John, I missed where I might have been advocating censorship... maybe it's so late at night that my logic filter is getting fuzzy... Of course one can't see the content of an encrypted anonymised message, but the case I'm concerned with here is where someone receives an encrypted threat message or some such, and wants it traced. In that case there ought to be some means. I'm speaking from recent experience, having received what the Berkeley PD considered a credible death threat on my answering machine last week... Okay, maybe your point hinges on the "advocating violent acts" item. Well this is a pretty tight issue: hard to differentiate between someone advocating insurrection, advocating race war, and advocating going out in your own neighborhood and killing (whoever). Either way it is advocacy of violence against someone. And I honestly don't have a simple answer to that one. The main point I was trying to go for is pretty unambiguous, that direct threats of violent actions are much more significant than for instance advocacy of committing some victimless crime or another... but that's a dull-obvious one compared to the advocating violence item. Somehow I believe we're going to need to consider the threats & violence questions sooner or later, if for no other reason than to have some solutions at hand when it happens and people start clamoring for restrictions on public access to crypto and anonymity. (jeez my writing is a mess at this hour!) -gg
George A. Gleason <gg@well.sf.ca.us> writes:
John, I missed where I might have been advocating censorship...
[...]
Okay, maybe your point hinges on the "advocating violent acts" item. Well this is a pretty tight issue: hard to differentiate between someone advocating insurrection, advocating race war, and advocating going out in your own neighborhood and killing (whoever). Either way it is advocacy of violence against someone. [...]
In the U.S. at least, there is nothing illegal about advocating race war or violence against groups and classifications of members of society. What is illegal is inciting others to violent acts against a specific person or target. Saying "Kill all WASPs!" is not illegal, but saying "Kill John Doe!" could get you arrested. You are treading a thin line (and I would say have passed onto the wrong side....) if you begin establishing policy such that a particular group or set of beliefs is denied access without justification, but just because "they are X." If you try to censor the communications of those who you despise then you are no better than they are... jim
participants (2)
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George A. Gleason
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mccoy@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu