Judge Doesn't Know What a Web Site is
An anonymous reader writes "A British judge admitted on Wednesday he was struggling to cope with basic terms like "Web site" in the trial of three men accused of inciting terrorism via the Internet.
Judge Peter Openshaw broke into the questioning of a witness about a Web forum used by alleged Islamist radicals.
"The trouble is I don't understand the language. I don't really understand what a Web site is". he told a London court during the trial of three men charged under anti-terrorism laws.
Prosecutor Mark Ellison briefly set aside his questioning to explain the terms "Web site" and "forum." An exchange followed in which the 59-year-old judge acknowledged: "I haven't quite grasped the concepts.""
It's things like this that make me want to go to law school.
Jurors are frequently disqualified for knowing too much, but it should be the opposite for a judge, I think.
That seems to be common in the US also.
The judge wasn't so proud as to pretend understanding and then issue a potentially unjust ruling.
Would that all judges had the same strength of character in this regard.
Give him credit for admitting he didn't understand. Clearly he needs to be able to understand the concept in order to rule on the case. What are the options when a judge just doesn't understand? Do we need a "technical" set of judges to handle these types of cases?
Cheers.
Mark
Some might say that 59 isn't that old, but the fact remains that there are still plenty of people that grew up before the computer and/or internet revolution. Eventually, however, having some knowledge of technical terms will be inevitable.
Just try looking up "person" in Black's Law Dictionary. The wording is important, as specific terms mean specific strings of legal precedents. Judges recuse themselves for good reasons all the time, and this guy did the right thing. Would you rather he'd judged a case with vague user-end impressions?
I wish everyone who wasn't up to an important job would say so.
Looks like everyone took the sensationalist bait on this.
Article is pretty light on details but it seems like the judge is trying to understand what a website actually "is"...it seems like an issue in this case is where the defendants' activities took place.
So perhaps he realized he needed to know more than "a window that comes up on your computer" as far as what a website is. It doesn't seem unreasonable for a 59-year-old in a completely non-technical job to not know how a website is put together; "what is a website?" is a feasible way to ask not only "describe this thing to me", but also "what makes up this thing?". Maybe he was asking the latter.
Look, nobody expects judges to be experts in everything. In particular, nobody expects judges to be knowledgeable about something that was INVENTED when they were in their 40s and was really a fad-for-young-people until a relatively short time ago.
What we expect judges to do is make fair rulings.
How can a judge who doesn't know anything about web sites and online forums make reasonable rulings? Well, he can't. And he knows this. So, the judge -- and MOST JUDGES -- have two choices:
- Learn enough to make a fair ruling
- Fake it and pick the lawyer with the nicest tie
Now, it has been fairly obvious that COMPLETELY CLUESS judges are making case law around the world. That is quite clearly BAD.
A judge willing to admit he lacks the deep understanding required to make a ruling, and taking steps to work around/solve the problem? NO PROBLEM, in my opinion, as long as he comes to the table with an open mind, impartiality, and a good sense of jurisprudence.
That said -- I think the judge should spend a few hours participating in IRC, reading bash.org, taking part in a forum about something he likes (maybe his car), checking out tubgirl, some pr0n, masturbating and so forth. Then maybe he will actually understand the medium. Somebody (prosecutor) should suggest that.
Do daemons dream of electric sleep()?
No, just the opposite. He's perfect for true justice. The solicitors will have to spend an hour or so having someone explain the basic concepts of the internet. From there the judge can listen to the facts of the case without any clouding of his judgment from any preconceived notions.
... blah blah blah."
"This is a web page. There are about a billion of them in existence, and about a billion people viewing the web pages. Anyone can pay to have access to the internet. Anyone can get free or very cheap space to put up their own web pages. We are accusing these men of doing just that to incite hatred
(Don't bother correcting my estimates of web sites and users. I know it's wrong)
-- Will program for bandwidth
He's ready to retire and take up photography again. And he LOVES the digital options. He's already setup his own website and uses Photoshop. He knows more about digital cameras than I do.
It's not age. It's interest.
He's found that his old interest has taken a new turn with computerization and he has spent his spare time learning all about it.
Ok, that is NOT what "Luddite" means. Ignorance alone does not make one a Luddite. Would you also call me a Luddite, because I don't understand the semiconductor physics inside of this computer I'm using? The Luddites were people who actively sought to destroy technology that would affect their livelyhoods. This judge does not appear to display either fear or antagonism towards this "web-site" technology, only difficulty understanding it (or maybe only finding a suitably concrete definition for his legalistic mind!).
Yes, but was she hot?
Ever feel like you are driving the getaway car?
Ignorance in situations of justice is only useful when you have ignorance of the criminal or case being tried. You don't want a judge or jury to have preconceptions about the innocence or guilt of the parties involved.
That doesn't mean you want legal decision-makers completely ignorant of even the basic working infrastructure of our modern society. Far from your notion that the judge can just "listen to the facts" -- rather than being able to take internet information for granted while his mind moves on to the pertinent facts of the case, he's wasting valuable brain cycles trying to figure out what this whole web site thing is on the fly as he either puzzles over it himself or TAKES SOMEONE ELSE'S WORD that what it is is important or not important to the case. Is it relevant to innocence or guilt? Is it not? He doesn't know because he's too much in the dark to even have figured out what my 90 year old grandmother knows.
Besides the issues of not knowing a basic building block of the case, it's just appalling that a judge in a modern society could have his head so far buried in the sand to not know what a web site is. Does his lack of observational skills extend to facts being dispensed in the case?
Why are you letting these clowns ruin our country?
I'd much rather have judges like him who say "Look, I just don't get this stuff, I've never had the time or inclination to really deal with it. Someone teach me." As opposed to judges who pretend they have a clue and then make completely bonehead decisions. If more judges were like him and came forward to admit when they don't feel up to par on the background material in a case, maybe the legal system would be a couple percentage points less FUBAR.
Of course it is a non-jury terrorist trial; the defendants are charged with terrorism. But not just know the law- a judge should be LEARNED, well informed in other areas as well. Else how can he know if a law makes any sense at all? LIVR- Learned, Impartial, and Very Relaxed....
SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
I would hope so, I'm kinda happy the judge didn't just try to act like he knew what was going on. I think, "Good for him".
Under the influence of Post-Cyberpunk Gonzo Journalism
Actually I applaud the Judge and he is wise. When conforted with something he didn't understand, he asked questions for clarification. A judge isn't an IT admin, he is an interpreter of the law and a decision maker based on that and the facts presented.
While it is funny to think of someone who doesn't know what a web site is, in this case he is a better judge than one who would pretend, make assumptions and possibly make wrong decisions based on that knowledge.
-Xen
If one is in a position of authority, and is expected to determine how laws should be applied to society -- one has an obligation to be a part of society and understand that society. This judge has clearly done neither. He has failed to enter the 21st century along with the rest of his countrymen, and has failed to keep up with the most basic social trends. Is is therefore unfit for work. Dismissed.
------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
Here's a good judge. It's very professional to admit that he doesn't understand something.
Perhaps one would think that it would be easy to explain what a web site is. However, the definition of a website might not be so easy as you may think. Judges, like computer scientists, often have to tackle with very fine details and seek answers to subtle questions. For example: Should every website use the HTTP protocol? If yes, what if there is a law saying terrorist websites are illegal but the defendands used a slightly customised HTTP version? Furthermore, should every website include webpages? What if the law prohibits terrorist webpages, but the defendands just placed some gzip or pdf files on a public indexed directory served by Apache httpd? Is a non-indexed directory served by Apache a website? Can a website on the Principality of Sealand be prosecuted under US law? If you tunnel HTTP traffic through another protocol, would this qualify as website data? Is a website a publication? Is it still a publication if you open a website on a non-networked server? If you create a website unreadable by humans but readable by computers, would this qualify as a publication? Is a website that was online only for 3 minutes a kind of publication? Is the printout of a website still a website? Would the browser cache be regarded as copying potentially copyrighted material? If a very sucky webserver can only handle 3 requests per minute and you hit your Refresh/Reload button 4 times within a minute bringing the server down, would this be a DoS attack?
Not a very good troll, really...
Simon.
Physicists get Hadrons!
It's like blood stains - we've all seen them but a judge still wants an expert to explain the fine points.
Here's something you'd *never* hear in an U.S. court.
"Ah... yeah, i still got nothin"
Bravo, Judge Limey.
now go read up so you can justifiably preside over such a case.
Seriously, how many judges presiding over tech-related cases right now actually understand what's going on?
If he's in-touch enough with what he's supposed to be doing to say this and not just hand out rulings like the asshats in this country, at least there's hope for one english-speaking judicial system.
Come read my stupid blagablog. Rants and Giggles
...Not the fact that he doesn't know what a website is, but the fact that he admits to not knowing what a website is. The fact that he doesn't know what it is isn't a problem -- you can teach someone out of their ignorance. But think about how much worse it would be if he did what most judges do, i.e., pretend they know what they're talking about and make poor judgments and court decisions..
Yes this guy should be praised for his honesty of his utter ineptitude. What he should do is recuse himself from the case for someone who knows something. And he should be thanked and rewarded. He should then go take some courses to learn something about the internet. Meanwhile judges who don't admit that they don't know what it is should be hunted down and fired or noted that they are inelligible to serve on any technological case.
Contrary to another poster I don't believe that a lack of being knowledgeble in the field brings about true justice. It means that such a person could easily be confused and misled by the guck that the expert and lawyers present to them. It has nothing to do with bias for the justice side of it, it has to do with not being competant enough on the topic to resolve the issue. More time and money will be wasted in trial getting him a clue then actually on the legal matter at hand. How is that good for anybody? It isn't.
If you ask me this is one more sign that serious reform is needed in the judge system, and the whole "tenure for life" good old boys network of judges is the first target. Though not neccessarily true, they are the most likely to be completely ignorant of technology and to have never bothered to learn what the internet is. What's worse is I'd bet that these are same morons who are letting all the legislation regarding to technology through. I say let's test their general knowledge and have endorsements for highly technical cases involving things such as various facets technology. Why not, they have to study tax law if they want to deal with taxes, they should have to study technology and IP law if they want to rule on stuff with that. From the tests results issue endorsements; if they can't pass a test on technology they can't be assigned a case that hinges upon internet technology very simple.
Would you let a foot doctor give you advice on heart surgery? No. And it's not a superiority thing either, I wouldn't let the cardiac surgeon tell me how to treat my feet other. As long as the issue is dealt with respectfully and judges are forth coming let them stay in the system. But when judges are found to be presiding over cases they dont have the proper knowledge of that should be treated just as unethically as a lawyer neglecting to properly represent a client.
My real question, if he's forthcoming enough to admit his lack of knowledge why not be forthright enough to remove yourself from the case to be replaced by someone who knows it to speed up the case. In our country at least I have a right to a speedy trial, which definately does not include educating a judge on the internet.
It's far time judges, teachers and other public officials were held to the same standards that other workers are in regards to time. Time goes on and new technologies come along as well as new techniques and trends. To be a viable worker we have to keep up with these things, why don't they have to? The tenure systems are crippling us.
"Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
EdelFactor
The internet is such a central aspect of life these days the judge is remiss in not having informed himself of at least the basics.
I imagine that you were played with. This is how lawyers have to talk to expert witnesses in court - they need to start from some baseline, and work there way down to what they want to know. She was doing exactly the same thing to you - and eventually got to the boundary of your knowledge in the area, showing that you might not be the best witness in that respect. She was practicing. I bet shes one hell of a lawyer at trial, as you fell for this hook line and sinker.
(and perhaps I'm being a touch naive, but I think that this is a bit more likely than not knowing that the earth revolved around the sun)
Wish we had a President who could admit his ignorance.
"Not an actor, but he plays one on TV."
Then I'd declare that web sites that don't execute code on external computers should never be considered weapons of terror and that we must hold true to the ideal of convicting real perpetrators of real crimes, of which there are plenty. It's easy to lock up the lunatic fringe that shouts about tearing down society. It's much harder to lock up people like Osama et al, who are not only intent on actually doing so, but also have real weapons at their disposal.
I'm not saying these folk are scapegoats - they may well be genuinely dangerous. I know little to nothing about the case and... I am not a judge.
Thinking about it, this probably is a timeless concern. If a judge stopped similar proceedings in the early 20th century because he didn't understand how the murderer had got away so fast in a carriage without horses, I'd like to think he'd have been similarly ridiculed. Judges aren't required to keep up with modern technology but surely they should be required to keep up with the everday tools of mainstream society? I would have thought any conviction handed down by a judge that was ignorant of the contemporary infrastructural context of the case would be unsound. Yeesh. Who'd be a judge?
I bet she was yanking your chain for her own amusement or to test you.
Nearly every reply I see here falls into one of two categories:
- "Wow, what a stupid judge! He doesn't know what a website is, like we teh smaert peoples do!!!"
- "No, the guy is wise to admit his limitation, and ask us, the smaert peoples who know what a website is, to tell him."
The tacit assumption is that it's perfectly clear what a "web site" is.Now, of course, I'm going to call that assumption into question. What is a web site? How do you tell where one web site ends, and where another starts? Is Geocities a web site? Is it rather a collection of web sites? Is it both, simultaneously? How does this decision interact with other legal reasoning that may be relevant to the case? What criteria ought to be applied in the kind of case he's handling?
The judge's supposed "admission" of "ignorance" could, for all that we know from TFA, not be because the judge has no concept of what a website is; it could be because his concept of what a website is is good enough for using, um, web sites, but not good enough for deciding this particular case.
Are you adequate?
You have to remember, he is your Dad. In a certain part of his mind you will always be about two years old. Like the way I always remind one of my sons about putting two 3.5 inch floppies in the Amiga drive. OK, he was nearly three years old at the time, is now 21 and did an internship at Google last christmas....
:)
Hmm, the captcha for this is ejected, which is what the two disks wouldn't do, I had to dismantle the machine.
I'm not speaking about this case in particular but about an ignorance of what has become an everyday reality for a majority of the population, at least in the northern hemisphere. The judge in question isn't even a man of terribly advanced years (59 years old). He doesn't need to be be advanced in his understanding of the Internet, surfing the web and posting on Slashdot during his lunch break, but being an educated man who doesn't grasp the concept of a web page is ridiculous.
I'm sure you're right that he can render informed judgements on this case but, really, isn't there a need for any person, let alone a judge, to possess this kind of common knowledge of what is going on in the culture? This judge's office (or, at the very least, that of his clerk/secretary) has probably had Internet access for years. If he lacks the curiosity to find out about the Internet up until now, I have to seriously question his intellect.
Will any precise definition of the word "web site" actually help to decide the merits of this case? I suspect the best conclusion that the judge could reach is that the really important questions are which parties have control over which individual pieces of content, and what responsibilities does such control entail.
That is, I think that the correct conclusion that the judge hopefully will arrive, by questioning people about the term "web site," is that despite the fact that the parties to the case use it in their filings, it is in fact irrelevant to the case. But before you can figure out that the term "web site" is irrelevant, you have to understand it better.
Are you adequate?
ISPs should be allowed to bill people differently for different qualities of service.
Which is an irrelevant point to make, NO ONE is arguing or even suggesting otherwise. Anyone who makes that point has effectively demonstrated that they do not really grasp the issue under debate.
For example my Cable ISP offers me at least two different levels of service, one faster and more expensive than the other, and that's A-OK!
The issue under debate is a very different thing. The best comparison to illustrate the situation and the problem is to look at telephone service, and to explain what it would be like for the phone company to do exactly the same thing. For the sake of simplicity lets ignore local calls. The service that the phone company is providing is to take absolutely any number I dial and hand me a link to the long distance network and hand that phone number to the long distance network.
If the phone company wants to offer me different qualities of service, that's fine. They can give me a cheapo low quality low volume noisy link to the long distance network at a low price, or a high quality link at a higher price. That's fine. But that's not what we're talking about.
What we are talking about would be if my local phone company were to examine the phone number I dialed so decide whether or not they "approve" of the person or company that I'm calling. If they "like" the person or company I'm calling, then they give me an immediate pristine link to the long distance network. If they do not "like" the person or company I'm calling, then they stick in a 5 second delay before patching me through to the long distance network and deliberately sabotage the volume of the call and deliberately inject noise into the line.
The service I am paying for is a link to the long distance network, period. If they want to offer different levels of service, that's fine. However there is absolutely no valid justification for them to deliberately sabotage my call based on who I'm calling... they do the exact same work supplying me with the exact same link to the exact same long distance network no matter what number I dialed. They just want to examine the number I dialed and jump in to sabotage certain calls.
And there are at least two reasons they are interested in doing that. Number one is that they might open some other business or sign an alliance with some other business (lets say pizza delivery), and they deliberately sabotage any phone call to any competitor pizza delivery service. They want to abuse their monopoly position in phone service in order to attempt to establish a monopoly in a different area - pizza delivery. The other reason they are interested in doing this is to extort money from random deep-pocket targets... targets that are not their customers and who have no business involvement with them at all. Like your local phone company noticing that a lot of people place phone orders with Sears and that Sears makes a lot of money... so your local phone company says to Sears "we want you to pay us 5% of everything you sell to any of our phone customers, or we will sabotage every call one of our customers makes to you ". And the phone company makes the same extortion threat to all of Sears' competitors... makes the same extortion threat to Target and Macy's and K-Mart and Wal-Mart and JC Penny. If one of those companies were to refuse to pay the extortion threat, their customers are going to have phone problems trying to place orders... and those customers quite likely would switch to placing their phone orders with one of the other stores that did pay the extortion threat and which does not suffer disruptive phone problems.
And a critical point here is that Sears is NOT a customer of the local phone company. Sears pays their phone bill to THEIR local phone company for their phone service. This is YOUR phone company trying to extort money out of Sears. This is YOUR phone company making rediculous noises about how Sears is loading their phone lines
- - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
Yes , if the case was something highly technical and went into the intricacies of technology he could be forgiven. But a website is part of general culture in the UK now and I'm afraid if he doesn't know what it is then he's probably seriously out of touch with more than just the IT world. If there was some case about something illegal with cars we wouldn't expect him to know how the combustion cycle worked but we *would* expect him to know what a friggin car is else how the hell can he make any attempt at judging the case??
Certain people actively investigate new appliances, others are busy enough as is that they simply don't care. One of my grandma's has vowed never to touch a computer, even though the family is full of IT-nerds. My other grandma is IM'ing more than I am.
The best thing a judge can do in such a case is acknowledge he doesn't understand the topic, and preferably have a different judge that does know the topic take over, regardless of the topic.
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