- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE.
- March 28, 2000.
- Contact: Emily Whitfield, ACLU, (917) 686-4542 (cell
phone)
- Contact: David Sobel, EPIC, (202) 544-9240
NEW
YORK, N.Y.,
March 28, 2000
The settlement
of a lawsuit between owners of the Internet blocking program Cyber
Patrol and the authors of a code allowing users to "unlock" its
key list of blocked Web sites leaves consumers and Web operators
in the dark, the American Civil Liberties Union said today.
In an
opinion issued late today, Judge Edward F. Harrington refused
to say whether U.S. website operators who posted "mirror" copies
of the program are subject to the settlement terms. He also appeared
to suggest that mirror sites could test that question only by
risking a contempt charge that could lead to fines and jail.
"We respectfully disagree
with the court's opinion and we are weighing our legal options,"
said Chris Hansen, an ACLU senior staff attorney and lead counsel
in the case.
Although the right
of parents to use the software was never at issue, Judge Harrington
said the case "raises a profound societal issue, namely, who is
to control the educational and intellectual nourishment of young
children - the parents or the purveyors of pornography and the
merchants of death and violence."
But by allowing Mattel
Inc., the owners of Cyber Patrol, to control the dissemination
of the decoding program, the judges' ruling leaves parents in
the dark about the products they are buying to protect their children,
Hansen said.
"Today's development
only reinforces our view that the less parents know about what
Cyber Patrol blocks, the more they are being led astray by Mattel
and the other manufacturers who consider their ėlist of ingredients'
top secret," he added.
The ACLU entered the
case last Friday on behalf of three U.S. Web site operators who
had posted "mirror" copies of the decoding program. In the wake
of the court's ruling, the three Web site owners -- Waldo L. Jaquith,
Lindsay Haisley and Bennett Haselton -- said they have not yet
decided whether to remove their copies of the software decoding
key.
The case was filed
by the national ACLU along with its Massachusetts affiliate, private
attorney Jessica Litman of New York and the Electronic Privacy
Information Center based in Washington, D.C.
The ACLU's opposition
to motion for preliminary injunction in the case is online at
http://www.aclu.org/court/cyberpatrol_motion.html.
The motion to quash subpoenas is online at http://www.aclu.org/court/cyberpatrol_quash.html.
The court's ruling is posted on EPIC's website at http://www.epic.org/free_speech/censorware/cp_injunction.html.
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