Ask Slashdot: Cyber Patrol Censorship?
There's more to the situation, however...
"I am more upset that my ISP never told me that Cyber Patrol was blocking their server... they have known for some time and they chose not to spread this information to their customers. I only found out when a job hunter couldn't access my resume and wrote me an e-mail to alert me to the problem. What can I do about this situation, aside from move to another ISP? What sort of compensation can I seek, either from Cyber Patrol or my ISP? It's impossible to measure what sort of hits I have lost due to this block, and I don't know how long it's been this way.
I suggested to my ISP that they set up 2 web servers, one for unregulated content and one "safe-surfing" where people could sign an agreement to keep content clean in trade for an unblocked server, and to co-ordinate this effort with companies such as Cyber Patrol. My ISP responded that they would take my comments into consideration, but that they did not even know whether their web server alone was blocked, or the entire domain, and that my solution might not be feasible."
Such behavior scares me. Is it legal for ISPs to behave this way? Will we all have to worry about being silently censored in this manner?
I'm sorry to say that I've experienced similar problems with n2h2's Bess censorware. Bess is popular in many public schools and libraries in my area.
Shortly after I published information on my web site criticizing n2h2's Bess product and similar products, along with software that helps censored users work around such products, n2h2 blocked every web site on my machine. Despite repeated attempts to get them to rectify the situation, it goes uncorrected. At one point, they even went so far as to modify their program to provide false unblocked results when accessed from hostnames I commonly browse the web from!
N2h2 has ignored or dismissed my requests to narrow the scope of their blocking. Through carelessness, negligence, or malice, they have chosen to block the entire 978.org domain and any other site hosted on my machine (ie, http://fiero.978.org/, http://tendafoot.978.org/, http://www.drumhillford.com/) and to tell third parties that contact them about the blocking that these sites are blocked due to pornographic content, information about circumventing their product, or because I offer free, anonymous, and instantaneous web access. None of these claims are true.
The fact that n2h2 has chosen to not only prejudicially block every web site that I'm involved in but also to spread lies about the nature of content on hosts in the 978.org domain and sites hosted on my machine is particularly disturbing.
Shortly after I discovered the blocking, I sent several letters similar to the following, asking them to rectify the problem.