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- Date: Fri, 24 Feb 95 09:14:24 CST
- From: telecom@delta.eecs.nwu.edu (TELECOM Digest (Patrick Townson))
- Subject: Free Expression and the Information Superhighway
-
-
- Attached for your review over the weekend are some lengthy comments
- on the subject of 'Free Expression and the Information Superhighway'
- submitted by Dave Banisar and the other persons named in the article.
- There are some serious challenges facing the net these days as a
- direct result, I beleive, of the misbehavior of a relatively small
- number of users. What should be our reaction as a community?
-
- Earlier this week I mailed out a petition relating to the Exon Bill
- in Congress, and today I also mailed out a statement by the American
- Civil Liberties Union to encourage you to think about what is going
- on. This special mailing continues in the same vein.
-
- PAT
-
- Date: 17 Feb 1995 14:15:16 -0500
- From: "Dave Banisar" <banisar@epic.org>
- Subject: GII Free Expression Letter
-
- ------------------
- HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
- ------------------
-
- For Further Information, Please Contact:
-
- Ann Beeson phone: 212-972-8400 x258
- e-mail: beesona@hrw.org
- Gara LaMarche phone: 212-972-8400 x207
- e-mail: lamarcg@hrw.org
- Marc Rotenberg phone: 202-544-9240
- e-mail: rotenberg@epic.org
-
-
- HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES GROUPS URGE GORE
- TO PROTECT FREE EXPRESSION ON INFO-HIGHWAY
-
- February 16, 1995 -- A coalition of leading human rights and
- civil liberties groups today urged Vice President Al Gore to
- carry the banner of free speech to Brussels where the G-7
- will meet next week to discuss the future of the global
- information infrastructure (GII). The coalition alleges
- that the current U.S. agenda for the GII is incomplete
- because it fails to include core free expression principles.
-
- The Clinton Administration has stated that it wants to
- achieve support from the G-7 for five basic principles for
- building the GII: encouraging private investment; promoting
- competition; creating a flexible regulatory environment;
- providing open access to networks and services for providers
- and users; and ensuring universal service. The
- Administration gave a detailed description of these
- principles in a document released yesterday entitled "The
- Global Information Infrastructure: Agenda for Cooperation."
-
- The coalition asks the U.S. to add a "sixth principle" for
- adoption at next week's G-7 gathering that "explicitly
- recognizes a commitment to protect and promote the free
- exchange of information and ideas on the GII." The letter
- (a copy of which is attached) recommends that the Clinton
- Administration:
-
- -protect against censorship and promote diverse ideas and
- viewpoints on the GII.
- -support broad access to the GII by people of all
- nations.
- -promote strong information privacy rights on the GII.
-
- The group points to the inevitable impact the GII will have
- on social, political, and economic life. If properly
- designed, the GII will "motivate citizens to become more
- involved in decisionmaking at local and global levels as
- they organize, debate, and share information unrestricted by
- geographic distances or national borders."
-
- The letter was signed by Human Rights Watch, Electronic
- Privacy Information Center, American Civil Liberties Union,
- American Library Association, Article 19, Center for
- Democracy and Technology, Electronic Frontier Foundation,
- People for the American Way, and Privacy International.
-
- ----------------------
-
- February 16, 1995
-
- The Honorable Al Gore
- Vice President of the United States
- S212 Capitol Building
- Washington, D.C. 20510
-
- Dear Mr. Vice President:
-
- We understand that you will be addressing the G-7
- Ministerial Conference on the Information Society, which
- takes place in Brussels February 25-26, 1995. The
- undersigned represent leading human rights and civil
- liberties organizations dedicated to promoting free
- expression in the new information age. We write today to
- ask you to urge the G-7 ministers to adhere to international
- free expression principles in any international agreement
- regarding the development, content, control and deployment
- of the global information infrastructure (GII).
-
- Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- proclaims:
-
- *Everyone has the right . . . to seek, receive and impart
- information and ideas through any media and regardless of
- frontiers.*
-
- Since the Universal Declaration was adopted in 1948, the
- ability of individuals to exercise their free expression
- rights has been transformed by technological advances.
- Today, interactive communications technologies provide an
- opportunity to reinvigorate Article 19 by empowering
- citizens to seek, receive and impart information and ideas
- instantaneously, across the globe.
-
- The GII can motivate citizens to become more involved in
- decisionmaking at local and global levels as they organize,
- debate, and share information unrestricted by geographic
- distances or national borders. Increased citizen awareness
- and involvement will contribute to the spread of democratic
- values. In particular, the GII has the potential to:
-
- * permit individuals with common interests to
- organize themselves in forums to debate public policy
- issues.
- * provide instant access to a wide range of
- information.
- * increase citizen oversight of government affairs.
- * decentralize political decisionmaking.
- * empower users to become active producers of
- information rather than passive consumers.
-
- Already, existing online networks empower citizens
- worldwide. Individuals in war-torn countries have used the
- Internet and other online networks to report human rights
- abuses quickly to the outside world. When traditional means
- of communication broke down and the war in Sarajevo made it
- impossible for civilians to leave their homes without
- risking their lives, many citizens used online technology to
- communicate with family members, the international press,
- and humanitarian relief agencies. People from across the
- globe are communicating online to fight censorship,
- scrutinize government, and exchange information and
- strategies on an endless array of subjects.
-
- However, the GII's inevitable impact on social, political, and
- economic life presents risks as well as opportunities.
- Although the extraordinary potential for a GII has been
- suggested by existing online communications networks, the
- present online community is still quite limited. Only
- countries with a sophisticated telecommunications
- infrastructure are able to take advantage of online
- technology. While the Internet has reached more than 150
- countries, two-thirds of the Internet host computers are in
- the U.S., and the 15 countries with the most Internet hosts
- account for 96% of all Internet hosts worldwide. As a recent
- report noted, "the Internet's diffusion appears to be
- inversely related to the occurrence of humanitarian crises --
- it is precisely those nations that lack a strong presence on
- the Net where wars, famines and dictators abound."
-
- Even in countries with advanced telecommunications
- infrastructures, only persons with access to equipment and
- training can take advantage of new information resources.
- General illiteracy remains the primary obstacle to computer
- literacy. And while the GII may foster an unprecedented
- sharing of cultural traditions, current users of online
- technology are primarily American, affluent, white, and
- male.
-
- Finally, some governments have inhibited online expression
- through limitations on the use of encryption technology,
- restrictive access practices, and content liability laws.
- Just as authoritarian governments control other forms of
- media, governments may restrict access to the GII out of fear
- that citizens will use it to undermine government authority.
- In India, exorbitant licensing fees operate to exclude many
- people from online services, and an archaic telegraph law
- requires online carriers to ensure that no obscene or
- objectionable messages are carried on their networks. In
- Singapore, users of Teleview, the government's sophisticated
- public interactive information system, must agree not to use
- the service to send "any message which is offensive on moral,
- religious, communal, or political grounds." Even the United
- States has continued to impose restrictions on the free flow
- of technologies designed to provide users with greater privacy
- and to foster freedom of communication.
-
- The undersigned organizations have reviewed "The Global
- Information Infrastructure: Agenda for Cooperation." We
- understand that the U.S. hopes to achieve support among G-7
- countries for five core principles as the basis for a global
- information infrastructure: encouraging private investment;
- promoting competition; creating a flexible regulatory
- framework; providing open access to the network for all
- information service providers; and ensuring universal
- service. We recognize the importance of these principles in
- providing a foundation for a GII and applaud the
- administration's support of universal service. However, we
- believe that the administration has failed to address some
- core free expression principles. Absent consideration of
- these principles, the current U.S. position on the future of
- the GII is incomplete.
-
- To reduce the risks of the GII and to maximize its potential
- to promote democracy, the GII must adopt and expand upon
- international standards of free expression. The following
- international rights and freedoms are of particular
- relevance to online activity:
-
- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
-
- * Article 19: "Everyone has the right to freedom
- of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to
- hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and
- impart information and ideas through any media and
- regardless of frontiers."
- * Article 7: "All are equal before the law and are
- entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of
- the law."
- * Article 12: "No one shall be subjected to
- arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or
- correspondence."
- * Article 18: "Everyone has the right to freedom
- of thought, conscience and religion."
- * Article 20: "Everyone has the right to freedom
- of peaceful assembly and association."
- * Article 21: "Everyone has the right to take part
- in the government of his country."
- * Article 27: "Everyone has the right freely to
- participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy
- the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its
- benefits."
-
- The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
- (ICCPR)
-
- * Article 19: The right "to hold opinions without
- interference" and "to seek, receive and impart information
- and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers . . .
- through any media."
- * Article 17: Freedom from "arbitrary or unlawful
- interference with privacy, family, home or correspondence."
- * Article 18: "Freedom of thought, conscience and
- religion."
- * Article 21: "The right of peaceful assembly."
- * Article 22: "The right to freedom of association
- with others."
- * Article 25: The right "to take part in the
- conduct of public affairs."
- * Article 26: "All persons are equal before the
- law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal
- protection of the law. . . . [T]he law shall prohibit any
- discrimination and guarantee to all persons equal and
- effective protection against discrimination on any ground
- such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or
- other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or
- other status."
-
- All of the G-7 members, including the United States, are
- parties to the ICCPR. The International Covenant on
- Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the American
- Convention on Human Rights, the European Convention for the
- Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, and the
- African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights also contain
- important free expression standards which should be
- considered in developing the GII.
-
- In the strong tradition of free speech protection under the
- First Amendment of the United States Constitution, the U.S.
- should advocate for the universal application of two
- important free expression principles not yet codified in
- international law. First, the U.S. should advocate for an
- explicit prohibition against prior censorship. Second, the
- U.S. should promote an explicit prohibition against
- restrictions of free expression by indirect methods such as
- the abuse of government or private controls over newsprint,
- radio broadcasting frequencies, or equipment used in the
- dissemination of information, or by any other means tending
- to impede the communication and circulation of ideas and
- opinions.
-
- Recommendations:
-
- The undersigned organizations have identified three
- principal areas of concern regarding free expression and the
- GII: content regulation, access, and information privacy.
- We recommend the following guidelines to address those
- concerns.
-
- Content Issues
-
- Recognizing the mandates of Articles 7, 18, 19, and 20 of
- the UDHR, and Articles 18, 19, 21, 22, and 26 of the ICCPR,
- we call on the Clinton Administration to protect the free
- exchange of information and ideas on the GII.
-
- * Prior censorship of online communications should
- be expressly prohibited on the GII.
- * Any restrictions of online speech content should
- be clearly stated in the law and should be limited to direct
- and immediate incitement of acts of violence.
- * Laws that restrict online speech content should
- distinguish between the liability of content providers and
- the liability of data carriers.
- * Online free expression should not be restricted
- by indirect means such as the abuse of government or private
- controls over computer hardware or software,
- telecommunications infrastructure, or other equipment
- essential to the operation of the GII.
- * The GII should promote noncommercial public
- discourse.
- * The right of anonymity should be preserved on the
- GII.
- * The GII should promote the wide dissemination of
- diverse ideas and viewpoints from a wide variety of
- information sources.
- * The GII should enable individuals to organize and
- form online associations freely and without interference.
-
- Access Issues
-
- Recognizing the mandates of Articles 7, 19, 20, 21, and 27
- of the UDHR, and Articles 19, 21, 22, 25, and 26 of the
- ICCPR, we call on the Clinton Administration to support
- broad access by individuals and groups to the GII
- development process, to online training, and to the GII
- itself.
-
- * Governments should provide full disclosure of
- information infrastructure development plans and should
- encourage democratic participation in all aspects of the
- development process.
- * The GII development process should not exclude
- citizens from countries that are currently unstable
- economically, have insufficient infrastructure, or lack
- sophisticated technology.
- * The GII should provide nondiscriminatory access
- to online technology.
- * To guarantee a full range of viewpoints, the GII
- should provide access to a diversity of information
- providers, including noncommercial educational, artistic,
- and other public interest service providers.
- * The GII should provide two-way communication and
- should enable individuals to publish their own information
- and ideas.
- * To protect diversity of access, the GII should
- have open and interoperable standards.
- * Deployment of the GII should not have the purpose
- or effect of discriminating on the basis of race, colour,
- sex, language, religion, political or other opinion,
- national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
- * The GII should encourage citizens to take an
- active role in public affairs by providing access to
- government information.
- * Governments should encourage widespread use of
- the GII and should strive to provide adequate training.
-
- Information Privacy
-
- Recognizing the mandates of Article 12 of the UDHR and
- Article 17 of the ICCPR, we call on the Clinton
- Administration to promote strong information privacy rights
- on the GII. Online communications are particularly
- susceptible to unauthorized scrutiny. Encryption technology
- is needed to ensure that individuals and groups may
- communicate without fear of eavesdropping. Lack of
- information privacy would inhibit online speech and
- unnecessarily limit the diversity of voices on the GII.
-
- * Governments should ensure enforceable legal
- protections against unauthorized scrutiny and use by private
- or public entities of personal information on the GII.
- * Personal information generated on the GII for one
- purpose should not be used for an unrelated purpose or
- disclosed without the person's informed consent.
- * Individuals should be able to review personal
- information on the GII and to correct inaccurate
- information.
- * The GII should provide privacy measures for
- transactional information as well as content.
- * The Clinton Administration should oppose controls
- on the export and import of communications technologies,
- including encryption.
-
- * Users of the GII should be able to encrypt their
- communications and information without restriction.
- * Governments should be permitted to conduct
- investigations on the GII pursuant only to lawful authority
- and subject to judicial review.
-
- The G-7 Ministerial Conference on the Information Society
- will focus international attention on the development of the
- global information infrastructure. We encourage the Clinton
- Administration to use this opportunity not simply to promote
- free expression values in principle, but to secure these
- values through specific decisions regarding the development,
- content, control and deployment of the GII. We request that
- the U.S. add a "sixth principle" for adoption by the G-7
- gathering that explicitly recognizes a commitment to protect
- and promote the free exchange of ideas and information on the
- GII. The U.S. is seen as the world's champion of the
- fundamental right of free expression, and it should continue
- to carry the free speech banner as it shapes the development
- of the GII.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Gara LaMarche, Director
- Ann Beeson, Bradford Wiley Fellow
- Free Expression Project
- Human Rights Watch
-
- Marc Rotenberg
- Executive Director
- Electronic Privacy Information Center
-
- Ira Glasser
- Executive Director
- American Civil Liberties Union
-
- Judith F. Krug
- Director, Office for Intellectual Freedom
- American Library Association
-
- Sandy Coliver
- Law Program Director
- Article 19 International Centre Against Censorship
-
- Jerry Berman
- Executive Director
- Center for Democracy and Technology
-
- Andrew Taubman
- Executive Director
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Arthur J. Kropp
- President
- People for the American Way
-
- Simon Davies
- Director General
- Privacy International
-
-
- cc: The Honorable Ronald Brown
- United States Secretary of Commerce
-
- ____________________________________
-
-
- David Banisar (Banisar@epic.org) * 202-544-9240 (tel)
- Electronic Privacy Information Center * 202-547-5482 (fax)
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave, SE, Suite 301 * ftp/gopher/wais cpsr.org
- Washington, DC 20003 * HTTP://epic.digicash.com/epic
-
-