Re: Freedom and Security
From: angels@wavenet.com (CyberAngels Director : Colin Gabriel Hatcher)
Site security is not at all the only problem. Are you not aware of spams and scams going on all the time? Are you not aware that sexual predators operate in IRC? Or that child pornography is a world wide trading game? Have you never heard of email forgeries or impersonation? What about tthe victims of harassment and hatred who don't know how to deal with it? What about all the people who have never heard of killfiles? Who don't know how to report a problem nor who to report it to? Haven't you ever been mail bombed and wished you could find out who did it?
I find it interesting that Mr. Hacher is claiming spams as a reason for CyberAngel activities. I had sent him several examples of spams, to which he replied with messages showing a distinct lack of knowledge (thinking I could filter out messages from the address - which was a mailing list to which I wish to subscribe, for instance). He then noticed my piece in CuDigest suggesting that spams and other Internet abuse would be something proper for the CyberAngels to be involved with - instead of the censorship they advocate. After noticing this, he wrote me back, told me that spams were not something that they were concerned with - they weren't a _real_ problem like pornography - and legally enjoined me not to send mail to the CyberAngels. (I would thus appreciate someone forwarding this mail to Mr. Hatcher; he is not visibly on the list. In case anyone is wondering, I forwarded _at most_ one copy of each message that I had received via email; I most certainly did not mailbomb him.) As has been previously pointed out, it is not possible for "sexual predators" to commit actual crimes - as opposed to utilizing freedom of speech and freedom of press - over the internet. There are four points that may be made regarding child pornography: A. What is defined as child pornography may vary from place to place. As an example, I believe the pornographic videos involving Traci Lords (who was below the age of 18 when they were made) are legal to posess in most of Europe. This difference is similar to that in ages for statutory rape; Mississipi, for instance has one of 12. (I view this as too low, in case anyone is wondering.) B. Even if something is claimed to be child pornography, it may not actually have involved the use of children. Makeup, plastic surgery, and digital editing are all involved in the creation of such faked child pornography; the latter two are advancing at a rapid rate. While the offering of such as "child pornography" is a variety of fraud if compensation is involved, somehow I doubt the CyberAngels would be much interested in getting someone prosecuted for it. C. As has been pointed out by others, even if actual child pornography is on the Net, it is not in and of itself doing any harm to children. It is the production of actual child pornography that does so. While it may be argued that giving child pornography a market value will encourage its production, two counterarguments may be made to this point. First, much of the sexually explicit images on the net are in violation of copyright; I do not believe that the CyberAngels are trying to get people prosecuted for this. Second, driving a market underground tends to raise prices - look at the Drug War; thus, any reduction in supply due to illegality of the market will simply compensate the producers more. D. As has been pointed out, the use of child pornography is a classic "Horseman" (of the Four). In other words, the CyberAngels are using child pornography as a red herring for their even more objectionable activities.
Maybe you feel like a veterano and can afford to look condesendingly at all the thousands of fresh-faced netizens just arriving online and say "well if they can't take the heat they should stay out of the fire" - but if we are to call ourselves an emerging "community" then we must take responsibility for our city, and that means caring about other people's problems.
I have no objection to the CyberAngels assisting victims of alleged harrasment with such mechanisms as kill files; I have some doubt as to their technical ability in this area. I object, however, to their more proactive activities, such as "patrolling" and soliciting people to make complaints about usages of free speech ("harrassment"). These involve either attempts to cut off someone's Internet access at the ISP's level or, worse, attempts to attract governmental attention. The first may be the right of the ISP, unless it is governmental or has a previous contract agreement stating otherwise; it would still be preferable if others such as the CyberAngels were to learn the basic lesson of "mind your own business." Bringing goverment into the matter may both result in a violation of individual civil liberties and may result in increased governmental control over the Internet. As has been pointed out by others, the Cypherpunks are doing things to help other people on the Internet in areas such as mail forgery/impersonation and mail-bombing. (A properly run anonymous remailer will not forward a mail bomb any more than a properly run post office will.) I sincerely doubt whether the CyberAngels are actually doing anything about these problems as opposed to their fetish of pornography.
When your address is forged and you get flamed and bombed, or if you start receiving anonymous death threats, your freedom is under threat. It's not enough to say "Well I just turn off my monitor"
The Internet is a city - it needs 911 services and it needs Neighborhood Watches. And neither professional law enforcement nor neighborhood watch are by definition a threat to anyone's freedom. Freedom within the context of Community does not and never has meant the freedom to kill your neighbor, or rob someone, or rape someone, or harm someone. In the context of the internet Community too, freedom is not the individual's right to do whatever he or she likes - because then the Community is no longer free.
By definition? Probably not... although it depends on the definition. Some implementations of such activities - such as the CyberAngels and their current and proposed activities - are such. Freedom is the right to do what will not trespass on another's freedom; I defy you to show how having pornography available, including "obscene" material, trespasses on the freedoms of others. I also defy you to show how having fully anonymous remailers available is a violation of anyone's liberties.
Freedom is under threat from two directions - from selfish individuals who care little for the Community, and from the over zealousness of governments who seek greater and greater control over individual thought and action.
The first step is to acknowledge that we have a problem within the Internet Community - because if we don't address it responsibly then we have only ourselves to blame when the governments try to take it over. We can face our problems or we can deny that they exist.
And how, pray tell, will bringing such alleged problems to the attention of government - as has been an activity of the CyberAngels - avoid increased governmental intervention?
By asking me the question: "What crime?" you are indicating to me that you prefer denial.
No. We have a disagreement about what is crime - what is an exercise of individual civil liberties, and what is a violation of them.
"Two people may disagree, but that does not mean that one of them is evil"
That depends on what they disagree. I believe we disagree in ways that include enough fundamental freedoms that calling you evil is proper from my viewpoint. -Allen
Rather than repeat the whole argument, I'd like to point out something:
C. As has been pointed out by others, even if actual child pornography is on the Net, it is not in and of itself doing any harm to children. It is
D. As has been pointed out, the use of child pornography is a classic "Horseman" (of the Four). In other words, the CyberAngels are using child pornography as a red herring for their even more objectionable activities.
to learn the basic lesson of "mind your own business." Bringing goverment into the matter may both result in a violation of individual civil liberties and may result in increased governmental control over the Internet.
The Internet is a city - it needs 911 services and it needs Neighborhood Watches. And neither professional law enforcement nor neighborhood watch are by definition a threat to anyone's freedom. Freedom within the context
Freedom is under threat from two directions - from selfish individuals who care little for the Community, and from the over zealousness of governments who seek greater and greater control over individual thought and action.
The 'threat' is non-existent - it's no longer a threat, but reality. Why do you think that the government was so desperate to slide the CDA through? Folks like the "CyberAngels" are the best friend of an intrusive government - they give them an excuse. While before the CDA the government could read what they liked over the net, they really couldn't do much about it, because if they did, the ACLU and friends would've swooped down like a pack of starving dogs and devoured them alive (not that that would've been a *bad* thing, mind you). Now, there's no excuse, and nothing to stop them - they have the *LAW* on their side. The CDA just makes it legal. The government is actually very interested in the USPS and others providing service over the net, because it makes their jobs a hell of a lot easier. This "child pornography" argument is just a red herring - there has ALWAYS been this type of thing around, and always will be. I notice much is made regarding legislating morality, but nothing is being said about the millions of tons of cocaine and heroin that the government brings in and sells to folks. When people realize that the drug laws and this absurd "war on drugs" is just to drive the competition out of business - well, it's not going to be pretty. And how about the enormous amounts of money made with the child slavery rings? There is a LOT more of that going on than this "child porno" stuff - just ask Interpol. As to the argument that we need cops and such - well, we did just fine for many years self-policing ourselves. The spammer and such was either shouted down with mailbombs or just plain ignored. Now, Suzie Q. gets an account, gets on IRC, and gets messaged by some freshman with no life, gets upset, and suddenly it's a federal case, attendant with the press smelling blood in the water, the morality cops like CyberAngels coming out of the woodwork in an attempt to get press, and the government rubbing their collective hands together, knowing that crap like this is just one more small step towards a police state. I heard someone the other day say "what do you call it when only the police have guns? - a police state!" Made me think. -- Ed Carp, N7EKG Ed.Carp@linux.org, ecarp@netcom.com 214/993-3935 voicemail/digital pager Finger ecarp@netcom.com for PGP 2.5 public key an88744@anon.penet.fi "Past the wounds of childhood, past the fallen dreams and the broken families, through the hurt and the loss and the agony only the night ever hears, is a waiting soul. Patient, permanent, abundant, it opens its infinite heart and asks only one thing of you ... 'Remember who it is you really are.'" -- "Losing Your Mind", Karen Alexander and Rick Boyes The mark of a good conspiracy theory is its untestability. -- Andrew Spring
participants (2)
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E. ALLEN SMITH -
Ed Carp