[Cddc] CDDC Speaker: Code, Lovely Code or the Three Wise Monkeys and European ISP liability
monalinda doro
monalind28 at yahoo.com
Thu Sep 30 21:27:22 EDT 2004
Dear Jeremy,
I received your email and I found it to be informative. I learned a lot from it. Thanks
Monalinda
jeremy hunsinger <jhuns at vt.edu> wrote:
Distribute as appropriate:
1:00 P.M. the 29th of Sept. in 527 Major Williams Hall
The Center for Digital Discourse and Culture is Hosting:
Chris Marsden of the the Oxford Internet
Institute(http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/)
Speaking on:
Code, Lovely Code or the Three Wise Monkeys and European ISP liability
Two types of code regulate behaviour on the Internet: legal code and
software code. There is a third type which receives less attention -
codes of conduct for intermediaries, including Internet Service
Providers, and the terms of use for their end users, which deal with
inappropriate behaviour on the Internet. It is this third type amongst
'code, code, code' that this paper examines. In particular, it asks
whether harmful and illegal content types can be regulated effectively
by legal code or ISP conduct codes. If such codes are ineffective, or
require such radical intervention into freedom of expression that the
end-to-end principle enshrines, the paper considers software code's
role in facilitating regulation. It does so by linking three separate
content types that users rule inappropriate: unsolicited commercial
messages (spam), malicious code (spyware and viruses particularly), and
harmful or inappropriate content (typically unsolicited adult material,
particularly for children). A regulatory response that institutes rules
at either the network or user level to prevent these content types is
increasingly urgent in broadband networks (including mobile). The paper
draws conclusions for regulatory policy based on a European Commission
funded study of self-regulatory types. Without such a unified approach,
a regulatory model that is much less suitable for both network openness
and freedom of expression is all but inevitable.
Two types of code regulate behaviour on the Internet: legal code and
software code. There is a third type which receives less attention -
codes of conduct for intermediaries, including Internet Service
Providers, and the terms of use for their end users, which deal with
inappropriate behaviour on the Internet. It is this third type amongst
'code, code, code' that this paper examines. In particular, it asks
whether harmful and illegal content types can be regulated effectively
by legal code or ISP conduct codes. If such codes are ineffective, or
require such radical intervention into freedom of expression that the
end-to-end principle enshrines, the paper considers software code's
role in facilitating regulation. It does so by linking three separate
content types that users rule inappropriate: unsolicited commercial
messages (spam), malicious code (spyware and viruses particularly), and
harmful or inappropriate content (typically unsolicited adult material,
particularly for children). A regulatory response that institutes rules
at either the network or user level to prevent these content types is
increasingly urgent in broadband networks (including mobile). The paper
draws conclusions for regulatory policy based on a European Commission
funded study of self-regulatory types. Without such a unified approach,
a regulatory model that is much less suitable for both network openness
and freedom of expression is all but inevitable.
Christopher Marsden is a prolific cyberlaw writer, researcher and
consultant, who joined the Oxford Internet Institute on 1 May 2004. His
research at
OII focuses on cyberlaw and international political economy/Internet
governance, broadband mobile Internet regulation and policy.
His latest publications are at www.selfregulation.info as well as
chapters
in 'Internet Television' (ed. Eli Noam et al, 2003) and 'Digital TV in
Europe' (eds Picard and Brown, 2004, with Monica Arino) both published
by
Lawrence Erlbaum. He has edited the following collections of essays:
"Convergence in European Digital TV Regulation" (Blackstone, London June
1999, with Stefaan Verhulst) and "Regulating the Global Information
Society"
(Routledge, 2000).
jeremy hunsinger
jhuns at vt.edu
www.cddc.vt.edu
www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy
www.tmttlt.com
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