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FC: Boston Globe says judge should not restrict cphack.exe program
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 28 Mar 2000 00:03:51 -0500
Judge Harrington seemed to refer to this today (talking about what he read
in the papers), so perhaps it had an impact in making him take concerns
over free speech more seriously than he otherwise would have. Certainly
Mattel has argued that there are no free speech aspects to this case.
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/087/editorials/Cyber_censorship+.shtml
Declan,
Thanks for your help on this editorial. Here's a copy, as it run on
Monday:
The World Wide Web has become a cornucopia of free expression. Government
should impose restrictions without a
trial only when the risk of immediate harm is great. Federal Judge Edward
Harrington in Boston should reconsider his
restraining order that forced the removal of material criticizing the
Cyber Patrol filtering program.
Individuals have a right to put Cyber Patrol on their computers. But other
people have a right to criticize the selection of
banned sites, many of which are pornographic but some not, such as Planned
Parenthood. Cyber Patrol argues that two
persons went beyond mere criticism when they posted, on the Internet, code
used to create the program. The judge
needs to decide whether criticism protected by the First Amendment
includes the code or whether its publication is barred
by copyright law.
The two code breakers are from Canada and Sweden and have already removed
the program from the Web in response
to the judge's order.
American sympathizers made copies of the program, and Cyber Patrol is
spreading subpoenas around the Internet to
force these mirror sites to shut down. It sent one to Declan McCullagh,
reporter for the Web magazine Wired News, who
posted links to mirror sites on Politechbot.com, his Web site. He refuses
to reveal the names of people who visited the
mirrors from his site. Compelling him to do so would be a violation of
freedom of the press.
The American Civil Liberties Union will appear before Harrington today to
argue that his temporary order against the
mirror sites should not become a longer lasting injunction.
Cyber Patrol engineers have rewritten their program so that the broken
code will not affect it. And Cyber Patrol has the
ability, through the Internet, to instruct computers with the filter to
prevent visits to sites that post the code breaker.
The code breaker program is doing no harm, even though it is still
available on mirror sites not yet reached by subpoenas.
The judge should let people publish what they want until he holds a trial
on the copyright question. Injunctions should not
be used to stifle speech unless absolutely necessary.
All content herein is © Globe Newspaper Company and may not be republished
without permission. If you have questions or comments
about the archives, please contact us at any time.
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