Usenet Abuse: Can the Net Be Saved From
Itself?
By Eric S. Freibrun
Laurence Canter and Martha Siegel, two
attorneys practicing law in Phoenix, are conceivably among the two most reviled dwellers
of cyberspace. A few months ago, the husband and wife law firm of Canter & Siegel
brought upon themselves a virtual firestorm of "flames" -- the network term for
angrily scornful messages -- for engaging in constitutionally protected free speech on the
Internet.
The "crime": They posted an
advertisement for their legal services throughout the Usenet, a major portion of the
Internet linking some 10 million people around the world encompassing government agencies,
large universities, high schools, businesses of all sizes and home computers. The ad had
nothing to do with computers and was not targeted toward any particular forum within the
Usenet. It simply offered to help any individual enter the Governments Green Card
Lottery, which makes available a specified number of work visas to foreign citizens who
would not otherwise qualify for them.
The Usenet is considered by some to be
the closest thing the world has yet had to an electronic "global village." To
some, Canter & Siegels ad was the equivalent of the Goodyear blimp hovering at
low altitude. Their ad appeared unsolicited in some 6000 of the 9000 "news
groups" comprising the Usenet. A news group is an electronic bulletin board in which
people interested in a particular topic share information.
The response from many in the enraged net
community was vitriolic and, in some cases, sociopathic, including anti-Semitic hate mail,
death threats, electronic harassment including listing Canters and Siegels
home address and advocating arson, threats to post their credit report and credit card
numbers, preparing electronic "bombs" to knock out their computers, and even the
suggestion that forged messages calling for the assassination of President Clinton be sent
in their names.
Did Canter and Siegel do anything
illegal? No. The government does not regulate the content of Usenet communications.
Moreover, the First Amendment to the Constitution protects, among other things, freedom of
speech, whether of a commercial or non-commercial nature. Any laws or regulations
prohibiting speech on the Internet based on content, e.g., purely commercial
advertisements such as those placed by Canter & Siegel, would likely be struck down as
unconstitutional if challenged in the courts. But as the Usenet and the larger Internet
are global communities, issues as to what constitutes permissible conduct on the
"net" transcend U.S. law.
Canters and Siegels ad
violated a fundamental rule of "netiquette" -- the informal Usenet code of
conduct that has developed over time -- that users not abuse a communal resource intended
for intellectual pursuits by hawking their products or services. News groups also
typically have rules discouraging the posting of messages not related to their topics.
Canters and Siegels method of disseminating their ad was considered
particularly obnoxious because they indiscriminately "spammed" their message
across innumerable news groups ("spamming" is net jargon for repeating the same
information numerous times, derived from a Monty Python episode featuring a restaurant
serving a tasty dish of Spam, Spam, sausage, eggs and Spam). The ad cost the lawyers
almost nothing to send. They took advantage of the Internets enormous transmission
and replication capabilities. The ads recipients, however, paid for the ad in
connection and data storage charges, as well as lost time spent removing the ad from their
news group mailboxes.
To many, Canters and Siegels
ad is merely the latest example of the decline in net civilization. What was once the
exclusive province of academic institutions and government agencies has become a global
soapbox for anyone with a PC and a modem. The easy access to the Internet afforded by
on-line services such as UUNET, Delphi, CompuServe and America Online has increased the
diversity of the nets population. Many longtime users view this as a threat to the
nets decade-old tradition of rational self-governance, and ultimately, free
expression.
Indeed, the global net has begun to
reflect the world itself. The New York Times has reported that Armenians and Turks have
brought their long-standing ethnic hatreds into the net community by accusing each other
of using electronic forgeries and software that seeks and destroys the others
messages. Pornographic pictures are traded, uploaded and downloaded in heavy volume, and
pedophiles have been caught prowling for young boys on local bulletin board systems and
national on-line services, again according to the Times.
Is regulation needed? As of this writing,
the international board of directors of the Internet Society was scheduled to meet in
June, 1994, to consider rules of appropriate network behavior. The Society does not have
enforcement authority, but is in a position to recommend to Internet access providers that
they contractually require subscribers to adhere to rules governing system use.
Some Internet access providers already
limit in their services contracts what subscribers can say and do using their systems.
First Amendment issues do not come into play because the limitations are not imposed by
any governmental act, but by written agreement between private parties.
In its Terms of Membership agreement,
Delphi Internet Services prohibits its users from advertising or promoting any commercial
product or services without Delphis consent. Delphi also prohibits users from
submitting for publication on the system any libelous or obscene material and requires
users to get Delphis permission before engaging in any mass electronic mailings.
America Online, which provides e-mail
access to the Internet, goes further. Billing itself as a "community oriented
service" with "children aboard," its Terms of Service prohibit a variety of
speech described as sexually oriented, threatening, racially offensive, obscene, profane
or abusive. Subscribers are further prohibited from using the system to encourage others
to use controlled substances. Harassment of others -- defined as a personal attack against
another member intended to cause distress, embarrassment or other discomfort, i.e.
"flaming" -- is also a violation of America Onlines service terms. Users
violating any term of service can be cut off.
CompuServe, another consumer-oriented
on-line service provider competing with America Online and offering e-mail access to the
Internet, has similar restrictions. For example, CompuServe members are prohibited from
disseminating on the service any abusive, profane or sexually offensive information or
material. They are additionally prohibited from advertising to other members, except
through the "Classifieds" section, which will not publish ads of a personal or
sexual nature.
The on-line services mentioned above are
but three gateways to the Internet. Will other users accessing the Internet through
gateways imposing no such restrictions agree to the establishment of a regulatory body
having broad policing and enforcement powers over the net? As spamming and other more
socially unacceptable activities become widespread, can the net do without one?
[The author gratefully acknowledges the
advice and counsel of Poul Bjerre-Jensen, Director of Management Information Services for
ANGUS Chemical Company.)
Attorney Eric Freibrun specializes in
Computer law and Intellectual Property protection, providing legal services to information
technology vendors and users. Tel.: 847-562-0099; Fax: 847-562-0033; E-mail: eric@freibrun.com.
Copyright © Eric S. Freibrun, Esq., Law Offices of Eric S. Freibrun, Ltd. All rights
reserved.