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                Date: 1998-04-16
                 
                 
                GILC-Alert: Die Kyber/Welt im Ueberblick
                
                 
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      q/depesche 98.4.16 
 
GILC-Alert: Die Kyber/Welt im Ueberblick 
 
Es ist ein garstig und ein schönes Bild zugleich, das dieser 
Überblick von Kontinenten fünf vermittelt: Zensurversuche 
allüberall durch Paragraphen oder Filtersoftware. 
Aber auch wie man mit klugen Klagen & obersten Gerichtshöfen so 
manchen besonders dreisten Zensur/Gesetzvorschlag einer 
Abschiessung zuführt...  
  
GILC-Alert wird von der American Civil Liberties' Union für die 
Global Internet Liberty Campaign produziert. 
 
  
 
 
[A] FOREMOST NEWS 
[A1] GILC Issues Statement at OECD Meeting 
[B] ROUNDUP OF GLOBAL INTERNET ISSUES 
[B1] Africa/Middle East 
[B1.1] Israel Debates Internet Censorship 
[B1.2] Algeria Freedom Fighter Continues Fight on Internet 
[B2] Asia/Oceania 
[B2.1] India and Telephony 
[B3] Europe 
[B3.1] Report: European Union Set to Reject Key Escrow for 
Cryptography 
[B3.2] Irish Bill Takes Aim at Child Pornography 
[B4] North America 
[B4.1] Court Strikes Down Virtual Child Pornography Law 
[B4.2] Virginia's Library Filtering Scheme Unconstitutional 
[B4.3] Netscape Plans on Adopting PICS 
[B4.4] Canada Set to Move on Encryption 
[B4.5] "Democracies Online" Formed 
[B5] SOUTH AMERICA 
[B5.1] Brazil and Internet 
 
 
[A] FOREMOST NEWS 
[A1] GILC Issues Statement at OECD Meeting 
 
On March 25th, 1998 members of GILC attended an OECD one day 
meeting 
on "International Co-operation Concerning Content and Conduct on 
the 
Internet", in Paris, and issued a member statement on "Impact of 
Self-Regulation and Filtering on Human Rights to Freedom of 
Expression." The statement details the importance of freedom of 
speech 
and freedom of expression to the online community.  It also 
explains 
the essential role anonymous communications plays in the struggle 
for 
human rights.  Among other things, the statement notes: "Global 
rating 
or labeling systems squelch the free flow of information: Efforts 
to 
force all Internet speech to be labeled or rated according to a 
single 
classification system distorts the fundamental cultural diversity 
of 
the Internet and will lead to domination of one set of political 
or 
moral viewpoints. Such systems will either be easy to use and not 
have 
enough categories for all cultures or it will have so many 
categories 
to cater for all cultures that it will be unusable. These systems 
are 
antithetical to the Internet and should be rejected." 
 
The GILC statement: 
http://www.gilc.org/speech/ratings/gilc-oecd-398.html
                   
 
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[B] ROUNDUP OF GLOBAL INTERNET ISSUES 
[B1] Africa/Middle East 
[B1.1] Israel Debates Internet Censorship 
 
The Business Arena reported that the Israeli Knesset Committee for 
Scientific and Technological Research and Development sought to 
"explore the possible imposition of censorship on information 
distributed over the Internet." Lawmakers heard testimony from 
many 
sources.  The paper reports that one "Yeshiva student told 
horrified 
[members] . . . . that he had reached pornographic sites 'while 
searching for automobiles.'"  The author of the piece then went on 
to 
argue: "All I ask is why this never happens to me! In the hundreds 
of 
surfing hours I have notched up in the past two years, never once 
has 
a pornographic site popped up by accident.  Never have I keyed in 
'law' and got 'sex.'"  The article warns that if Israel "imposes 
any 
censorship whatsoever on the Internet, it will fall in line with 
such 
model democracies as the Chinese Republic, Singapore and various 
Arab 
regimes." 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B1.2] Algeria Freedom Fighter Continues Fight on Internet 
 
Algeria is a country where the government deals with even 
suspected 
opposition brutally: executions, decapitations, rapes, kidnappings 
and 
other forms of torture are daily nightmares.  Needless to say, the 
government outlaws newspapers critical of the extremist  and 
armed  
Islamic groups, who allegedly have massacred more than 80,000 
people 
since elections were suspended in 1992.  La Nation was one such 
paper 
until it's editor, Salima Ghezali (who won the European 
Parliament's 
 
 
prestigious Sakharov award), took the paper to the Internet last 
year. 
Ghezali is the only female editor of a major Muslim newspaper and 
practices what she calls "guerrilla journalism."  The Guardian 
(London) quotes her saying: "Over one 100 people are now being 
killed 
every week.  This barbarity now seems normal, but of course it is 
not. 
The regime is so arrogant that if there is no condemnation of its 
human rights abuses it will believe it has carte blanche." 
 
For more information: http://www.ifex.org/alert/00000298.html
                   
 
More information in French: 
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/md/Forum/algerie/msg00011.html
                   
 
An interview with Ghezali: http://www.merip.org/ghezali.htm
                   
 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
 
[B2] Asia/Oceania 
[B2.1] India and Telephony 
 
Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited (VSNL), the overseas 
telecommunications 
arm of the Indian government, announced that customers would be 
disconnected if they used Internet telephony to dial overseas (a 
fraction of the cost that a normal telephone call would cost). 
Asia-Pacific Telecommunications reported that VSNL may actually be 
blocking access to certain companies that provide Internet 
telephony 
software.  If VSNL is doing this, the paper argues: "it would seem 
illegal, because it amounts to censorship and a restriction of the 
freedom guaranteed to all Indians under the Constitution. If VSNL 
is 
shutting [them] out, there are other Web sites which offer voice 
connectivity." 
 
VSNL's policy can be found at: http://www.vsnl.net.in/
                   
 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
 
[B3] Europe 
[B3.1] Report: European Union Set to Reject Key Escrow for 
Cryptography 
 
On April 2, 1998, the Intelligence Newsletter reported that the 
European Commission is about to complete a draft directive aimed 
at 
digital signatures and computer privacy. The EC draft leaves out 
any 
use of Trusted Third Parties (TTPs), key escrow or key recovery 
systems.  This draft will be submitted for public comment in 
Copenhagen on April 23rd -April 24th.  Furthermore, the Newsletter 
quotes from a recently released November 1996 memorandum from the 
office of William Reinch, the U.S. Commerce Department's 
undersecretary for export administration: "he acknowledged that 
key 
escrow by a TTP was 'more costly and less efficient' than 
non-escrowed 
products." 
 
Read GILC's Cryptography and Liberty: An International Survey of 
Encryption Policy, February 1998, at 
http://www.gilc.org/crypto/crypto-survey.html. 
 
Read Cyber-Rights & Cyber-Liberties (UK), "First Report on UK 
Encryption Policy" is available at 
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/law/pgs/yaman/ukdtirep.htm. 
 
Read "Scrambling for Safety" Conference Web site is at 
http://www.privacy.org/pi/conference/dti/. 
 
Read the Walsh Report, "Review of policy relating to encryption 
technologies": http://www.efa.org.au/Issues/Crypto/Walsh/
                   
 
Read Kryptographie, Cryptography resources in German from FITUG, 
at 
http://www.fitug.de/ulf/krypto/. 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B3.2] Irish Bill Takes Aim at Computer Child Pornography 
 
The Irish Minister of Justice formally introduced to the Dail the 
Child Trafficking and Pornography Bill which would criminalize 
possession of sexually explicit material involving people under 17 
years of age.  The Irish Times notes that the Minister fears that 
without the law, pedophiles would try and use the Internet to 
molest 
people under 17 years (the age of consent).  The paper quotes 
O'Donoghue: "The offense of possession will apply where, for 
example, 
a person downloads child pornography from the Internet.  This 
means 
that any person who would try and circumvent the legislation by 
means 
of computer technology would not succeed." 
 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
 
[B4] North America 
[B4.1] Court Strikes Down Virtual Child Pornography Law 
 
A federal district court in Portland, Maine has struck down a 
portion 
of the Child Pornography Protection Act of 1996. While old 
definitions 
of child pornography required prosecutors to prove that the 
"child" 
was in fact under the age of consent, the new federal law outlawed 
"any visual depiction, including any photograph, film, video, 
picture, 
or computer or computer-generated image or picture . . . of 
sexually 
explicit conduct, where . . . such depiction is, or appears to be, 
of 
a minor engaging in sexually explicit conduct."  U.S. District 
Judge 
Gene Carter found that the inclusion of computer images that 
merely 
"appear" to show minors engaged in sex to be too broad and would 
restrict adult expression: "The statute impacts a significant 
amount 
of adult pornography featuring adults who appear youthful," Carter 
wrote in his 11-page decision. "The court concludes that 
expression 
involving such adults will be chilled by the subjective language 
of 
the statute." Carter is the first federal judge to find the law 
unconstitutional. 
 
Read Cnet article: http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,20722,00.html
                   
 
Read the Act: ftp://ftp.loc.gov/pub/thomas/c104/h4331.ih.txt
                   
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B4.2] Virginia's Library Filtering Scheme Unconstitutional 
 
Relying  and drawing heavily from  the U.S. Supreme Court's 
landmark 
Reno v. ACLU decision last summer, Judge Leonie M. Brinkema of the 
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, 
invalidated 
a local, board-approved library-filtering program.  Not only, she 
said, did the government misconstrue the nature of the Internet, 
but 
she also held that "the Library Board may not adopt and enforce 
content-based restrictions on access to protected Internet speech 
unless it meets the highest level of constitutional scrutiny."  
She 
dismissed the government's argument that blocking software is 
simply 
another form of a librarian selecting the books and periodicals to 
put 
in the library: she noted that cyber-publications only exist in 
cyberspace and do not "take up shelf space or require physical 
maintenance of any kind."  Furthermore, Judge Brinkema noted that 
while library books cost money, and therefore, necessitate certain 
purchasing decisions, cyber-publications cost no money.  Rather, 
"it 
costs a library more to restrict the content of its collection by 
means of blocking software than it does for the library to offer 
unrestricted access to all Internet publications." 
 
Read the Cnet article: 
http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,20920,00.html
                   
 
Read the ACLU press release: 
http://www.aclu.org/news/n040798a.html
                   
 
Read the ACLU's complaint: 
http://www.aclu.org/court/loudoncocomplaint.html
                   
Read the Judge's entire decision: 
http://www.techlawjournal.com/courts/loudon/80407mem.htm
                   
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B4.3] Netscape Plans on Adopting PICS 
 
The popular Internet browser, Netscape, has recently announced 
that by 
the end of this month, its newest version (Netscape Communicator 
4.05) 
will adopt the controversial Platform for Internet Content 
Selection 
content-rating and content-filtering scheme.  Netscape will call 
its 
implementation of PICS NetWatch and will launch in German with 
English 
and other versions to follow shortly thereafter. PC World News 
Radio 
quotes Cassidy Sehgal, an attorney working on cyber-issues for the 
American Civil Liberties Union (a GILC founding member), who is 
concerned about the Netscape development: "There are serious 
long-term 
implications.  I think that people need to realize that it's not 
as 
simple as turning [the filter] on and off . . . because what will 
happen now is if you want your speech to be read you're going to 
have 
to rate [your site].  That is antithetical to First Amendment 
views." 
 
Read GILC comments on PICS: 
http://www.gilc.org/speech/ratings/gilc-pics-submission.html
                   
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B4.4] Canada Sets the Stage for Encryption Action 
 
On March 31, 1998, leaders of Canada's cryptography industry and 
privacy advocates met in Ottawa to discuss and suggest an 
encryption 
plan for Canada. Wired News reported that "the consensus among the 
group was that Canada should continue its current stance of not 
implementing any domestic crypto controls, and liberalize its 
existing 
export policies."  The article quotes David Jones, president of 
Electronic Frontier Canada (EFC is a GILC founding member): "We 
are 
firmly opposed to any policy or legislation that would prohibit 
the 
export of encryption of encryption products, either stored or 
transmitted."  In February, the Canadian government invited public 
comment when it issued "A Cryptography Policy Framework for 
Electronic 
Commerce," where it depicts several different cryptography 
possibilities.  According to Mark Hughes, executive director of 
the 
Institute for the Study of Privacy Issues said: "its call for 
public 
comment is, in my view, a cruel joke because the paper was only 
just 
issued (February 21, 1998) and all public comment must be made by 
April 21, 1998.  As few Canadians comprehend what encryption is 
and 
how it affects them, two months is simply not enough time for 
Canadians to sufficiently educate themselves in order to make 
informed 
comments on the future of their electronic privacy." 
Read Wired story: http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/1
                   
 
Canada's "Framework" proposal: 
http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/cy00005e.html
                   
 
Electronic Frontier Canada: http://insight.mcmaster.ca/org/efc
                   
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
[B4.5] "Democracies Online" Formed 
 
Housed at the Center for Democracy and Citizenship at the Hubert 
H. 
Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, a 
new 
organization dedicated "to build[ing] a strong foundation for 
improving democracy as democracies around the world converge with 
information networks" has just formed.  "Democracies Online" will 
provide a twice-monthly newsletter ("Democracy Notes") that will 
objectively cover trends, issues, and efforts related to the 
convergence of democracy and information networks.  "Democracies 
Online" will also supply a newswire and  online peer networks.  
The 
organization also proposes to host a Democracies Online World 
Virtual 
Summit in the Fall of 1998. 
 
They can be found at: http://www.e-democracy.org/do
                   
 
To subscribe either to the newswire or the Notes: send an e-mail 
message to: listserv@tc.umn.edu  In the body of your message, 
write: 
subscribe do-wire "Your Name (Place)" To join both the Newswire 
and 
Democracy Notes, send the following two lines: subscribe do-wire 
"Your 
Name (Place)" subscribe do-notes "Your Name (Place)" 
 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
 
[B5] SOUTH AMERICA 
[B5.1] Brazil and Internet 
 
Internet access in Brazil had been limited to wealthy English 
speakers 
 with good telephone lines.  Reuters recently reported that the 
situation is slowly changing: "there are signs that the Internet 
is 
becoming more accessible.  The paper cites to a survey released 
late 
last month that covers many aspects of Internet usage in South 
America's largest country. According to the survey, more women are 
traveling the information superhighway (17% used it in 1996 
compared 
to 25% in 1997).  Language is also becoming less of an obstacle: 
whereas 68% of Brazilian, Internet-users understood English in 
1996, 
today only 58% do.  "The surveys showed Brazilian Internet users 
to 
have many traits in common with their American counterparts: most 
are 
well-informed (68% subscribe to a newspaper or magazine) and most 
are 
adults (34% are 20 to 30 years old, 24% are aged 30 to 40)." 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 
Raafat S. Toss 
GILC Organizer Developer 
American Civil Liberties Union 
125 Broad Street 
New York, New York 10004 
212.549.2559 
212.549.2656 (fax) 
rtoss@aclu.org 
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Links to all information in this alert can be found at 
http://www.gilc.org
                   
 
You are welcome to pass the GILC ALERT to all who may be 
interested. 
And you have permission to re-print GILC ALERT and distribute it. 
 
If you are not a subscriber but would like to be, please send an 
email 
to gilc-announce@gilc.org with the following message in the body: 
 
  Subscribe gilc-announce <your email address> 
 
PUBLICATION OF THIS NEWSLETTER IS MADE POSSIBLE BY A GRANT FROM 
THE 
OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE (OSI) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
                 
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edited by Harkank 
published on: 1998-04-16 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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