Saturday, January 30, 2010
Too Serious To Laugh
The Slippery Slope in Australia
Friday, January 29, 2010
A Global Embarrassment
In spite of these commendable actions, the school district is now a laughing stock. And not just in Riverside County or in California, it's now a laughing stock nation wide and even planet wide. This whole flap could have amounted to no more than an amusing anecdote about American culture, except for one little thing: the thick-witted yokels running the school actually pulled copies of the DICTIONARY from fourth and fifth grade classrooms. Bad enough, but at least they made up for it by eventually getting some smarts and putting the books back, right?. Well, not quite. They had to add in accommodation for stupidity and insanity: parents can now decide whether or not their children will have access to the DICTIONARY in SCHOOL.
I've now seen news reports and scathing commentary about this in three languages and dozens of news outlets around the world. Picked up by every major news outlet in the US, the story has since moved on to Canada, Australia, the UK, Spain, Mexico, and more. A few commentators support pulling the dictionary. Most, however, see nothing more than confirmation of their belief that the US is a very strange place.
Thursday, January 28, 2010
A Very Busy Censorship Day
The Tulsa World reported today that a children's book known as Buster's Sugartime has been challenged at the Union School District in Oklahoma. The problem was that the book mentions (MENTIONS!) same-sex couples. I'm not going to read the book, but I will quote here from the Tulsa World article, which contains quotes from the book:
Of the book's 31 pages of text and pictures, two short passages mention the same-sex couple: "Buster went to visit his mom's friends Karen and Gillian. They had three children ..." and "Lily's moms, Tracy and Gina, were very good cooks."According to the article, the parents of one elementary school student formally challenged the book. A review committee recommended 6-1 that the book be retained. Undeterred, the parents took their complaint to the school board, arguing at least in part that the book advocates same-sex marriage, and such marriages are not allowed under Oklahoma law. What that line of argument could possibly have to do with the book was not explained, at least not in the news article. The school board voted 3-1 to retain the book, and that has ended the issue, at least for now.
I realize some parents will object to even so innocuous a text as this. But to challenge the book's availability, denying other parents the right to make a different choice, is harder to understand. The review process seems to have worked in this case, but shame on the one member of the review committee and one member of the school board who voted to remove the book.
How Low Can Censorship Go?
About Internet Filters in Volusia County, FL
- The new policy defines an adult as someone 18 or older, but the CIPA states a cutoff age of 17.
- The new policy requires an adult to state a reason for disabling the internet filter, but the US v. ALA Supreme Court decision (echoed in FCC Order 03-188), appears to require that an adult be able to disable a filter without stating a reason.
- The new policy creates a privacy concern by requiring an adult requesting unblocking or disabling to identify himself or herself by name, in writing, and to state the planned internet access. The CIPA appears not to permit this kind of record keeping.
- The allowance of 72 hours for consideration of the request is far too long. The US v. ALA decision assumed that disabling could be done in a timely manner. Excessive delays may place an undue burden the right to access protected speech.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Can the CIPA be fixed?
- Clarify that libraries must unblock or disable a filter on demand by any adult patron without delay or question. At a practical level, this is how things work now, because the US v. ALA (2003) decision imposed this requirement. But the language of the Act itself has not been updated to reflect that decision. The Act still says that libraries may unblock or disable on demand by an adult patron, and censorship proponents try to make far too much out of the difference between may and must. Changing that one word would have little or no practical impact, but would cut down on a lot of rhetorical nonsense.
- The FCC could get clearer on what kinds of violations of CIPA terms will cause a school or library to loose the related federal funds and what kinds will not. The law itself being rather vague, the FCC is in a difficult position, and one result is that they sometimes avoid getting specific. Will the FCC actively pursue a return of funds if a library has computers that have no filters installed, even if those computers can only be used by adults? How about if the library refuses to unblock or disable on demand by an adult patron? What if the library tries to create an application and review process for unblocking or disabling, or just takes too long to unblock or disable on demand? Each of these situations appears to violate the terms of the CIPA, but which the FCC will take action on is less than clear.
- Some kind of standard measure for the effectiveness of Internet Filters, in terms of both underblocking and overblocking, is needed. The law requires that CIPA-compliant libraries have internet filters, but says nothing about how to measure their effectiveness or what effectiveness levels are minimally required. On the one hand, it is clear that an internet filter program could be so ineffective that a library using it would be out of compliance with the CIPA. On the other hand, it was well known when the CIPA was written that all filtering programs both overblock and underblock content, so some degree of ineffectiveness must be acceptable. Between these two extremes, nobody knows where the line is to be drawn, or even how to go about drawing it. It may someday be up to some unfortunate library with poorly designed software (deliberately or accidentally) to test this in court.
- The CIPA probably needs to include language that requires age-grading of access to materials, allowing a 16-year-old (for example) to access material that might be blocked for a 6-year-old. Some filtering software provides this capability, but not all. The CIPA makes no statement about requiring such grading, lumping all minors under the age of 17 into a single category. This is a difficult area of Free Speech law, but court precedent indicates that a 6-year-old and a 16-year-old are not the same with regard to what kinds of images might be too sexually explicit. Failing to address this in the CIPA leaves libraries open to "as applied" challenges from all sides.
Monday, January 25, 2010
Open Letter to the Volusia County Council
Dear Councilperson:
It appears that the Council is considering changes in policy about unblocking and/or disabling internet filters at the Volusia County Public Library. While my understanding of that proposal is limited to what I’ve read in news reports, and is therefore incomplete, I wish to bring to your attention the possibility that the proposed changes could result in the revocation of federal funds the library currently receives, as well as embroil the county in a costly lawsuit. I urge the council to seek the advice of an attorney before proceeding with the proposal.
If I understand the situation correctly, the Volusia County Public Library receives certain federal funds that make the library subject to the terms of the Children’s Internet Protection Act (CIPA). The CIPA requires that libraries receiving those funds have filtering software on all computers with internet access. You should be aware, however, that the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which administers certification and compliance under the CIPA, requires that adult library patrons be able to disable the internet filter without explaining their intended use. The FCC clarified this in order 03-188, in response to the US Supreme Court decision US v. ALA. The order says, in part:
The Supreme Court found that CIPA does not induce libraries to violate the Constitution because public libraries’ Internet filtering software can be disabled at the request of any adult user and, therefore, does not violate their patrons’ First Amendment rights. In upholding CIPA, the Supreme Court emphasized “the ease with which patrons may have the filtering software disabled,” and that a patron who encounters a blocked site … need only ask a librarian to unblock it (or at least in the case of adults) disable the filter.” The plurality also highlighted the government’s acknowledgment at oral argument that “a patron would not ‘have to explain … why he was asking a site to be unblocked or the filtering to be disabled.’”
Again, please seek the advice of an attorney before proceeding with the proposed policy changes.
Thank You For Your Consideration.
News Coverage: http://www.wesh.com/news/22308295/detail.html
FCC Summary of the CIPA: http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/consumerfacts/cipa.html
FCC Order 03-188: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-03-188A1.pdf
US v. ALA Decision: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?court=US&vol=539&invol=194
Friday, January 22, 2010
A Response To Ms. Maziarka
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Howl On Trial
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
A Society's Confidence in Itself?
"Censorship reflects a society's lack of confidence in itself. It is a hallmark of an authoritarian regime. Long ago those who wrote our First Amendment charted a different course. They believed a society can be truly strong only when it is truly free. In the realm of expression they put their faith, for better or for worse, in the enlightened choice of the people, free from the interference of a policeman's intrusive thumb or a judge's heavy hand. So it is that the Constitution protects coarse expression as well as refined, and vulgarity no less than elegance. A book worthless to me may convey something of value to my neighbor. In the free society to which our Constitution has committed us, it is for each to choose for himself."
Sunday, January 17, 2010
The Destruction of Knowledge
- Further reducing already limited public spending on education at all levels.
- Vouchers and other methods for shifting tax dollars out of public education and into private hands.
- Sanitizing great literature into mind-numbing pap, as is too often done in the classroom with the writings of Walt Whitman, William Shakespeare, and other masters.
- Attempts to remove education about basic human sexuality from public school curricula, including removing information about abortion, birth control methods, and prevention of disease, or replacing medically sound curricula with abstinence-only "education."
- Attempts to remove education about human evolution from public school curricula by watering down information on evolutionary theory, injecting unscientific doubt, or adding materials on the pseudoscience sometimes called Creationism or Intelligent Design.
- Lawsuits and other pressure by private schools that teach Creationism to force accrediting agencies or universities to accept the notion that their students are adequately educated.
- Pressuring school and public libraries to reduce or eliminate books that portray homosexuality in a positive, or even neutral, light, or that give factual information about variation in human sexual expression.
- Pressuring school and public libraries to carry more books on pseudo-scientific "ex-gay" therapies.
- Demanding that schools and libraries impose internet filters that go far beyond protecting children from sexually explicit material, blocking access to information that both adults and minors have a constitutional right to access.
- Pressure to keep worldview-challenging curricula out of the public schools, including courses on comparative religion, comparative political systems, and many aspects of history.
- Attempting to remove or restrict access to books in school curricula.
- Attempting to remove or restrict access to books in school libraries.
- Attempting to remove or restrict access to books in public libraries.
Sunday, January 10, 2010
What the CIPA does (not) Require
The CIPA requires the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to administer the certification process. The FCC must interpret the CIPA and come up with administrative rules that inform schools and libraries of the requirements and define the process of certification. If it happens that a library certifies it is in compliance but then the FCC finds that the library is has not met all the conditions, the FCC might demand reimbursement of the discount.
- Schools and libraries must implement Internet Filtering programs that block online access to visual images that contain child pornography or obscenity.
- For users who are minors under 17, the Internet Filtering programs must also block online access to visual images that are Harmful to Minors.
- Schools and libraries must have an “Internet safety policy” that addresses “the safety and security of minors when using electronic mail, chat rooms, and other forms of direct electronic communications.”
- The CIPA does not require all schools and libraries to comply with its terms. Only libraries that accept E-rate and LSTA funds to reduce their expenses for telecommunications are bound by the terms of the CIPA. Libraries that don’t participate in those programs are free to ignore the CIPA. Complying with the terms of the CIPA costs money, and each library must evaluate the costs and benefits based on its own financial circumstances before deciding whether or not to participate.
- The CIPA does not require Internet Filters that block access to any text. This surprises many, in part because blocking objectionable text is a feature of many Internet Filtering programs. A library might happen to implement a filter that blocks text as well as images, but that is not a requirement. What the CIPA requires is a filter that blocks access to visual images that are a) child pornography or b) obscene, and for computer users who are minors, c) are harmful to minors. So far as text is concerned, the CIPA allows an 8-year-old to read the writings of the Marquis de Sade.
- The CIPA does not require that adult users be blocked from viewing material that is harmful to minors. Such material must be blocked from access only by users who are themselves minors. Adults need be blocked only from material that meets the legal definitions of obscenity or child pornography.
- The CIPA does not require Internet Filters that block access to Email messages, Instant Messages, or Chat Rooms. Some filtering programs have an ability to monitor these forms of communication while others do not, but no such blocking or monitoring is required by the CIPA. What is required is a policy, not an Internet Filter, that addresses the safety of Email, chat rooms, and the like.
- The CIPA does not require that Internet Filter programs meet any specific standards of effectiveness. Although it is well understood that all Internet Filtering products both underblock and overblock access to internet materials, and that the degree to which these errors happen varies from program to program, there is no standard or process for certifying which commercially available filtering products comply or fail to comply with the intent of the CIPA.
- The CIPA does not require that Internet Filters remain in place for adult users. The CIPA requires filters to be installed on all library-owned computers, but allows an adult user to request that a specific site be unblocked or the entire filter be disabled "for lawful purposes."
- The CIPA does not require that Internet Filters be installed on patron-owned computers. Increasingly, public libraries allow patrons to connect their personal computers to the internet through the library's communications network. This is allowed even if the patron's computer has no filtering program installed. Some libraries may have a filter that resides partially or completely on the network itself, rather than on each individual computer, and in that situation the patron's computer will be subject to some degree of filtering. Other libraries may be using a filter that resides separately on each individual computer, and in this scenario the patron's computer would not be subject to any filtering. The CIPA leaves it up to each library to choose the structure of the filters it installs, so there is no requirement one way or the other.
- A library can establish its own policy as to whether or not the intervention of library staff is required to unblock a site or disable the filter on a computer being used by an adult patron. Some libraries configure the filtering system to allow adult patrons to unblock the filter themselves, without staff intervention. Other libraries allow only library employees to perform those functions, requiring adult patrons to request staff help if they want to unblock or disable the filter. Legal experts differ in their opinions as to what the exact requirements of the CIPA are in this regard. In its administrative orders, the FCC acknowledges that this debate exists, and declines to issue a clarifying ruling. That leaves the matter up to each library.
- Adult patrons do not have to state a reason for requesting unblocking of a site or disabling of the filter, and the unblocking or disabling must be done without significant delay. This was indicated by the Supreme Court in the US v. ALA decision that allowed enforcement of the CIPA, which decision was echoed by the FCC in its administrative order of 2003 (below).
Saturday, January 9, 2010
Internet Filters: The Constitutional Headache
Friday, January 8, 2010
CIPA Compliance in Brownsville, Texas?
I am in no position to verify the details of the situation in Brownsville, but if they are as SafeLibraries claims, he could have a valid point. That is, IF the Brownsville Public Library has certified to the FCC that it is in compliance with the CIPA, and IF it is also true that the library has computers that are permanently unfiltered (as SafeLibraries indicates), then the library might actually be violating the terms of the CIPA, and could be subject to an FCC demand for return of the federal funds it has received from programs related to the CIPA.
So far as I understand the requirements of the CIPA, a compliant library must have internet filters installed on every computer, even computers in a back office that is not open to the public. While any adult patron (or employee) can request that the filter be disabled, the filter would have to be re-enabled once that individual finishes using the computer.
Part of SafeLibraries' post is about an adult patron who was able to download child pornography on a library computer (the patron was convicted and jailed, according to news reports). It is important to point out that such an incident, by itself, is not evidence that a library is out of compliance with the CIPA, and can be difficult to evaluate without a lot more details about how the illegal pornography was obtained. In a library that is complying fully with the CIPA, a patron might still be able to download illegal pornography because a) the filtering program underblocked, meaning that it failed to live up to its intended design, b) the pornography was transfered as an attachment to an email or instant message that was not monitored by the filter or could not be identified as containing illegal images, c) the patron simply had requested that the filter be disabled while he was using the computer. Downloading child pornography is a crime regardless of how it is accomplished. But even in a library that is fully CIPA-compliant, it is possible for such a crime to take place.
A recent post by the American Library Association documents a somewhat similar situation at the public library in Groton, Connecticut. Police are investigating the possibility that an adult patron downloaded child pornography on a computer in the library, in spite of internet filtering. In Groton, however, there has yet to be any accusations that the library failed to comply in any way with the CIPA.