Background on 18 USC 2257: http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/2257info.htm Information on last-minute deal between Free Speech Coalition and the Feds: http://www.freespeechcoalition.com/news_events_1.htm -Declan -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Rotten.com: our gapingmaw.com site shut by Feds, 2257 Date: Wed, 22 Jun 2005 17:20:07 -0700 From: Xeni Jardin <xeni@private> To: 'Declan McCullagh' <declan@private> http://www.boingboing.net/2005/06/22/rottencom_our_gaping.html Wednesday, June 22, 2005 Rotten.com: our gapingmaw.com site shut by Feds, 2257 A message on gapingmaw.com (which you could call an industrial-strength grossout blog of sorts) says: --- CENSORED BY US GOVERNMENT 18 USC 2257 Yes, that is correct. The things that used to be here, the very funny things that you want to read, have been made retroactively illegal by the US government, in a side-handed attack on the pornography industry. We might mention that the material here isn't even pornography as you normally think of it -- this site is just adult humor, in essay format, with some illustrations. The government is mandating that we meet certain bookkeeping requirements, ones impossible to meet for this site. Never mind that those requirements do not actually gain the public anything. This is the strongest attack on free speech since the passage of the CDA, and oddly, the media seems to have hardly noticed. The penalty for not abiding by these bookkeeping requirements is five years prison. The regulations were promulgated by Alberto Gonzales, US Attorney General appointed by George Bush. If you voted for Bush, this is your fault. If you think this country is free, you are sadly mistaken. No nation has freedom when it is run by religious zealots. --- Link to gapingmaw.com, such as it is: http://www.gapingmaw.com/ The law in question is ostensibly aimed at preventing the exploitation of minors in pornography. However, some free speech advocates argue it provides the conservative Bush administration with far-reaching power to effectively silence a wide array of websites deemed offensive. Here's the full text: Link to U.S. Code : Title 18 : Section 2257. http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/ts_search.pl?title=18&sec=2257 The adult biz advocacy group Free Speech Coalition (FSC) filed a lawsuit last week challenging 2257, and AVN has more on that: Link. http://www.boingboing.net/2005/06/22/rottencom_our_gaping.html --------------------------------------- Xeni Jardin | www.xeni.net * co-editor, BoingBoing.net * correspondent: Wired Magazine, Wired News, etc. * technology contributor: NPR's "Day to Day" say: /SHEH-nee zhar-DAN/ xeni@private Mailing list for updates: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/xeni-net/ -------- Original Message -------- Subject: 18 USC 2257 to go into effect at midnight... greatly increases recordkeeping reqs. for online erotica Date: Thu, 23 Jun 2005 12:05:54 -0700 From: Joseph Lorenzo Hall <joehall@private> Reply-To: joehall@private To: Dave Farber <dave@private>, Declan McCullagh <declan@private> The gist: "So now the DOJ has wisely made the world safer by forcing anyone even remotely connected with publishing erotic images to keep elaborate files on the true identities of everyone in said images for seven years. And we're even more secure because law enforcement officers can wander into adult businesses any time they want, without a court order, and go through every single file for hours or days at a time." ---- <http://www.alternet.org/story/22289/> # On File By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet Posted on June 22, 2005, Printed on June 23, 2005 When the US government wants to police what citizens are saying online, it pulls out the most potent weapon in its arsenal: bureaucratic regulations. The Department of Justice is currently pushing two new regs that will generate long-lasting records of what people are posting and reading. What's particularly dirty about all this is that it puts the onus of tracking people on private businesses, rather than in the hands of law enforcement. How will this tracking regime begin? With a group of unpopular and often marginal people, of course. You know - pornographers. The DOJ recently issued a regulation, which goes into effect next week, updating the Child Protection and Obscenity Enforcement Act for the Internet age. This law, also simply known as 2257, after its number in the criminal code, requires adult businesses to keep detailed records proving that all the models they use are over the age of 18. Incidentally, these records will also contain the real names of performers, and often their addresses too. To keep "proper records" under the new version of 2257 (and avoid steep fines or jail time), you must maintain files that contain every single erotic image or film you've published, cross-indexed with age-verification papers for every single performer in them. These records must be kept for seven years. That's a hell of a lot of hard drive space if you run a porn site that posts streaming videos. It's also a logistical nightmare for any site that does reviews of adult movies or erotic material. Republishing an erotic image - even if you're doing it simply for the purposes of criticism - requires you to keep the same age-verification records as the people who created that image. The law also applies to any Web site that posts "lascivious" images of naked people or people engaging in "sexual activity." -- Joseph Lorenzo Hall UC Berkeley, SIMS PhD Student <http://josephhall.org/> _______________________________________________ Politech mailing list Archived at http://www.politechbot.com/ Moderated by Declan McCullagh (http://www.mccullagh.org/)
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