Children's Privacy Act

Rich Graves llurch at networking.stanford.edu
Fri May 24 03:13:56 PDT 1996


On Thu, 23 May 1996, Timothy C. May wrote:

> We at LolitaWatch GMBH are amused that legislators in the United States are
> attempting to legislate that which can be so easily bypassed with the
> world-wide Internet.
[...]
> Danish laws are not so repressive as American laws, and our American
> friends can so easily access our data bases of information derived from the
> mandatory age-labeling tags you Americans so conveniently (for us) insist
> upon.

Good and valid points about the CPA's hypocrisy and inanity, but this
doesn't really address the bill (was it meant to?). 

CDA + CPA = bad. CDA = bad. CPA is still indeterminate.

I recognize that criminalizing the free flow of information is like trying
to stick your finger in a dike, but every little bit has an effect. In
this case, I'd call it a positive effect. 

I was certainly disappointed to hear a couple of cypherpunks the other day
discussing for-profit offshore data havens full of personal information
that is illegal to collect in the US as a business opportunity *they* were
interested in pursuing. I just can't see myself doing that, for anybody.
Gubmint or private, doesn't matter.

-rich







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