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Date: 1999-09-06

Content Rating & Zensur am Bertelsmann/kongress


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Was die Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA) der
gross/kopferten Industrie am Bertelsmann Kongress am 9.
September vorhat, könnte nur allzuleicht veritable Zensur
heraubeschwören.
Mitglieder der Global Internet Liberty Campaign aus aller
Welt [auch quintessenz] werden alldort vertreten sein, eine
Declaration geht in der Nacht auf Donnerstag hinaus.


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Robert MacMillan, Newsbytes.

Online free-speech groups say they are worried about an
upcoming conference of Internet industry heavyweights that
could result in an international ratings standards code that
could lead to government censorship. As Newsbytes reported
in May, the Internet Content Rating Association (ICRA) was
formed by a group of mostly big-time industry players bent on
developing its own regulations to avoid the potential
government regulation of Internet content. The association
has planned a meeting in Munich, Germany, from Sept. 9 to
Sept. 11, at which it will hear two conflicting proposals for a
worldwide ratings system, one of which features input from
former White House Special Policy Adviser Ira C. Magaziner
and Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN) Interim Chairwoman Esther Dyson. ICRA Executive
Director Stephen Balkam told Newsbytes that the idea of
establishing an international ratings system certainly will not
please everyone. The Bertelsmann Foundation-sponsored
plan that will come up next week was developed by an
"expert network," including Magaziner and Dyson, and
drafted mainly by Yale Law School professor Jack Balkin. It
calls for the ratings system, Website conduct codes and
about 10 other points. It will go up against a program
sponsored by the Internet Content Rating for Europe
(INCORE) proposal, which contains some difference that
reflect the European Union's own involvement in the online
content debate. "I think that there have been some within
certain organizations who have always viewed this as a
potential threat for government censorship, " Balkam said.
"Yes...governments can do all kinds of things to their people,
but we should remain vigilant in everything from ratings
systems to the electric chair." ICRA, which has absorbed the
US-based ratings group the Recreational Software Advisory
Council, supports the use of Internet filtering to keep children
away from harmful content online, but does not necessarily
support governmental imposition of these systems. "We do
support filtering because we are a rating and filtering service,
but our second mission is to protect free speech because we
see our efforts as discouraging governments from creating
legislation," Balkam said. "Everything to do with policy on the
Internet is a tricky balance." According to David Sobel of the
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC), however, a
system of international content regulations leads one step
closer to governments requiring the use of such a system for
the Internet community. "It is being put forward as a means
of self-regulation and a way to ward off government regulation,
but I think there's a very strong and obvious possibility that
governments are going to consider mandating the use of
such a system," Sobel said. Sobel and Balkam both
confirmed that they held a dinner meeting to discuss EPIC's
concerns, but Sobel did not characterize it as a great step
toward progress. Bruce Taylor, president and chief counsel
for the conservative group National Law Center for Children
and Families - which supports the Child Online Protection
Act (COPA) - said that the meeting likely would produce few
valuable results because of groups like EPIC and the
Electronic Frontier Foundation's objections to what they
perceive as free speech restrictions. "It's like (Center for
Democracy and Technology President) Jerry Berman blasting
(AT&T Corp. Chairman) Mike Armstrong because he voiced
objection to the amount of violence, pornography and hate
speech on the Internet," Taylor said. "They'll throw an
industry wet blanket on anyone who wants to take
responsible measures to use this technology." Whether
industry will try to subvert the system is unclear, but judging
by the list of ICRA founding members - AOL Europe,
Bertelsmann Foundation, British Telecom, Demon Internet
(UK), EuroISPA, IBM, Internet Watch Foundation, Microsoft,
Software & Information Industry Association, and T-Online
Germany - there may be more support for the system than
initially anticipated. Nevertheless, some media outlets and
other companies have indicated that they would not support a
uniform ratings system. Much of the furor and renewed
interest in a ratings system came in the wake of the murder
rampage at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., the
latest and most bloody in a more than year- long string of
school shootings. Vice President Al Gore summoned a group
of industry executives to develop some ideas toward an
Internet ratings system, and several legislators on Capitol Hill
- notably presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.,
and Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.Y., have proposed other types of
content alerts for a variety of media. President Clinton also
has called for "Hollywood" to get together and try to settle on
a code of conduct for its content, while Republican Congress
members have built similar legislation into juvenile crime bills.
With fears that the government would stray too far into
censorship territory, some industry leaders have started
GetNetWise.org, which offers a one-stop resource for parent-
and guardian-controlled filter technology. Sobel said that "to
the extent that it focuses on education, it's great,
but...there's a little too much emphasis on filtering." "It's hard
for people to say this, but this really comes down to a matter
of parents being involved," he said. "To popularize the idea
that all you need to do is spend $30 and buy the software
program... is irresponsible."
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Jetzt erst recht!
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heiter, sauber, ordentlich
DrezninMusik MoechelBuch PoschRegie
Premiere 10. September
http://1000Sonnen.heimatseite.com/
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published on: 1999-09-06
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