FInland Proposes Editorial Culpability for Web Content
Sandstorm writes "Electronic Frontier Finland ry has an interesting article about a proposed law in the Finnish parliament on liabilities in public communications. Among other alarming things, the proposed law would require all web publications to have an editor-in-chief, who would have a criminal responsibility for all material published in his publication. That would include discussion on web boards and force editors on sites like /. preview and censor all comments before displaying them."
I really wonder about laws of this kind. Do the lawmakers really think about the implications of this? I don't mean that "Big Brother"-shit, I mean, people will not abide by this law because it is too cumbersome. People will not archive every revision of their personal homepage just because they happen to have a small webserver and the law says they have to. I sure as hell won't. Come arrest me.
This kind of civil disobedience may seem trivial, but what happens when lots of people lose respect for the law in other areas because they deem (correctly) that the lawmakers are totally clueless about modern society?
When will politicans realize we cannot have an Orwellian government AND an informed and educated population AND a market economy at the same time? IDIOTS!
You guys don't even read the stories half the time, now you're supposed to read every comment?!
Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
A mall was bombed last year. (try googling for "Myyrmanni bomb") Several people got killed, including the bomber. It turned out that the bomber was active poster on several discussion forums. Some of these were crackpot forums, and one was for people interested in explosives. The moderator of the explosives forum got arrested, but was released afterwards.
Another point is that the Finnish telecom, (Sonera) got thoroughly blasted by an anonymous book first published on the web. The book seemed credible enough, and later a police investigation showed that the security department of Sonera had been scanning the e-mail and the phone calls of the employees, without their consent. Probably this was done by a pissed-off employee. However, a big company got in trouble because the net allowed fast spreading of the book, and there was no way to press the publisher.
The outcome is logical, as the politicians and voters do not understand the net. Large campaign financiers have an interest in regulating the net. Play with the fears of the people and get paid when you desperately need good press and money for the commercials.
I'm getting more and more ashamed for being Finnish.
Those lazy Finns... just monitor and log all network traffic yourself, like any halfway decent government. No need to bother Joe Public with the details.
While I don't support a law like this, and really don't like what it would do to my favourite addiction, the effects could be interesting in push technology forward in a way that sorts of a lot of related legal problems (including responsibility, copyright, etc).
I have long thought that web forums were a step backwards. They are often slow, the interface is limited, and in general you have little control over the forum's functionality. Compare this to Usenet or BBS-style mail and forums, where your client provides the functionality needed.
The first step we need to take is to a distributed usenet-type system. Instead of web-interfaced forums, we have a lot of different news servers, which are not connected in a hierarchy. NNTP is also suitable as it is, although the servers would need some work to make the groups and articles more manageable, and allow a system for ratings.
The second step is to get away from centralised storage. A host site has an initial article and a storage index, which is a collection of links to a whole lot of other sites -- one per poster in fact. The poster's client posts the article to their "home" server, and notifies the host site about the relationship of that article to the discussion.
Now the host is merely publishing a short comment, and linking to a huge amount of discussion on that comment, where each part of the discussion resides with its owner. The responsibility for their contribution, as well as copyright, is far more clear in this situation.
Well, that's my 2c. Damn, I wish I could get Slashdot in QNX ...
What we need (IMNSHO) is a distributed usenet-type systemi-name =twylite [http://public.xdi.org/=twylite], see idcommons.net
Another point is that the Finnish telecom, (Sonera) got thoroughly blasted by an anonymous book first published on the web. The book seemed credible enough, and later a police investigation showed that the security department of Sonera had been scanning the e-mail and the phone calls of the employees, without their consent. Probably this was done by a pissed-off employee. However, a big company got in trouble because the net allowed fast spreading of the book, and there was no way to press the publisher.
This really disturbs me with the implications. Publishing a book anonymously on the web with no editor is a big responsibility.
This is a freedom that should be protected, but continue to keep it unregulated. This presents a possiblity to publish good books ("The Jungle", where an industry should improve for health reasons) before a huge crisis ensues (Think Enron), or it could be misused (The Globe, National Inquirer, etc.).
It would simultanously be a great loss and huge gain if you held no liability for what was said on the internet.
"Among other alarming things, the proposed law would require all web publications to have an editor-in-chief, who would have a criminal responsibility for all material published in his publication. That would include discussion on web boards and force editors on sites like /. preview and censor all comments before displaying them."
That's the most absurd law I ever heard of. That's exactly like blaming the telephone company when some psycho makes threatening calls to someone. They just have no respect for the immunity of unmoderated mediums anymore.
Repeal the DMCA!
Okay, so Finland won't have any decent web sites anymore, but do they think that they can either impose this law on sites in other countries (rotsa ruck) or block access for the entire nation to sites in other countries? What if someone makes a long distance call to a dial up provider in France or Sweden or wherever? (Yeah I know that gets expensive really fast but some people will do it anyway.) Even China's having trouble keeping their people from checking out un-authorized sites, how's a country like Finland where the populace doesn't fear a bullet in the back of the head for any little infraction going to handle the uproar over blocked sites? It's not as though they can keep people from finding out that there are sites to which they are being denied access.
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.
There has been at least one court case in France where a webmaster was found guilty for having illegal speech on his website. The speech in question was located on a forum, and wasn't put there by the webmaster.
h p3 ?id_article=169p hp3?id_article=25 8
This effectively means that anybody who puts up an unmoderated forum in France is taking a chance.
It didn't require extra laws, and probably didn't make a lot of headlines, but it's a reality.
http://www.homo-numericus.bonidoo.net/article.p
http://vulgum.org/libre/article.