July 6, 2008, 2:38PM

Users finding they have no online free speech guarantees

By ANICK JESDANUN
Associated Press

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/front/5874185.html


NEW YORK — Rant all you want in a public park. A police officer generally 
won't eject you for your remarks alone, however unpopular or provocative.

Say it on the Internet, and you'll find that free speech and other 
constitutional rights are anything but guaranteed.

Companies in charge of seemingly public spaces online wipe out content 
that's controversial but otherwise legal. Service providers write their own 
rules for users worldwide and set foreign policy when they cooperate with 
regimes like China. They serve as prosecutor, judge and jury in handling 
disputes behind closed doors.

The governmental role that companies play online is taking on greater 
importance as their services — from online hangouts to virtual repositories 
of photos and video — become more central to public discourse around the 
world. It's a fallout of the Internet's market-driven growth, but possible 
remedies, including government regulation, can be worse than the symptoms.

Dutch photographer Maarten Dors met the limits of free speech at Yahoo 
Inc.'s photo-sharing service, Flickr, when he posted an image of an 
early-adolescent boy with disheveled hair and a ragged T-shirt, staring 
blankly with a lit cigarette in his mouth.

Without prior notice, Yahoo deleted the photo on grounds it violated an 
unwritten ban on depicting children smoking. Dors eventually convinced a 
Yahoo manager that — far from promoting smoking — the photo had value as a 
statement on poverty and street life in Romania. Yet another employee 
deleted it again a few months later.

"I never thought of it as a photo of a smoking kid," Dors said. "It was 
just of a kid in Romania and how his life is. You can never make a serious 
documentary if you always have to think about what Flickr will delete."

There may be legitimate reasons to take action, such as to stop spam, 
security threats, copyright infringement and child pornography, but many 
cases aren't clear-cut, and balancing competing needs can get thorny.

"We often get caught in the middle between a rock and a hard place," said 
Christine Jones, general counsel with service provider GoDaddy.com Inc. 
"We're obviously sensitive to the freedoms we have, particularly in this 
country, to speak our mind, (yet) we want to be good corporate citizens and 
make the Internet a better and safer place."

In Dors' case, the law is fully with Yahoo. Its terms of service, similar 
to those of other service providers, gives Yahoo "sole discretion to 
pre-screen, refuse or remove any content." Service providers aren't 
required to police content, but they aren't prohibited from doing so.

While mindful of free speech and other rights, Yahoo and other companies 
say they must craft and enforce guidelines that go beyond legal 
requirements to protect their brands and foster safe, enjoyable communities 
— ones where minors might be roaming.

Guidelines help "engender a positive community experience," one to which 
users will want to return, said Anne Toth, Yahoo's vice president for policy.

Dors ultimately got his photo restored a second time, and Yahoo has 
apologized, acknowledging its community managers went too far.

Heather Champ, community director for Flickr, said the company crafts 
policies based on feedback from users and trains employees to weigh 
disputes fairly and consistently, though mistakes can happen.

"We're humans," she said. "We're pretty transparent when we make mistakes. 
We have a record of being good about stepping up and fessing up."

But that underscores another consequence of having online commons 
controlled by private corporations. Rules aren't always clear, enforcement 
is inconsistent, and users can find content removed or accounts terminated 
without a hearing. Appeals are solely at the service provider's discretion.

Users get caught in the crossfire as hundreds of individual service 
representatives apply their own interpretations of corporate policies, 
sometimes imposing personal agendas or misreading guidelines.

To wit: Verizon Wireless barred an abortion-rights group from obtaining a 
"short code" for conducting text-messaging campaigns, while LiveJournal 
suspended legitimate blogs on fiction and crime victims in a crackdown on 
pedophilia. Two lines criticizing President Bush disappeared from AT&T 
Inc.'s webcast of a Pearl Jam concert. All three decisions were reversed 
only after senior executives intervened amid complaints.

Inconsistencies and mysteries behind decisions lead to perceptions that 
content is being stricken merely for being unpopular.

"As we move more of our communications into social networks, how are we 
limiting ourselves if we can't see alternative points of view, if we can't 
see the things that offend us?" asked Fred Stutzman, a University of North 
Carolina researcher who tracks online communities.

First Amendment protections generally do not extend to private property in 
the physical world, allowing a shopping mall to legally kick out a customer 
wearing a T-shirt with a picture of a smoking child.

With online services becoming greater conduits than shopping malls for 
public communications, however, some advocacy groups believe the federal 
government needs to guarantee open access to speech. That, of course, also 
could invite meddling by the government, the way broadcasters now face 
indecency and other restrictions that are criticized as vague.

Others believe companies shouldn't police content at all, and if they do, 
they should at least make clearer the rules and the mechanisms for appeal.

"Vagueness does not inspire the confidence of people and leaves room for 
gaming the system by outside groups," said Lauren Weinstein, a veteran 
computer scientist and Internet activist. "When the rules are clear and the 
grievance procedures are clear, then people know what they are working with 
and they at least have a starting point in urging changes in those rules."

But Marjorie Heins, director of the Free Expression Policy Project, 
questions whether the private sector is equipped to handle such matters at 
all. She said written rules mean little when service representatives 
applying them "tend to be tone-deaf. They don't see context."

At least when a court order or other governmental action is involved, 
"there's more of a guarantee of due process protections," said Robin Gross, 
executive director of the civil-liberties group IP Justice. With a private 
company, users' rights are limited to the service provider's contractual 
terms of services.

Jonathan Zittrain, a Harvard professor who recently published a book on 
threats to the Internet's openness, said parties unhappy with sensitive 
materials online are increasingly aware they can simply pressure service 
providers and other intermediaries.

"Going after individuals can be difficult. They can be hard to find. They 
can be hard to sue," Zittrain said. "Intermediaries still have a calculus 
where if a particular Web site is causing a lot of trouble ... it may not 
be worth it to them."

Unable to stop purveyors of child pornography directly, New York Attorney 
General Andrew Cuomo recently persuaded three major access providers to 
disable online newsgroups that distribute such images. But rather than cut 
off those specific newsgroups, all three decided to reduce administrative 
hassles by also disabling thousands of legitimate groups devoted to TV 
shows, the New York Mets and other topics.

Gordon Lyon, who runs a site that archives e-mail postings on security, 
found his domain name suddenly deactivated because one entry contained 
MySpace passwords obtained by hackers.

He said MySpace went directly to domain provider GoDaddy, which effectively 
shut down his entire site, rather than contact him to remove the one 
posting or replace passwords with asterisks. GoDaddy justified such drastic 
measures, saying that waiting to reach Lyon would have unnecessarily 
exposed MySpace passwords, including those to profiles of children.

Meanwhile, in response to complaints it would not specify, Network 
Solutions LLC decided to suspend a Web hosting account that Dutch filmmaker 
Geert Wilders was using to promote a movie that criticizes the Quran — 
before the movie was even posted and without the company finding any actual 
violation of its rules.

Service providers say unhappy customers can always go elsewhere, but choice 
is often limited.

Many leading services, particularly online hangouts like Facebook and News 
Corp.'s MySpace or media-sharing sites such as Flickr and Google Inc.'s 
YouTube, have acquired a cachet that cannot be replicated. To evict a user 
from an online community would be like banishing that person to the 
outskirts of town.

Other sites "don't have the critical mass. No one would see it," said Scott 
Kerr, a member of the gay punk band Kids on TV, which found its profile 
mysteriously deleted from MySpace last year. "People know that MySpace is 
the biggest site that contains music."

MySpace denies engaging in any censorship and says profiles removed are 
generally in response to complaints of spam and other abuses. GoDaddy also 
defends its commitment to speech, saying account suspensions are a last resort.

Few service providers actively review content before it gets posted and 
usually take action only in response to complaints.

In that sense, Flickr, YouTube and other sites consider their reviews 
"checks and balances" against any community mob directed at unpopular 
speech — YouTube has pointedly refused to delete many video clips tied to 
Muslim extremists, for instance, because they didn't specifically contain 
violence or hate speech.

Still, should these sites even make such rules? And how can they ensure the 
guidelines are consistently enforced?

YouTube has policies against showing people "getting hurt, attacked or 
humiliated," banning even clips OK for TV news shows, but how is YouTube to 
know whether a video clip shows real violence or actors portraying it? 
Either way, showing the video is legal and might provoke useful discussions 
on brutality.

"Balancing these interests raises very tough issues," YouTube acknowledged 
in a statement.

Unwilling to play the role of arbiter, the group-messaging service Twitter 
has resisted pressure to tighten its rules.

"What counts as name-calling? What counts as making fun of someone in a way 
that's good-natured?" said Jason Goldman, Twitter's director of program 
management. "There are sites that do employ teams of people that do that 
investigation ... but we feel that's a job we wouldn't do well."

Other sites are trying to be more transparent in their decisions.

Online auctioneer eBay Inc., for instance, has elaborated on its policies 
over the years, to the extent that sellers can drill down to where they can 
ship hatching eggs (U.S. addresses only) and what items related to natural 
disasters are permissible (they must have "substantial social, artistic or 
political value"). Hypothetical examples accompany each policy.

LiveJournal has recently eased restrictions on blogging. The new harassment 
clause, for instance, expressly lets members state negative feelings or 
opinions about another, and parodies of public figures are now permitted 
despite a ban on impersonation. Restrictions on nudity specifically exempt 
non-sexualized art and breast feeding.

The site took the unusual step of soliciting community feedback and setting 
up an advisory board with prominent Internet scholars such as Danah Boyd 
and Lawrence Lessig and two user representatives elected in May.

The effort comes just a year after a crackdown on pedophilia backfired. 
LiveJournal suspended hundreds of blogs that dealt with child abuse and 
sexual violence, only to find many were actually fictional works or 
discussions meant to protect children. The company's chief executive issued 
a public apology.

Community backlash can restrain service providers, but as Internet 
companies continue to consolidate and Internet users spend more time using 
vendor-controlled platforms such as mobile devices or social-networking 
sites, the community's power to demand free speech and other rights diminishes.

Weinstein, the veteran computer scientist, said that as people congregate 
at fewer places, "if you're knocked off one of those, in a lot of ways you 
don't exist."


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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