At 18:03 7/14/2000 -0500, Jim Choate wrote: > > In any case, it is not interfering with your "right" to use their > > machine as you see fit, since you have no such right to begin with. > >And this has what to do with the concept of 'censorship' being a >'government' only action? We may be talking at cross-purposes. Let me try again: If don't have a right to use their machine, and you're denied the ability to use it, how is that censorship? -Declan (Oh, if pressed, I might say that private universities, for instance, can engage in "censorship" when they violate a contractual guarantee to uphold academic freedom. But that's not what we're talking about here.)