With the litigous nature of the US, I think it's only a matter of time
before this bill gets tested in court as some company/individual
decides to sue another for perceived 'Annoyance'.

I suppose that it was thought there was too much protecting Civilians
from Corporations seeking to obtain their identities.

-----
"The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution safeguards freedom of
speech. The right to speak freely generally includes the right to
speak anonymously. And developing case law holds that the right to
speak freely embraces the liberty to speak anonymously on the
Internet.
advertisement

All well and good, right? Wrong.

A law designed to thwart telephone harassment has been updated and
signed into effect by President Bush. But this is troublesome. The
newly updated law in part prohibits annoying Web postings or e-mails
that do not disclose the true identities of the authors of this
speech.

Let's drill down a bit.

While the U.S. constitution places an extremely high value on and
provides protection for free speech, such speech is not completely
unbridled. That is why our nation has a developed body of law
pertaining to defamation. In a nutshell, if someone says something
false about someone else that causes harm to that person, liability
and monetary damages may be awarded.

In the context of the Internet, it is not uncommon for people to
communicate using pseudonyms. That allows them to speak freely and
openly, without revealing who they really are. Once in a while, other
persons or companies want to find out the identities of anonymous
people who have communicated on the Internet. This is especially so if
they feel that they have been defamed.
So much for freedom of speech, as well as for appropriate Internet anonymity.

To find out the identities of these anonymous Internet speakers, they
at times must go to the Internet service providers that are the
conduits of the speech at issue. To do that, a "John Doe" lawsuit
usually is filed against the anonymous speaker at the heart of the
matter. From that case, a subpoena is served on the ISP seeking the
identity of the speaker. The anonymous speaker then has an opportunity
to file what is called a "motion to quash," which seeks to bar
revelation of his or her identity.

The court then is called upon to rule whether the anonymous speaker's
identity should be disclosed. Because of First Amendment guarantees of
freedom of speech, which the cases hold includes the right to speak
anonymously on the Internet, the court normally will err on the side
of protecting the identity of the speaker. That's unless the party
seeking disclosure can make a "prima facie" showing upfront in the
case that the speech at issue truly creates liability and that true
harm and damage has ensued.

Against this backdrop of protection of anonymous Internet speech comes
the newly updated law.

The Communications Act has prohibited the making of telephone calls or
the utilization of telecommunications devices "without disclosing
(one's) identity to annoy, abuse, threaten or harass any person at the
called number or who receives the communications." The same law also
has been clear that the term "telecommunications device...does not
include an interactive computer service."

This means this law has not been aimed at Internet communications. Now
comes the huge qualifier.

A small but important provision buried deep in last year's Violence
Against Women and Department of Justice Reauthorization Act, which was
just signed into law, now brings the reach of the above-quoted text
home to the Internet. The provision in question applies to "any device
or software that can be used to originate telecommunications or other
types of communications that are transmitted, in whole or in part, by
the Internet."

What does this mean? The Communications Act provides for fines and
imprisonment of up to two years for violations. But taken to a
logical, if extreme, conclusion, it is possible that a person who
makes a Web posting or who sends an e-mail intended simply to annoy
someone else while not disclosing his or her true identity could be
subject to fines and jail time.

So much for freedom of speech as well as for appropriate Internet
anonymity. There is no requirement of harm to trigger the impact of
this new law, and the annoyance standard raises a number of concerns.

For example, certain speech could be true but still annoying. Should
such speech be stifled? Some "annoying speech" can lead to very
positive change--whether the speech is directed at government,
companies or individuals. Plus, an annoyance standard is quite
amorphous and subject to a multitude of interpretations.

While cyberstalking certainly should be prevented, we should be
careful not to erode our constitutionally protected rights. "

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
Message: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=i:5:194995
Archives: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/threads.cfm/5
Subscription: http://www.houseoffusion.com/lists.cfm/link=s:5
Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/cf_lists/unsubscribe.cfm?user=89.70.5
Donations & Support: http://www.houseoffusion.com/tiny.cfm/54

Reply via email to