Fwd: IT: CIPA struck down! (and Seth Finkelstein's reports!)
Seth Finkelstein
sethf at sethf.com
Fri May 31 11:11:15 EDT 2002
Date: Fri, 31 May 2002 10:41:18 -0400
From: Seth Finkelstein <sethf at sethf.com>
To: Seth Finkelstein's InfoThought list
Subject: IT: Federal censorware law down! (and Seth Finkelstein's reports!)
The "CIPA" law, which involved linking Federal library funding
to censorware for everyone, has been struck down by a Federal court.
A news report is at: http://www.msnbc.com/news/759858.asp?cp1=1
The text of the decision is available at
http://www.paed.uscourts.gov/us03011.shtml
I'm ecstatic that the court seems to have used my
anticensorware work as one factor in its decision, in passages
such as these:
"Another technique that filtering companies use in order to deal with a
structural feature of the Internet is blocking the root level URLs of
so-called "loophole" Web sites. These are Web sites that provide
access to a particular Web page, but display in the user's browser a
URL that is different from the URL with which the particular page is
usually associated. Because of this feature, they provide a "loophole"
that can be used to get around filtering software, i.e., they display
a URL that is different from the one that appears on the filtering
company's control list. "Loophole" Web sites include caches of Web
pages that have been removed from their original location,
"anonymizer" sites, and translation sites.
Caches are archived copies that some search engines, such as Google,
keep of the Web pages they index. The cached copy stored by Google
will have a URL that is different from the original URL. Because Web
sites often change rapidly, caches are the only way to access pages
that have been taken down, revised, or have changed their URLs for
some reason. For example, a magazine might place its current stories
under a given URL, and replace them monthly with new stories. If a
user wanted to find an article published six months ago, he or she
would be unable to access it if not for Google's cached version.
Some sites on the Web serve as a proxy or intermediary between a user
and another Web page. When using a proxy server, a user does not
access the page from its original URL, but rather from the URL of the
proxy server. One type of proxy service is an "anonymizer." Users may
access Web sites indirectly via an anonymizer when they do not want
the Web site they are visiting to be able to determine the IP address
from which they are accessing the site, or to leave "cookies" on their
browser.(8) Some proxy servers can be used to attempt to translate Web
page content from one language to another. Rather than directly
accessing the original Web page in its original language, users can
instead indirectly access the page via a proxy server offering
translation features.
As noted above, filtering companies often block loophole sites, such
as caches, anonymizers, and translation sites. The practice of
blocking loophole sites necessarily results in a significant amount of
overblocking, because the vast majority of the pages that are cached,
for example, do not contain content that would match a filtering
company's category definitions. Filters that do not block these
loophole sites, however, may enable users to access any URL on the Web
via the loophole site, thus resulting in substantial underblocking."
This is an aspect which I've been trying to get into the
censorware debate for ages. I'm overjoyed that the court heard, they
got it, they listened, and it helped strike down Federal censorware law!
These are the reports which seem to have made a difference in the above:
BESS's Secret LOOPHOLE: (censorware vs. privacy & anonymity) - a
secret category of BESS (N2H2), and more about why censorware must
blacklist privacy, anonymity, and translators
http://sethf.com/anticensorware/bess/loophole.php
BESS vs The Google Search Engine (Cache, Groups, Images) -
BESS bans cached web pages, passes porn in groups, and considers all
image searching to be pornography.
http://sethf.com/anticensorware/bess/google.php
SmartFilter's Greatest Evils - why censorware must blacklist
privacy, anonymity, and language translators
http://sethf.com/anticensorware/smartfilter/greatestevils.php
The Pre-Slipped Slope - censorware vs the Wayback Machine web archive -
The logic of censorware programs suppressing an enormous digital library.
http://sethf.com/anticensorware/general/slip.php
--
Seth Finkelstein Consulting Programmer sethf at sethf.com http://sethf.com
Anticensorware Investigations: http://sethf.com/anticensorware/
Seth Finkelstein's Infothought list - http://sethf.com/infothought/
http://www.nytimes.com/2001/07/19/technology/circuits/19HACK.html
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