids see home pages about how it's OK to be gay or a nazi or a nerd or a creationist or a Republican or whatever isn't going to serve the needs of the people who want to impose a strict content-control regime on their kids, or on the net. And while my faith in the judiciary is pretty weak, I just don't think they'll go so far as to say that the Constitution allows the government to force people to put subject labels on their web pages. *(circa 1991, there was a videotape circulating in keep-abortion-legal activist circles which described and showed how to perform an early-term abortion using relatively simple technology (e.g., suction) - I can't seem to remember the medical term for the procedure, but the tape was intended, a la PGP, to make the technology available while it was still legal to discuss it. Someone must have ported this video to Quicktime by now.) Third party labeling/rating is a much superior solution because it allows the labelers to examine data with a mindset compatible with the mindset of the customer, which source-labeling, nor automated filtering, will never do. Here's to hoping that regulators/legislators won't get around to imposing a source-labeling scheme before experience is able to show them that it's neither necessary nor sufficient to reach their goals. -- Greg Broiles | US crypto export control policy in a nutshell: gbroiles@netbox.com | http://www.io.com/~gbroiles | Export jobs, not crypto. |
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Greg Broiles