Supreme Court Rules ISPs Not Liable for E-mail Content
dan of the north was the first to write in with the Supreme Court Ruling outcome that ruled that ISPs (in this case, Prodigy), are not liable for the content of e-mail messages sent through them. The details of the circumstance are availible in the above link. Yes, this was a big "duh", but it's good to see this stand.
The Supreme Court did not rule on this case, they rejected it without comment. There is a significant difference...they have not offered their opinion of the case at all. They get far too many cases each year to consider and rule on all of them.
When are we going to start standing up and taking responsibility for the actions of others? I mean, really, think about how much dangerous and obscene information must be flowing through email every day.. What excuse do the ISP's have? Its not like they lack the technology to examine every message and track every net user.. Lets keep the net safe!
On a related topic, I really must insist that the US postal service start opening every letter and examining the contents for objectional material.
Come on people! we're racing head-long into a dangerous time where everyone might have to start taking personal responsibility for their own actions.. Isn't that what government is for?
-- 'Won't somebody please think of the lawyers.."
air and light and time and space
My reading of the article is that basically the U.S. Supreme Court has held only that the ISP is not liable for the transmission of the offending information, which means that they have what is called "common carrier" status. I'm not sure whether the original lawsuit also contained a request for liability based on the network security issue(s). I'm reminded of the fiasco at Network Solutions not too long ago where hackers forged the email header information for a large number of websites and basically took control of those sites for a while. If I owned the registration on one of those sites, and libel or slandering material was published on those domains, I would very certainly have suffered damages to my reputation, etc. And I would hope that a court would find that if NSI didn't adequately secure my data (or offer higher security for my data to prevent the domain name piracy, which they do), that they are in part responsible for the damage.
Spam mail...I don't know if the courts need to necessarily get involved, because there are other technological ways of dealing with the problem, AKA the RBOC list. If the email services provided by yahoo, etc. don't shut off the flow of spam mail, they can get blocked in a hurry, right? Your question asked Shouldn't these ISP's and large companies be responsible for the information being sent through their network?No -- they can't be under the court opinion. But they can, have, and will continue to be made responsible by the 'Net community for the fact that spam is flowing through their networks. Which is why nearly all ISP's have a policy of cutting off the account(s) of anyone sending spam through their connections.
Final case: "It's just like having a gun... if your gun is taken and used in a homicide, you should be responsible for not taking the necessary precautions and preventing it from being used in a crime."
Depends. If I have the gun in my hand and I let you take it from me, shoot somebody, etc. I'm an accessory to the crime. Likewise, if I allow or assist someone who should not have access to firearms to gain that access, I can again be charged with violating the law. But if you burglarize my house, breaking into a gun cabinet, stealing the weapon, (and I report it to the police, etc.), if you murder someone, should I still be held liable because I didn't somehow prevent your original burglary crime, or store the guns in a 2000 lb. safe, etc.?
...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...