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[infowarrior] - Senators threaten new Net porn crackdown

Richard Forno
Fri, 20 Jan 2006 05:05:40 -0800

Senators threaten new Net porn crackdown

By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/Senators+threaten+new+Net+porn+crackdown/2100-1028_3-602
9005.html

Story last modified Thu Jan 19 16:44:00 PST 2006

WASHINGTON--U.S. senators on Thursday blasted what they called an
"explosion" in Internet pornography and threatened to enact new laws aimed
at targeting sexually explicit Web sites.

At an afternoon hearing convened here by the Senate Commerce Committee,
Chairman Ted Stevens, an Alaska Republican, lashed out at an adult
entertainment industry representative, saying that the industry needs to
take swift moves to devise a rating system and to clearly mark all its
material as "adult only."

"I think any adult producer would agree," said Paul Cambria, counsel to the
Adult Freedom Foundation, which represents companies offering "lawful
adult-oriented entertainment." It would just be a matter of organizing the
industry, he added.

"My advice is you tell your clients they better do it soon, because we'll
mandate it if they don't," Stevens said.

Though it wasn't mentioned at the hearing, Web browsers have long supported
the Internet standard called PICS, or Platform for Internet Content
Selection. Internet Explorer, for instance, permits parents to disable
access to Web sites rated as violent or sexually explicit.

Many adult Web sites have voluntarily labeled themselves as sexually
explicit. Playboy.com and Penthouse.com, for instance, rate themselves using
a variant of PICS created by the nonprofit Internet Content Rating
Association.

In addition, mandatory rating systems have frequently been struck down by
courts as an affront to the First Amendment's guarantee of freedom of
expression. Judges have ruled it unconstitutional for governments to enforce
the Motion Picture Association of America's movie-rating system. The Supreme
Court has said that the right to speak freely encompasses the right not to
speak--including the right not to be forced to self-label.

Sen. Blanche Lincoln, an Arkansas Democrat, talked up her bill that she and
a handful of Democrats announced last year. It proposes a 25 percent excise
tax on revenue from most adult-oriented sites and a requirement that all
such sites use an age-verification system.

"Too few adult Web sites are taking the extra step to create another
obstacle, another barrier, that can keep youngsters from accessing or
stumbling on pornography," Lincoln said.

The proposals at Thursday's hearing were uncannily reminiscent of similar
complaints from politicians a decade ago. In January 1996, Congress approved
the Communications Decency Act, which was soundly rejected by the U.S.
Supreme Court. Congress also approved a ban on computer-generated child
pornography--which was also shot down by the justices on free-speech
grounds.

The hearing occurred one day after U.S. Justice Department lawyers filed
paperwork in a California federal court in an attempt to force Google to
turn over logs from its search engine. The reason, the Justice Department
said, is to prepare for an October 2006 trial over a lawsuit from the
American Civil Liberties Union challenging the Child Online Protection Act.

That 1998 law, which restricts the posting of sexually explicit material
deemed "harmful to minors" on commercial Web sites, was effectively frozen
through a 2004 Supreme Court decision. The justices forwarded it back to a
lower court for a full trial.

"On the Google case, what is your reaction to Google's position that (the
Justice Department's request) is an invasion of their privacy?" Sen. Daniel
Innouye, the committee's top-ranking Democrat, asked Bush administration
representatives.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Laura Parsky declined to comment, saying
it was a dispute currently before the courts.

Parsky and an FBI official applauded the idea of new laws, saying they would
welcome additional tools from Congress but were doing the best with what
they had now.

But congressional intervention has historically "provided anything but a
panacea to the availability of pornography online," said Tim Lordan,
executive director of the Internet Education Foundation, a nonprofit group
that counts representatives from America Online, VeriSign and the World Wide
Web Consortium among its board members.

Sen. Inouye of Hawaii took a similarly cautious stance, pointing to a poll
that said 70 percent of parents were concerned about pornography but at the
same time didn't want the government to step in.

"My concern is that this matter has incensed members of Congress to agree
that if the industry is not going to act upon it, Congress will," he said.
"And often times Congress does a lousy job." 



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  • [infowarrior] - Senators threaten new Net porn crackdown Richard Forno