[governance] The dawning of Internet censorship in Germany
JFC Morfin
jefsey at jefsey.com
Fri Jun 19 17:30:58 EDT 2009
David, Joe, Peter and all,
technically this debate seems senseless, because the internet being
discussed just does not exist. Neither in law, nor in technology.
This is the first problem we meet everywhere. Please first legally
define what you are talking about. So the debate may stop being
emotional, subjective, irreal, etc. On one side we are talking of
bits and protocols, on the other side we are talking of human
behaviour and laws.
Let start from an example David and Joe know well: domain names. The
worldwide claimed and acclaimed ICANN success is UDRP. The UDRP
document starts with a legal recital, documenting the meaning of
theterms being used, ... except what a ... domain name is. The US and
new IETF definition of the Internet is every packetswitch network
interoperable computer. And both understand it as under their
political/technical jurisdiction or influence. The French law, which
is an application of the European directives, discusses the "public
online communication" that may use the "internet" (small "i") : it
does not bother defining (this is no more legal but common
terminology). The first question is therefore: what are we talking about.
What are discussed here are not laws to punish crime that would
actually (100% or not) prevent crimes, but laws that would prevent
bows and arrows to be able to kill specific targets [quite
hazardeous] while everyone may have access to guns [what makes the
debate somewhat outdated]. While also, nobody realizes that the IETF
"standards" are just "influences" (the very IETF mission definition
by RFC 3935) to make the Internet work in a way the IETF better along
its own core values.
By no means they are describing any technical obligations or reality.
It happens that the Internet we use everyday is by far more powerfull
and versatile, and that it is actually more and more used everyday in
ways which architecturally are sounder than the way ICANN, ISOC, and
Govs believes it. This is no surprise for the IETF (this is plainly
explained in the very same RFC 3935: the IETF is here to analyse,
document, integrate new developments made outside of it). Today such
developments are taking advantage from IDNs and are carried by China
and hundred of millions of users. The current technology we use
makes intercontinental machine guns free and available everywhere.
Summary: what you discuss are the relations between two orthogonal
things: technology and law. In addition they have different
development cycles, no common basis (as people are not left any
control in the way the technology is designed) and different
"jurisdictions". Protocols are for machines, laws are for people. The
interesting issue in Hadopi and other legislations is that they want
to impose laws on machines to force people to respect societal
protocols, upto making machines to judge people.
jfc
At 13:25 18/06/2009, David Goldstein wrote:
>Ralf,
>
>Laws don't ever, or almost never, stop the problem they set out to
>do. They merely set out to reduce the problem to a certain extent.
>There are laws against murder, yet there is still murder. So you are
>wrong - it is analogous to speeding. Expecting any law to stop
>something 100% is naive.
>
>As for Baptista, Dambier and their cast of fools, maybe you should
>first understand the difference between child protection, that is
>protecting children from unsuitable content online, and child abuse
>where children are actually abused.
>
>And thank you Rui for a thoughtful contribution to the debate.
>
>As for suggestions tens of thousands have signed online petitions.
>Really? So what? What minuscule percentage actually understood what
>they were signing?
>
>
>David
>
>
>
>----- Original Message ----
>From: Ralf Bendrath <bendrath at zedat.fu-berlin.de>
>To: governance at lists.cpsr.org; David Goldstein <goldstein_david at yahoo.com.au>
>Sent: Thursday, 18 June, 2009 12:19:55 PM
>Subject: Re: [governance] The dawning of Internet censorship in Germany
>
>I don't want to sound like a supporter of Joe Baptista or Peter Dambier
>here, but I also don't want unfounded things to be said about the
>censorship conflict in Germany. So:
>
>David Goldstein schrieb:
>
> > To use the argument that blocking child pornography is ineffective is
> > nonsensical. People still speed in cars yet there are laws against
> > speeding. It certainly changes behaviour though.
>
>No. It's about stopping cars that (maybe accidentially) head to a wrong
>direction instead of just arresting the wrong guy at the endpoint. So
>much for analogies.
>
> > However given the childish arguments put forward by people like
> > Dambier, I wouldn't expect there to be much knowledge on such issues.
>
>Don't troll unles needed, David. Especially without knowledge about the
>situation in Germany.
>
>There have been many, many, and many more arguments raised in the Gernan
>debate since April. Result: Total ignorance.
>
> > The issue is how far does such a list such as proposed by the German
> > government, and also the Australian government, go. If it's used to
> > block content such as child porn, great. If it goes further, then
> > it's a problem.
>
>The fundamental problem is: We will never know. The list is run by the
>German Federal Police, it's secret, and there is close to zero
>oversight. No judge, no prescribed procedures for taking sites off the
>(un-known black) list, no nothing.
>
>Ralf
>
>
>
> Access Yahoo!7 Mail on your mobile. Anytime. Anywhere.
>Show me how: http://au.mobile.yahoo.com/mail
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