http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,64688,00.html

Stop, in the Name of 'Bots  
 
Thursday, October 03, 2002
By Glenn Harlan Reynolds

 
Nowadays, it seems as if more and more law enforcement is being done by
machines. Unfortunately, they don't seem to be up to the job. And the
humans don't want to take responsibility, either.

One example is provided by the traffic cameras that are being employed by
revenue-starved cities around the nation. They shouldn't make mistakes:
They automatically photograph cars that are speeding, or that run red
lights, and then they take a picture and a computer issues a citation.
Unfortunately, they turn out to be inaccurate, and often rigged to
produce revenue for the contractors and cities who operate them, at the
expense of people who are innocent.

Then there are the software 'bots that the entertainment industry is
using to look for copyright infringers. The software, which crawls the
Web the way search-engine software does, looks for files that appear to
match copyrighted material: songs, movies, etc. When the 'bot finds the
material, a human being is supposed to check the results, then notify the
Internet service provider that a customer is infringing upon protected
material and that the material must be removed. This usually leads to the
ISP terminating the Internet account of the individual posting the
material. 

Except that it doesn't work that way. Here's what the Internet Service
Provider Association says in a brief just filed against the Recording
Industry Association of America:

The lists have not even been culled to eliminate items that should never
have been included in the first place. While most of the works identified
in Exhibit 1 appear to be songs featuring George Harrison, the notice
also demands removal of a file labeled, in part, "John Lennon, Yoko Ono
And George Harrison Interview.mp3." The notice further objects to a file
entitled "Portrait of mrs. harrison Williams 1943.jpg." It even claims
infringement by distribution of a file whose appalling title includes
phrases such as "Nude Preteens and Young Teens Naked ... Brian is 14 and
Harrison is 8."

It is highly unlikely that a single company owns the copyright both to
George Harrison's songs and to child porn materials. The most likely
explanation is that the list was generated by a "bot" that had been
programmed to search for all files with the name "harrison" in them --
and that the results of its search were incorporated without a glance
into the copyright owner's §512(c) notification.

The brief also identifies a file entitled "harry potter book report.rtf"
whose name and tiny size (1K) make obvious that it is not an illegal copy
of the Harry Potter movie. Obvious to anyone who looks, anyway. But why
should the record and movie companies bother to look? They're unlikely to
suffer any damages if ISPs take down the wrong files, and the consumers
involved are unlikely to sue them. (In filing with the Internet Service
Providers, a company representative even certified in writing "that we
have a good faith belief that use of the material ... is not authorized
by Warner Bros. ... or the law." Puhleez.) 

Much like the operators of rigged traffic cameras, they're relying on
their own institutional power -- and the hassle of opposing them -- to
let them get away with near-criminal sloppiness. It's bad enough that you
might lose your Internet connection because of such carelessness -- but
you could wind up in even worse trouble.

Though no one has gone after the record company whose software seems to
have "admitted" that it holds the copyright to the kiddie porn images
mentioned above, the FBI is expanding its investigation of kiddie porn.
This is a field where, as Wired magazine recently noted, the rule is
already "one click and you're guilty," even if you don't realize that
what you're downloading is kiddie porn. The FBI will probably start using
software 'bots to look for violators. So far, the authorities' record at
getting the technology right is unimpressive, as Wired reports:

At the bail hearing for Johnston, Tinney and three other defendants in
Houston, the FBI's Kristen Sheldon ... testified that an IP address is,
"in very simple terms, a Social Security number. Only one person at one
specific time can have that number." In fact, an IP address identifies a
computer, rather than a person, and may not even consistently map to a
particular machine in networks that use dynamic IP addressing. Midway
through the hearing, the presiding U.S. magistrate asked, "What are GIF
files?" (Emphasis added.) 

This combination of cluelessness and irresponsibility is, unfortunately,
not unusual. It also isn't challenged enough. As David Carr writes, who's
going to stand up and complain when, if you do, some idiot will probably
accuse you of being soft on child pornographers? But those idiots are,
well, idiots. When the power to enforce the law is delegated to software
employed by people who don't -- or can't be bothered to -- understand it,
no one is safe. When you hear that people are using machines to enforce
the law, remember the old computer-geek saying: "Garbage In, Garbage
Out." 

Ask why -- at a time when ordinary people are being asked by politicians
and corporations to take more personal responsibility for their actions
-- the people who claim to be enforcing the law aren't willing to take
responsibility for what they do with their machines. And ours.

 

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