http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/27/us/27verizon.html? 
ex=1348632000&en=a1232dee7638e939&ei=5124&partner=permalink&exprod=perma 
link
September 27, 2007
Verizon Blocks Messages of Abortion Rights Group
By ADAM LIPTAK

Saying it had the right to block “controversial or unsavory” text  
messages, Verizon Wireless has rejected a request from Naral Pro- 
Choice America, the abortion rights group, to make Verizon’s mobile  
network available for a text-message program.

The other leading wireless carriers have accepted the program, which  
allows people to sign up for text messages from Naral by sending a  
message to a five-digit number known as a short code.

Text messaging is a growing political tool in the United States and a  
dominant one abroad, and such sign-up programs are used by many  
political candidates and advocacy groups to send updates to supporters.

But legal experts said private companies like Verizon probably have  
the legal right to decide which messages to carry. The laws that  
forbid common carriers from interfering with voice transmissions on  
ordinary phone lines do not apply to text messages.

The dispute over the Naral messages is a skirmish in the larger  
battle over the question of “net neutrality” — whether carriers or  
Internet service providers should have a voice in the content they  
provide to customers.

“This is right at the heart of the problem,” said Susan Crawford, a  
visiting professor at the University of Michigan law school,  
referring to the treatment of text messages. “The fact that wireless  
companies can choose to discriminate is very troubling.”

In turning down the program, Verizon, one of the nation’s two largest  
wireless carriers, told Naral that it does not accept programs from  
any group “that seeks to promote an agenda or distribute content  
that, in its discretion, may be seen as controversial or unsavory to  
any of our users.” Naral provided copies of its communications with  
Verizon to The New York Times.

Nancy Keenan, Naral’s president, said Verizon’s decision interfered  
with political speech and activism.

“No company should be allowed to censor the message we want to send  
to people who have asked us to send it to them,” Ms. Keenan said.  
“Regardless of people’s political views, Verizon customers should  
decide what action to take on their phones. Why does Verizon get to  
make that choice for them?”

A spokesman for Verizon said the decision turned on the subject  
matter of the messages and not on Naral’s position on abortion. “Our  
internal policy is in fact neutral on the position,” said the  
spokesman, Jeffrey Nelson. “It is the topic itself” — abortion —  
“that has been on our list.”

Mr. Nelson suggested that Verizon may be rethinking its position. “As  
text messaging and multimedia services become more and more  
mainstream,” he said, “we are continuing to review our content  
standards.” The review will be made, he said, “with an eye toward  
making more information available across ideological and political  
views.”

Naral provided an example of a recent text message that it has sent  
to supporters: “End Bush’s global gag rule against birth control for  
world’s poorest women! Call Congress. (202) 224-3121. Thnx! Naral  
Text4Choice.”

Messages urging political action are generally thought to be at the  
heart of what the First Amendment protects. But the First Amendment  
limits government power, not that of private companies like Verizon.

In rejecting the Naral program, Verizon appeared to be acting against  
its economic interests. It would have received a small fee to set up  
the program and additional fees for messages sent and received.

Text messaging programs based on five- and six-digit short codes are  
a popular way to receive updates on news, sports, weather and  
entertainment. Several of the leading Democratic presidential  
candidates have used them, as have the Republican National Committee,  
Save Darfur and Amnesty International.

Most of the candidates and advocacy groups that use text message  
programs are liberal, which may reflect the demographics of the  
technology’s users and developers. A spokeswoman for the National  
Right to Life Committee, which is in some ways Naral’s anti-abortion  
counterpart, said, for instance, that it has not dabbled in text  
messaging.

Texting has proved to be an extraordinarily effective political tool.  
According to a study released this month by researchers at Princeton  
and the University of Michigan, young people who received text  
messages reminding them to vote in November 2006 were more likely to  
go to the polls. The cost per vote generated, the study said, was  
much smaller than other sorts of get-out-the-vote efforts.

Around the world, the phenomenon is even bigger.

“Even as dramatic as the adoption of text messaging for political  
communication has been in the United States, we’ve been quite slow  
compared to the rest of the world,” said James E. Katz, the director  
of the Center for Mobile Communication Studies at Rutgers University.  
“It’s important in political campaigns and political protests, and it  
has affected the outcomes of elections.”

Timothy Wu, a law professor at Columbia, said it was possible to find  
analogies to Verizon’s decision abroad. “Another entity that controls  
mass text messages is the Chinese government,” Professor Wu said.

Jed Alpert, the chief executive officer of Mobile Commons, which says  
it is the largest provider of mobile services to political and  
advocacy groups, including Naral, said he had never seen a decision  
like Verizon’s.

“This is something we haven’t encountered before, that is very  
surprising and that we’re concerned about,” Mr. Alpert said.

Professor Wu pointed to a historical analogy. In the 19th century, he  
said, Western Union, the telegraph company, engaged in  
discrimination, based on the political views of people who sought to  
send telegrams. “One of the eventual reactions was the common carrier  
rule,” Professor Wu said, which required telegraph and then phone  
companies to accept communications from all speakers on all topics.

Some scholars said such a rule was not needed for text messages  
because market competition was sufficient to ensure robust political  
debate.

“Instead of having the government get in the game of regulating who  
can carry what, I would get in the game of promoting as many options  
as possible,” said Christopher S. Yoo, a law professor at the  
University of Pennsylvania. “You might find text-messaging companies  
competing on their openness policies.”
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