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This document contains
the court's opinion in A.C.L.U. v. Reno. This document was
adapted from text versions of the opinion available on the Internet.
The hypertext links have been added as a feature of the BitLaw web
site. The Internet cases index can be found on the
Index page.





IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION No. 96-963
CIVIL ACTION No. 96-1458
June 11, 1996
ADJUDICATION ON MOTIONS FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, et al.,
v.
JANET RENO, Attorney General of
the United States
AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION,
INC., et al.,
v.
UNITED STATES DEP'T OF JUSTICE, et al.





Outline
I. INTRODUCTION
Procedural
Background
Statutory Provisions at Issue
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
The Nature of Cyberspace
The
Creation of the Internet and the Development of Cyberspace
How Individuals Access the
Internet
Methods to Communicate
Over the Internet
The World Wide Web
Restricting Access to
Unwanted On-Line Material
PICS
Software
Cyber Patrol
SurfWatch
Content on the Internet
Sexually Explicit
Material On the Internet
Obstacles to Age
Verification on the Internet
The Practicalities of the
Proffered Defenses
Credit Card Verification
Adult Verification by Password
The Government's
"Tagging" Proposal
The Problems of Offshore
Content and Caching
III.CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
SLOVITER,
Chief Judge, Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit:
A.Statutory Provisions
B.Preliminary Injunction
Standard
C.Applicable Standard of
Review
D.The Nature of the
Government's Interest
E.The Reach of the Statute
F.Whether CDA is Narrowly
Tailored
G.Preliminary Injunction
BUCKWALTER, District Judge
A.
B.
C.
DALZELL, District Judge
A. Introduction
B. Defining Indecency
C. Plaintiffs'
Likelihood of Prosecution Under the Act
D. A Medium-Specific Analysis
1.
The Differential
Treatment of Mass Communication Media
2. The Scope of the
Pacifica Decision
3. The Effect of the
CDA and the Novel Characteristics of Internet Communication
4. Diversity and
Access on the Internet
5. Protection of
Children from Pornography
E. Conclusion
Preliminary Injuncation
Footnotes
Notes (For the
Panel)
Notes (Judge Sloviter)
Notes (Judge Buckwalter)
Notes (Judge Dalzell)





Before: Sloviter,
Chief Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit;
Buckwalter and Dalzell, Judges, United States District Court for the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania
I. INTRODUCTION
Procedural Background
Before us are motions for a preliminary injunction filed by
plaintiffs who challenge on constitutional grounds provisions of the
Communications Decency Act of 1996 (CDA or "the Act"), which
constitutes Title V of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, signed
into law by the President on February 8, 1996.1 Telecommunications
Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-104, § 502, 110 Stat. 56, 133-35.
Plaintiffs include various organizations and individuals who, inter
alia, are associated with the computer and/or communications
industries, or who publish or post materials on the Internet, or
belong to various citizen groups. See ACLU Complaint (¶¶
7-26), ALA First Amended Complaint (¶¶ 3, 12-33).
The defendants in these actions are Janet Reno, the Attorney
General of the United States, and the United States Department of
Justice. For convenience, we will refer to these defendants as the
Government. Plaintiffs contend that the two challenged provisions of
the CDA that are directed to communications over the Internet which
might be deemed "indecent" or "patently offensive" for minors,
defined as persons under the age of eighteen, infringe upon rights
protected by the First Amendment and the Due Process Clause of the
Fifth Amendment.
Plaintiffs in Civil Action Number 96-963, in which the lead
plaintiff is the American Civil Liberties Union (the ACLU),2 filed
their action in the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of Pennsylvania on the day the Act was signed, and moved for
a temporary restraining order to enjoin enforcement of these two
provisions of the CDA. On February 15, 1996, following an evidentiary
hearing, Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter, to whom the case had been
assigned, granted a limited temporary restraining order, finding in a
Memorandum that 47 U.S.C. § 223(a)(1)(B) ("the indecency
provision" of the CDA) was unconstitutionally vague. On the same day,
Chief Judge Dolores K. Sloviter, Chief Judge of the United States
Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, having been requested by the
parties and the district court to convene a three-judge court,
pursuant to § 561(a) of the CDA, appointed such a court
consisting of, in addition to Judge Buckwalter, Judge Stewart Dalzell
of the same district, and herself, as the circuit judge required by
28 U.S.C. § 2284.
After a conference with the court, the parties entered into a
stipulation, which the court approved on February 26, 1996, wherein
the Attorney General agreed that:
she will not initiate any investigations or
prosecutions for violations of 47 U.S.C. § 223(d) for conduct
occurring after enactment of this provision until the three-judge
court hears Plaintiffs' Motion for Preliminary Injunction . . . and
has decided the motion.
The Attorney General's commitment was qualified to the extent
that:
her full authority to investigate or prosecute any
violation of § 223(a)(1)(B), as amended, and § 223(d) as to
conduct which occurs or occurred during any period of time after
enactment of these provisions (including for the period of time to
which this stipulation applies) should the Court deny plaintiffs'
motion or, if the motion is granted, should these provisions
ultimately be upheld.
Stipulation, ¶ 4, in C.A. No. 96-963.
Shortly thereafter, the American Library Association, Inc. (the
ALA) and others3 filed a similar action at C.A. No. 96-1458. On
February 27, 1996, Chief Judge Sloviter, again pursuant to §
561(a) of the CDA and upon request, convened the same three-judge
court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2284. The actions were
consolidated pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 42(a), "for all matters
relating to the disposition of motions for preliminary injunction in
these cases, including the hearing on such motions."
The parties were afforded expedited discovery in connection with
the motions for preliminary injunction, and they cooperated with
Judge Dalzell, who had been assigned the case management aspects of
the litigation. While the discovery was proceeding, and with the
agreement of the parties, the court began receiving evidence at the
consolidated hearings which were conducted on March 21 and 22, and
April 1, 12 and 15, 1996. In order to expedite the proceedings, the
parties worked closely with Judge Dalzell and arranged to stipulate
to many of the underlying facts and to place much of their cases in
chief before the court by sworn declarations, so that the hearings
were largely devoted to cross-examination of certain of the witnesses
whose declarations had been filed. The parties submitted proposed
findings of fact and post-hearing memoranda on April 29, and the
court heard extensive oral argument on May 10, 1996.4
Statutory Provisions at Issue
Plaintiffs focus their challenge on two provisions of section 502
of the CDA which amend 47 U.S.C. §§ 223(a) and 223(d).
Section 223(a)(1)(B) provides in part that any person in
interstate or foreign communications who, "by means of a
telecommunications device,"5 "knowingly . . . makes, creates, or
solicits" and "initiates the transmission" of "any comment, request,
suggestion, proposal, image or other communication which is obscene
or indecent, knowing that the recipient of the communication is under
18 years of age," "shall be criminally fined or imprisoned."
(emphasis added).
Section 223(d)(1) ("the patently offensive provision"), makes it a
crime to use an "interactive computer service"6 to "send" or
"display in a manner available" to a person under age 18, "any
comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other communication
that, in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive
as measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory
activities or organs, regardless of whether the user of such service
placed the call or initiated the communication."
Plaintiffs also challenge on the same grounds the provisions in
§ 223(a)(2) and § 223(d)(2), which make it a crime for
anyone to "knowingly permit[] any telecommunications facility under
[his or her] control to be used for any activity prohibited" in
§§ 223(a)(1)(B) and 223(d)(1). The challenged provisions
impose a punishment of a fine, up to two years imprisonment, or both
for each offense.
Plaintiffs make clear that they do not quarrel with the statute to
the extent that it covers obscenity or child pornography, which were
already proscribed before the CDA's adoption. See 18 U.S.C.
§§ 1464-65 (criminalizing obscene material); id.
§§ 2251-52 (criminalizing child pornography); see also New
York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747 (1982); Miller v. California, 413 U.S.
15 (1973).
Plaintiffs in the ACLU action also challenge the provision of the
CDA that criminalizes speech over the Internet that transmits
information about abortions or abortifacient drugs and devices,
through its amendment of 18 U.S.C. § 1462(c). That section now
prohibits the sending and receiving of information over the Internet
by any means regarding "where, how, or of whom, or by what means any
[drug, medicine, article, or thing designed, adapted, or intended for
producing abortion] may be obtained or made". The Government has
stated that it does not contest plaintiffs' challenge to the
enforceability of the provision of the CDA as it relates to 18 U.S.C.
§ 1462(c).7
As part of its argument that the CDA passes constitutional muster,
the Government cites the CDA's "safe harbor" defenses in new §
223(e) of 47 U.S.C., which provides:
(e) Defenses
In addition to any other defenses available by law:
(1) No person shall be held to have violated subsection (a) or (d)
of this section solely for providing access or connection to or from
a facility, system, or network not under that person's control,
including transmission, downloading, intermediate storage, access
software, or other related capabilities that are incidental to
providing such access or connection that does not include the
creation of the content of the communication.
(2) The defenses provided by paragraph (1) of this subsection
shall not be applicable to a person who is a conspirator with an
entity actively involved in the creation or knowing distribution of
communications that violate this section, or who knowingly advertises
the availability of such communications.
(3) The defenses provided in paragraph (1) of this subsection
shall not be applicable to a person who provides access or connection
to a facility, system, or network engaged in the violation of this
section that is owned or controlled by such person.
(4) No employer shall be held liable under this section for the
actions of an employee or agent unless the employee's or agent's
conduct is within the scope of his or her employment or agency and
the employer (A) having knowledge of such conduct, authorizes or
ratifies such conduct, or (B) recklessly disregards such conduct.
(5) It is a defense to a prosecution under subsection (a)(1)(B) or
(d) of this section, or under subsection (a)(2) of this section with
respect to the use of a facility for an activity under subsection
(a)(1)(B) that a person --
(A) has taken, in good faith, reasonable, effective, and
appropriate actions under the circumstances to restrict or prevent
access by minors to a communication specified in such subsections,
which may involve any appropriate measures to restrict minors from
such communications, including any method which is feasible under
available technology; or
(B) has restricted access to such communication by requiring use
of a verified credit card, debit account, adult access code, or adult
personal identification number.
(6) The [Federal Communications] Commission may describe measures
which are reasonable, effective, and appropriate to restrict access
to prohibited communications under subsection (d) of this section.
Nothing in this section authorizes the Commission to enforce, or is
intended to provide the Commission with the authority to approve,
sanction, or permit, the use of such measures. The Commission shall
have no enforcement authority over the failure to utilize such
measures. . . .
II. FINDINGS OF FACT
All parties agree that in order to apprehend the legal questions
at issue in these cases, it is necessary to have a clear
understanding of the exponentially growing, worldwide medium that is
the Internet, which presents unique issues relating to the
application of First Amendment jurisprudence and due process
requirements to this new and evolving method of communication. For
this reason all parties insisted on having extensive evidentiary
hearings before the three-judge court. The court's Findings of fact
are made pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 52(a). The history and basic
technology of this medium are not in dispute, and the first
forty-eight paragraphs of the following Findings of fact are derived
from the like-numbered paragraphs of a stipulation8 the parties
filed with the court.9
The Nature of Cyberspace
The
Creation of the Internet and the Development of Cyberspace
- The Internet is not a physical or tangible entity, but rather
a giant network which interconnects innumerable smaller groups of
linked computer networks. It is thus a network of networks. This
is best understood if one considers what a linked group of
computers -- referred to here as a "network" -- is, and what it
does. Small networks are now ubiquitous (and are often called
"local area networks"). For example, in many United States
Courthouses, computers are linked to each other for the purpose of
exchanging files and messages (and to share equipment such as
printers). These are networks.
- Some networks are "closed" networks, not linked to other
computers or networks. Many networks, however, are connected to
other networks, which are in turn connected to other networks in a
manner which permits each computer in any network to communicate
with computers on any other network in the system. This global Web
of linked networks and computers is referred to as the Internet.
- The nature of the Internet is such that it is very difficult,
if not impossible, to determine its size at a given moment. It is
indisputable, however, that the Internet has experienced
extraordinary growth in recent years. In 1981, fewer than 300
computers were linked to the Internet, and by 1989, the number
stood at fewer than 90,000 computers. By 1993, over 1,000,000
computers were linked. Today, over 9,400,000 host computers
worldwide, of which approximately 60 percent located within the
United States, are estimated to be linked to the Internet. This
count does not include the personal computers people use to access
the Internet using modems. In all, reasonable estimates are that
as many as 40 million people around the world can and do access
the enormously flexible communication Internet medium. That figure
is expected to grow to 200 million Internet users by the year
1999.
- Some of the computers and computer networks that make up the
Internet are owned by governmental and public institutions, some
are owned by non-profit organizations, and some are privately
owned. The resulting whole is a decentralized, global medium of
communications -- or "cyberspace" -- that links people,
institutions, corporations, and governments around the world. The
Internet is an international system. This communications medium
allows any of the literally tens of millions of people with access
to the Internet to exchange information. These communications can
occur almost instantaneously, and can be directed either to
specific individuals, to a broader group of people interested in a
particular subject, or to the world as a whole.
- The Internet had its origins in 1969 as an experimental
project of the Advanced Research Project Agency ("ARPA"), and was
called ARPANET. This network linked computers and computer
networks owned by the military, defense contractors, and
university laboratories conducting defense-related research. The
network later allowed researchers across the country to access
directly and to use extremely powerful supercomputers located at a
few key universities and laboratories. As it evolved far beyond
its research origins in the United States to encompass
universities, corporations, and people around the world, the
ARPANET came to be called the "DARPA Internet," and finally just
the "Internet."
- From its inception, the network was designed to be a
decentralized, self-maintaining series of redundant links between
computers and computer networks, capable of rapidly transmitting
communications without direct human involvement or control, and
with the automatic ability to re-route communications if one or
more individual links were damaged or otherwise unavailable. Among
other goals, this redundant system of linked computers was
designed to allow vital research and communications to continue
even if portions of the network were damaged, say, in a war.
- To achieve this resilient nationwide (and ultimately global)
communications medium, the ARPANET encouraged the creation of
multiple links to and from each computer (or computer network) on
the network. Thus, a computer located in Washington, D.C., might
be linked (usually using dedicated telephone lines) to other
computers in neighboring states or on the Eastern seaboard. Each
of those computers could in turn be linked to other computers,
which themselves would be linked to other computers.
- A communication sent over this redundant series of linked
computers could travel any of a number of routes to its
destination. Thus, a message sent from a computer in Washington,
D.C., to a computer in Palo Alto, California, might first be sent
to a computer in Philadelphia, and then be forwarded to a computer
in Pittsburgh, and then to Chicago, Denver, and Salt Lake City,
before finally reaching Palo Alto. If the message could not travel
along that path (because of military attack, simple technical
malfunction, or other reason), the message would automatically
(without human intervention or even knowledge) be re-routed,
perhaps, from Washington, D.C. to Richmond, and then to Atlanta,
New Orleans, Dallas, Albuquerque, Los Angeles, and finally to Palo
Alto. This type of transmission, and re-routing, would likely
occur in a matter of seconds.
- Messages between computers on the Internet do not necessarily
travel entirely along the same path. The Internet uses "packet
switching" communication protocols that allow individual messages
to be subdivided into smaller "packets" that are then sent
independently to the destination, and are then automatically
reassembled by the receiving computer. While all packets of a
given message often travel along the same path to the destination,
if computers along the route become overloaded, then packets can
be re-routed to less loaded computers.
- At the same time that ARPANET was maturing (it subsequently
ceased to exist), similar networks developed to link universities,
research facilities, businesses, and individuals around the world.
These other formal or loose networks included BITNET, CSNET,
FIDONET, and USENET. Eventually, each of these networks (many of
which overlapped) were themselves linked together, allowing users
of any computers linked to any one of the networks to transmit
communications to users of computers on other networks. It is this
series of linked networks (themselves linking computers and
computer networks) that is today commonly known as the Internet.
- No single entity -- academic, corporate, governmental, or
non-profit -- administers the Internet. It exists and functions as
a result of the fact that hundreds of thousands of separate
operators of computers and computer networks independently decided
to use common data transfer protocols to exchange communications
and information with other computers (which in turn exchange
communications and information with still other computers). There
is no centralized storage location, control point, or
communications channel for the Internet, and it would not be
technically feasible for a single entity to control all of the
information conveyed on the Internet.
How Individuals Access the Internet
- Individuals have a wide variety of avenues to access
cyberspace in general, and the Internet in particular. In terms of
physical access, there are two common methods to establish an
actual link to the Internet. First, one can use a computer or
computer terminal that is directly (and usually permanently)
connected to a computer network that is itself directly or
indirectly connected to the Internet. Second, one can use a
"personal computer" with a "modem" to connect over a telephone
line to a larger computer or computer network that is itself
directly or indirectly connected to the Internet. As detailed
below, both direct and modem connections are made available to
people by a wide variety of academic, governmental, or commercial
entities.
- Students, faculty, researchers, and others affiliated with the
vast majority of colleges and universities in the United States
can access the Internet through their educational institutions.
Such access is often via direct connection using computers located
in campus libraries, offices, or computer centers, or may be
through telephone access using a modem from a student's or
professor's campus or off-campus location. Some colleges and
universities install "ports" or outlets for direct network
connections in each dormitory room or provide access via computers
located in common areas in dormitories. Such access enables
students and professors to use information and content provided by
the college or university itself, and to use the vast amount of
research resources and other information available on the Internet
worldwide.
- Similarly, Internet resources and access are sufficiently
important to many corporations and other employers that those
employers link their office computer networks to the Internet and
provide employees with direct or modem access to the office
network (and thus to the Internet). Such access might be used by,
for example, a corporation involved in scientific or medical
research or manufacturing to enable corporate employees to
exchange information and ideas with academic researchers in their
fields.
- Those who lack access to the Internet through their schools or
employers still have a variety of ways they can access the
Internet. Many communities across the country have established
"free-nets" or community networks to provide their citizens with a
local link to the Internet (and to provide local-oriented content
and discussion groups). The first such community network, the
Cleveland Free-Net Community Computer System, was established in
1986, and free-nets now exist in scores of communities as diverse
as Richmond, Virginia, Tallahassee, Florida, Seattle, Washington,
and San Diego, California. Individuals typically can access
free-nets at little or no cost via modem connection or by using
computers available in community buildings. Free-nets are often
operated by a local library, educational institution, or
non-profit community group.
- Individuals can also access the Internet through many local
libraries. Libraries often offer patrons use of computers that are
linked to the Internet. In addition, some libraries offer
telephone modem access to the libraries' computers, which are
themselves connected to the Internet. Increasingly, patrons now
use library services and resources without ever physically
entering the library itself. Libraries typically provide such
direct or modem access at no cost to the individual user.
- Individuals can also access the Internet by patronizing an
increasing number of storefront "computer coffee shops," where
customers -- while they drink their coffee -- can use computers
provided by the shop to access the Internet. Such Internet access
is typically provided by the shop for a small hourly fee.
- Individuals can also access the Internet through commercial
and non-commercial "Internet service providers" that typically
offer modem telephone access to a computer or computer network
linked to the Internet. Many such providers -- including the
members of plaintiff Commercial Internet Exchange Association --
are commercial entities offering Internet access for a monthly or
hourly fee. Some Internet service providers, however, are
non-profit organizations that offer free or very low cost access
to the Internet. For example, the International Internet
Association offers free modem access to the Internet upon request.
Also, a number of trade or other non-profit associations offer
Internet access as a service to members.
- Another common way for individuals to access the Internet is
through one of the major national commercial "online services"
such as America Online, CompuServe, the Microsoft Network, or
Prodigy. These online services offer nationwide computer networks
(so that subscribers can dial-in to a local telephone number), and
the services provide extensive and well organized content within
their own proprietary computer networks. In addition to allowing
access to the extensive content available within each online
service, the services also allow subscribers to link to the much
larger resources of the Internet. Full access to the online
service (including access to the Internet) can be obtained for
modest monthly or hourly fees. The major commercial online
services have almost twelve million individual subscribers across
the United States.
- In addition to using the national commercial online services,
individuals can also access the Internet using some (but not all)
of the thousands of local dial-in computer services, often called
"bulletin board systems" or "BBSs." With an investment of as
little as $2,000.00 and the cost of a telephone line, individuals,
non-profit organizations, advocacy groups, and businesses can
offer their own dial-in computer "bulletin board" service where
friends, members, subscribers, or customers can exchange ideas and
information. BBSs range from single computers with only one
telephone line into the computer (allowing only one user at a
time), to single computers with many telephone lines into the
computer (allowing multiple simultaneous users), to multiple
linked computers each servicing multiple dial-in telephone lines
(allowing multiple simultaneous users). Some (but not all) of
these BBS systems offer direct or indirect links to the Internet.
Some BBS systems charge users a nominal fee for access, while many
others are free to the individual users.
- Although commercial access to the Internet is growing rapidly,
many users of the Internet -- such as college students and staff
-- do not individually pay for access (except to the extent, for
example, that the cost of computer services is a component of
college tuition). These and other Internet users can access the
Internet without paying for such access with a credit card or
other form of payment.
Methods to
Communicate Over the Internet
- Once one has access to the Internet, there are a wide variety
of different methods of communication and information exchange
over the network. These many methods of communication and
information retrieval are constantly evolving and are therefore
difficult to categorize concisely. The most common methods of
communications on the Internet (as well as within the major online
services) can be roughly grouped into six categories:
(1) one-to-one messaging (such as "e-mail"),
(2) one-to-many messaging (such as "listserv"),
(3) distributed message databases (such as "USENET
newsgroups"),
(4) real time communication (such as "Internet Relay
Chat"),
(5) real time remote computer utilization (such as "telnet"),
and
(6) remote information retrieval (such as "ftp," "gopher," and
the "World Wide Web").
Most of these methods of communication can be used to transmit
text, data, computer programs, sound, visual images (i.e.,
pictures), and moving video images.
- One-to-one messaging. One method of communication on the
Internet is via electronic mail, or "e-mail," comparable in
principle to sending a first class letter. One can address and
transmit a message to one or more other people. E-mail on the
Internet is not routed through a central control point, and can
take many and varying paths to the recipients. Unlike postal mail,
simple e-mail generally is not "sealed" or secure, and can be
accessed or viewed on intermediate computers between the sender
and recipient (unless the message is encrypted).
- One-to-many messaging. The Internet also contains automatic
mailing list services (such as "listservs"), [also referred to by
witnesses as "mail exploders"] that allow communications about
particular subjects of interest to a group of people. For example,
people can subscribe to a "listserv" mailing list on a particular
topic of interest to them. The subscriber can submit messages on
the topic to the listserv that are forwarded (via e-mail), either
automatically or through a human moderator overseeing the
listserv, to anyone who has subscribed to the mailing list. A
recipient of such a message can reply to the message and have the
reply also distributed to everyone on the mailing list. This
service provides the capability to keep abreast of developments or
events in a particular subject area. Most listserv-type mailing
lists automatically forward all incoming messages to all mailing
list subscribers. There are thousands of such mailing list
services on the Internet, collectively with hundreds of thousands
of subscribers. Users of "open" listservs typically can add or
remove their names from the mailing list automatically, with no
direct human involvement. Listservs may also be "closed," i.e.,
only allowing for one's acceptance into the listserv by a human
moderator.
- Distributed message databases. Similar in function to
listservs -- but quite different in how communications are
transmitted -- are distributed message databases such as "USENET
newsgroups." User-sponsored newsgroups are among the most popular
and widespread applications of Internet services, and cover all
imaginable topics of interest to users. Like listservs, newsgroups
are open discussions and exchanges on particular topics. Users,
however, need not subscribe to the discussion mailing list in
advance, but can instead access the database at any time. Some
USENET newsgroups are "moderated" but most are open access. For
the moderated newsgroups,10 all messages to the newsgroup are
forwarded to one person who can screen them for relevance to the
topics under discussion. USENET newsgroups are disseminated using
ad hoc, peer to peer connections between approximately 200,000
computers (called USENET "servers") around the world. For
unmoderated newsgroups, when an individual user with access to a
USENET server posts a message to a newsgroup, the message is
automatically forwarded to all adjacent USENET servers that
furnish access to the newsgroup, and it is then propagated to the
servers adjacent to those servers, etc. The messages are
temporarily stored on each receiving server, where they are
available for review and response by individual users. The
messages are automatically and periodically purged from each
system after a time to make room for new messages. Responses to
messages, like the original messages, are automatically
distributed to all other computers receiving the newsgroup or
forwarded to a moderator in the case of a moderated newsgroup. The
dissemination of messages to USENET servers around the world is an
automated process that does not require direct human intervention
or review.
- There are newsgroups on more than fifteen thousand different
subjects. In 1994, approximately 70,000 messages were posted to
newsgroups each day, and those messages were distributed to the
approximately 190,000 computers or computer networks that
participate in the USENET newsgroup system. Once the messages
reach the approximately 190,000 receiving computers or computer
networks, they are available to individual users of those
computers or computer networks. Collectively, almost 100,000 new
messages (or "articles") are posted to newsgroups each day.
- Real time communication. In addition to transmitting messages
that can be later read or accessed, individuals on the Internet
can engage in an immediate dialog, in "real time", with other
people on the Internet. In its simplest forms, "talk" allows
one-to-one communications and "Internet Relay Chat" (or IRC)
allows two or more to type messages to each other that almost
immediately appear on the others' computer screens. IRC is
analogous to a telephone party line, using a computer and keyboard
rather than a telephone. With IRC, however, at any one time there
are thousands of different party lines available, in which
collectively tens of thousands of users are engaging in
conversations on a huge range of subjects. Moreover, one can
create a new party line to discuss a different topic at any time.
Some IRC conversations are "moderated" or include "channel
operators."
- In addition, commercial online services such as America
Online, CompuServe, the Microsoft Network, and Prodigy have their
own "chat" systems allowing their members to converse.
- Real time remote computer utilization. Another method to use
information on the Internet is to access and control remote
computers in "real time" using "telnet." For example, using
telnet, a researcher at a university would be able to use the
computing power of a supercomputer located at a different
university. A student can use telnet to connect to a remote
library to access the library's online card catalog program.
- Remote information retrieval. The final major category of
communication may be the most well known use of the Internet --
the search for and retrieval of information located on remote
computers. There are three primary methods to locate and retrieve
information on the Internet.
- A simple method uses "ftp" (or file transfer protocol) to list
the names of computer files available on a remote computer, and to
transfer one or more of those files to an individual's local
computer.
- Another approach uses a program and format named "gopher" to
guide an individual's search through the resources available on a
remote computer.
The World Wide Web
- A third approach, and fast becoming the most well-known on the
Internet, is the "World Wide Web." The Web utilizes a "hypertext"
formatting language called hypertext markup language (HTML), and
programs that "browse" the Web can display HTML documents
containing text, images, sound, animation and moving video. Any
HTML document can include links to other types of information or
resources, so that while viewing an HTML document that, for
example, describes resources available on the Internet, one can
"click" using a computer mouse on the description of the resource
and be immediately connected to the resource itself. Such
"hyperlinks" allow information to be accessed and organized in
very flexible ways, and allow people to locate and efficiently
view related information even if the information is stored on
numerous computers all around the world.
- Purpose. The World Wide Web (W3C) was created to serve as the
platform for a global, online store of knowledge, containing
information from a diversity of sources and accessible to Internet
users around the world. Though information on the Web is contained
in individual computers, the fact that each of these computers is
connected to the Internet through W3C protocols allows all of the
information to become part of a single body of knowledge. It is
currently the most advanced information system developed on the
Internet, and embraces within its data model most information in
previous networked information systems such as ftp, gopher, wais,
and Usenet.
- History. W3C was originally developed at CERN, the European
Particle Physics Laboratory, and was initially used to allow
information sharing within internationally dispersed teams of
researchers and engineers. Originally aimed at the High Energy
Physics community, it has spread to other areas and attracted much
interest in user support, resource recovery, and many other areas
which depend on collaborative and information sharing. The Web has
extended beyond the scientific and academic community to include
communications by individuals, non-profit organizations, and
businesses.
- Basic Operation. The World Wide Web is a series of documents
stored in different computers all over the Internet. Documents
contain information stored in a variety of formats, including
text, still images, sounds, and video. An essential element of the
Web is that any document has an address (rather like a telephone
number). Most Web documents contain "links." These are short
sections of text or image which refer to another document.
Typically the linked text is blue or underlined when displayed,
and when selected by the user, the referenced document is
automatically displayed, wherever in the world it actually is
stored. Links for example are used to lead from overview documents
to more detailed documents, from tables of contents to particular
pages, but also as cross-references, footnotes, and new forms of
information structure.
- Many organizations now have "home pages" on the Web. These are
documents which provide a set of links designed to represent the
organization, and through links from the home page, guide the user
directly or indirectly to information about or relevant to that
organization.
- As an example of the use of links, if these Findings were to
be put on a World Wide Web site, its home page might contain links
such as those:
- THE NATURE OF CYBERSPACE
- CREATION OF THE INTERNET AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF CYBERSPACE
- HOW PEOPLE ACCESS THE INTERNET
- METHODS TO COMMUNICATE OVER THE INTERNET
- Each of these links takes the user of the site from the
beginning of the Findings to the appropriate section within this
Adjudication. Links may also take the user from the original Web
site to another Web site on another computer connected to the
Internet. These links from one computer to another, from one
document to another across the Internet, are what unify the Web
into a single body of knowledge, and what makes the Web unique.
The Web was designed with a maximum target time to follow a link
of one tenth of a second.
- Publishing. The World Wide Web exists fundamentally as a
platform through which people and organizations can communicate
through shared information. When information is made available, it
is said to be "published" on the Web. Publishing on the Web simply
requires that the "publisher" has a computer connected to the
Internet and that the computer is running W3C server software. The
computer can be as simple as a small personal computer costing
less than $1500 dollars or as complex as a multi-million dollar
mainframe computer. Many Web publishers choose instead to lease
disk storage space from someone else who has the necessary
computer facilities, eliminating the need for actually owning any
equipment oneself.
- The Web, as a universe of network accessible information,
contains a variety of documents prepared with quite varying
degrees of care, from the hastily typed idea, to the
professionally executed corporate profile. The power of the Web
stems from the ability of a link to point to any document,
regardless of its status or physical location.
- Information to be published on the Web must also be formatted
according to the rules of the Web standards. These standardized
formats assure that all Web users who want to read the material
will be able to view it. Web standards are sophisticated and
flexible enough that they have grown to meet the publishing needs
of many large corporations, banks, brokerage houses, newspapers
and magazines which now publish "online" editions of their
material, as well as government agencies, and even courts, which
use the Web to disseminate information to the public. At the same
time, Web publishing is simple enough that thousands of individual
users and small community organizations are using the Web to
publish their own personal "home pages," the equivalent of
individualized newsletters about that person or organization,
which are available to everyone on the Web.
- Web publishers have a choice to make their Web sites open to
the general pool of all Internet users, or close them, thus making
the information accessible only to those with advance
authorization. Many publishers choose to keep their sites open to
all in order to give their information the widest potential
audience. In the event that the publishers choose to maintain
restrictions on access, this may be accomplished by assigning
specific user names and passwords as a prerequisite to access to
the site. Or, in the case of Web sites maintained for internal use
of one organization, access will only be allowed from other
computers within that organization's local network.11
- Searching the Web. A variety of systems have developed that
allow users of the Web to search particular information among all
of the public sites that are part of the Web. Services such as
Yahoo, Magellan, Altavista, Webcrawler, and Lycos are all services
known as "search engines" which allow users to search for Web
sites that contain certain categories of information, or to search
for key words. For example, a Web user looking for the text of
Supreme Court opinions would type the words "Supreme Court" into a
search engine, and then be presented with a list of World Wide Web
sites that contain Supreme Court information. This list would
actually be a series of links to those sites. Having searched out
a number of sites that might contain the desired information, the
user would then follow individual links, browsing through the
information on each site, until the desired material is found. For
many content providers on the Web, the ability to be found by
these search engines is very important.
- Common standards. The Web links together disparate information
on an ever-growing number of Internet-linked computers by setting
common information storage formats (HTML) and a common language
for the exchange of Web documents (HTTP). Although the information
itself may be in many different formats, and stored on computers
which are not otherwise compatible, the basic Web standards
provide a basic set of standards which allow communication and
exchange of information. Despite the fact that many types of
computers are used on the Web, and the fact that many of these
machines are otherwise incompatible, those who "publish"
information on the Web are able to communicate with those who seek
to access information with little difficulty because of these
basic technical standards.
- A distributed system with no centralized control. Running on
tens of thousands of individual computers on the Internet, the Web
is what is known as a distributed system. The Web was designed so
that organizations with computers containing information can
become part of the Web simply by attaching their computers to the
Internet and running appropriate World Wide Web software. No
single organization controls any membership in the Web, nor is
there any single centralized point from which individual Web sites
or services can be blocked from the Web. From a user's
perspective, it may appear to be a single, integrated system, but
in reality it has no centralized control point.
- Contrast to closed databases. The Web's open, distributed,
decentralized nature stands in sharp contrast to most information
systems that have come before it. Private information services
such as Westlaw, Lexis/Nexis, and Dialog, have contained large
storehouses of knowledge, and can be accessed from the Internet
with the appropriate passwords and access software. However, these
databases are not linked together into a single whole, as is the
World Wide Web.
- Success of the Web in research, education, and political
activities. The World Wide Web has become so popular because of
its open, distributed, and easy-to-use nature. Rather than
requiring those who seek information to purchase new software or
hardware, and to learn a new kind of system for each new database
of information they seek to access, the Web environment makes it
easy for users to jump from one set of information to another. By
the same token, the open nature of the Web makes it easy for
publishers to reach their intended audiences without having to
know in advance what kind of computer each potential reader has,
and what kind of software they will be using.
Restricting
Access to Unwanted On-Line Material12
PICS
- With the rapid growth of the Internet, the increasing
popularity of the Web, and the existence of material online that
some parents may consider inappropriate for their children,
various entities have begun to build systems intended to enable
parents to control the material which comes into their homes and
may be accessible to their children. The World Wide Web Consortium
launched the PICS ("Platform for Internet Content Selection")
program in order to develop technical standards that would support
parents' ability to filter and screen material that their children
see on the Web.
- The Consortium intends that PICS will provide the ability for
third parties, as well as individual content providers, to rate
content on the Internet in a variety of ways. When fully
implemented, PICS-compatible World Wide Web browsers, Usenet News
Group readers, and other Internet applications, will provide
parents the ability to choose from a variety of rating services,
or a combination of services.
- PICS working group [PICS-WG] participants include many of the
major online services providers, commercial internet access
providers, hardware and software companies, major internet content
providers, and consumer organizations. Among active participants
in the PICS effort are:
Adobe Systems, Inc.
Apple Computer
America Online
AT&T
Center for Democracy and Technology
CompuServe
Delphi Internet Services
Digital Equipment Corporation
IBM
First floor
First Virtual Holdings Incorporated
France Telecom
FTP Software
Industrial Technology Research Institute of Taiwan
Information Technology Association of America
Institut National de Recherche en Informatique et en
Automatique (INRIA)
Interactive Services Association
MCI
Microsoft
MIT/LCS/World Wide Web Consortium
NCD
NEC
Netscape Communications Corporation
NewView
O'Reilly and Associates
Open Market
Prodigy Services Company
Progressive Networks
Providence Systems/Parental Guidance
Recreational Software Advisory Council
SafeSurf
SoftQuad, Inc.
Songline Studios
Spyglass
SurfWatch Software
Telequip Corp.
Time Warner Pathfinder
Viacom Nickelodeon13
- Membership in the PICS-WG includes a broad cross-section of
companies from the computer, communications, and content
industries, as well as trade associations and public interest
groups. PICS technical specifications have been agreed to,
allowing the Internet community to begin to deploy products and
services based on the PICS-standards.
- Until a majority of sites on the Internet have been rated by a
PICS rating service, PICS will initially function as a "positive"
ratings system in which only those sites that have been rated will
be displayed using PICS compatible software. In other words, PICS
will initially function as a site inclusion list rather than a
site exclusion list. The default configuration for a PICS
compatible Internet application will be to block access to all
sites which have not been rated by a PICS rating service, while
allowing access to sites which have a PICS rating for appropriate
content.14
Software
- For over a year, various companies have marketed stand alone
software that is intended to enable parents and other adults to
limit the Internet access of children. Examples of such software
include: Cyber Patrol, CYBERsitter, The Internet Filter, Net
Nanny, Parental Guidance, SurfWatch, Netscape Proxy Server, and
WebTrack. The market for this type of software is growing, and
there is increasing competition among software providers to
provide products.
Cyber Patrol
- As more people, particularly children, began to use the
Internet, Microsystems Software, Inc. decided to develop and
market Internet software intended to empower parents to exercise
individual choice over what material their children could access.
Microsystems' stated intent is to develop a product which would
give parents comfort that their children can reap the benefits of
the Internet while shielding them from objectionable or otherwise
inappropriate materials based on the parents' own particular
tastes and values. Microsystems' product, Cyber Patrol, was
developed to address this need.
- Cyber Patrol was first introduced in August 1995, and is
currently available in Windows and Macintosh versions. Cyber
Patrol works with both direct Internet Access providers (ISPs,
e.g., Netcom, PSI, UUnet), and Commercial Online Service Providers
(e.g., America Online, Compuserv, Prodigy, Microsoft). Cyber
Patrol is also compatible with all major World Wide Web browsers
on the market (e.g., Netscape, Navigator, Mosaic, Prodigy's Legacy
and Skimmer browsers, America Online, Netcom's NetCruiser, etc.).
Cyber Patrol was the first parental empowerment application to be
compatible with the PICS standard. In February of 1996,
Microsystems put the first PICS ratings server on the Internet.
- The CyberNOT list contains approximately 7000 sites in twelve
categories. The software is designed to enable parents to
selectively block access to any or all of the twelve CyberNOT
categories simply by checking boxes in the Cyber Patrol
Headquarters (the Cyber Patrol program manager). These categories
are:
Violence/Profanity: Extreme cruelty, physical or emotional acts
against any animal or person which are primarily intended to
hurt or inflict pain. Obscene words, phrases, and profanity
defined as text that uses George Carlin's seven censored words
more often than once every fifty messages or pages.
Partial Nudity: Full or partial exposure of the human
anatomy except when exposing genitalia.
Nudity: Any exposure of the human genitalia.
Sexual Acts (graphic or text): Pictures or text exposing
anyone or anything involved in explicit sexual acts and lewd
and lascivious behavior, including masturbation, copulation,
pedophilia, intimacy and involving nude or partially nude
people in heterosexual, bisexual, lesbian or homosexual
encounters. Also includes phone sex ads, dating services, adult
personals, CD-ROM and videos.
Gross Depictions (graphic or text): Pictures or descriptive
text of anyone or anything which are crudely vulgar, deficient
in civility or behavior, or showing scatological impropriety.
Includes such depictions as maiming, bloody figures, indecent
depiction of bodily functions.
Racism/Ethnic Impropriety: Prejudice or discrimination
against any race or ethnic culture. Ethnic or racist jokes and
slurs. Any text that elevates one race over another.
Satanic/Cult: Worship of the devil; affinity for evil,
wickedness. Sects or groups that potentially coerce individuals
to grow, and keep, membership.
Drugs/Drug Culture: Topics dealing with the use of illegal
drugs for entertainment. This would exclude current illegal
drugs used for medicinal purposes (e.g., drugs used to treat
victims of AIDS). Includes substances used for other than their
primary purpose to alter the individual's state of mind such as
glue sniffing.
Militant/Extremist: Extremely aggressive and combative
behaviors, radicalism, advocacy of extreme political measures.
Topics include extreme political groups that advocate violence
as a means to achieve their goal.
Gambling: Of or relating to lotteries, casinos, betting,
numbers games, on-line sports or financial betting including
non-monetary dares.
Questionable/Illegal: Material or activities of a dubious
nature which may be illegal in any or all jurisdictions, such
as illegal business schemes, chain letters, software piracy,
and copyright infringement.
Alcohol, Beer & Wine: Material pertaining to the sale or
consumption of alcoholic beverages. Also includes sites and
information relating to tobacco products.
- Microsystems employs people to search the Internet for sites
containing material in these categories. Since new sites are
constantly coming online, Microsystems updates the CyberNOT list
on a weekly basis. Once installed on the home PC, the copy of
Cyber Patrol receives automatic updates to the CyberNOT list over
the Internet every seven days.
- In February of 1996, Microsystems signed a licensing
arrangement with CompuServe, one of the leading commercial online
services with over 4.3 million subscribers. CompuServe provides
Cyber Patrol free of charge to its subscribers. Microsystems the
same month signed a licensing arrangement with Prodigy, another
leading commercial online service with over 1.4 million
subscribers. Prodigy will provide Cyber Patrol free of charge of
its subscribers.
- Cyber Patrol is also available directly from Microsystems for
$49.95, which includes a six month subscription to the CyberNOT
blocked sites list (updated automatically once every seven days).
After six months, parents can receive six months of additional
updates for $19.95, or twelve months for $29.95. Cyber
Patrol Home Edition, a limited version of Cyber Patrol, is
available free of charge on the Internet. To obtain either
version, parents download a seven day demonstration version of the
full Cyber Patrol product from the Microsystems Internet World
Wide Web Server. At the end of the seven day trial period, users
are offered the opportunity to purchase the complete version of
Cyber Patrol or provide Microsystems some basic demographic
information in exchange for unlimited use of the Home Edition. The
demographic information is used for marketing and research
purposes. Since January of 1996, over 10,000 demonstration copies
of Cyber Patrol have been downloaded from Microsystems' Web site.
- Cyber Patrol is also available from Retail outlets as
NetBlocker Plus. NetBlocker Plus sells for $19.95, which includes
five weeks of updates to the CyberNOT list.
- Microsystems also sells Cyber Patrol into a growing market in
schools. As more classrooms become connected to the Internet, many
teachers want to ensure that their students can receive the
benefit of the Internet without encountering material they deem
educationally inappropriate.
- Microsystems is working with the Recreational Software
Advisory Council (RSAC), a non-profit corporation which developed
rating systems for video games, to implement the RSAC rating
system for the Internet.
- The next release of Cyber Patrol, expected in second quarter
of this year, will give parents the ability to use any PICS rating
service, including the RSAC rating service, in addition to the
Microsystems CyberNOT list.
- In order to speed the implementation of PICS and encourage the
development of PICS-compatible Internet applications, Microsystems
maintains a server on the Internet which contains its CyberNOT
list. The server provides software developers with access to a
PICS rating service, and allows software developers to test their
products' ability to interpret standard PICS labels. Microsystems
is also offering its PICS client test program for Windows free of
charge. The client program can be used by developers of PICS
rating services to test their services and products.
SurfWatch
- Another software product, SurfWatch, is also designed to allow
parents and other concerned users to filter unwanted material on
the Internet. SurfWatch is available for both Apple Macintosh,
Microsoft Windows, and Microsoft Windows 95 Operating Systems, and
works with direct Internet Access Providers (e.g., Netcom, PSI,
UUnet, AT&T, and more than 1000 other Internet Service
Providers).
- The suggested retail price of SurfWatch Software is $49.95,
with a street price of between $20.00 and $25.00. The product is
also available as part of CompuServe/Spry Inc.'s Internet in a Box
for Kids, which includes access to Spry's Kids only Internet
service and a copy of SurfWatch. Internet in a Box for Kids
retails for approximately $30.00. The subscription service, which
updates the SurfWatch blocked site list automatically with new
sites each month, is available for $5.95 per month or $60.00 per
year. The subscription is included as part of the Internet in a
Box for Kids program, and is also provided as a low-cost option
from Internet Service Providers.
- SurfWatch is available at over 12,000 retail locations,
including National stores such as Comp USA, Egghead Software,
Computer City, and several national mail order outlets. SurfWatch
can also be ordered directly from its own site on the World Wide
Web, and through the Internet Shopping Network.
- Plaintiffs America Online (AOL), Microsoft Network, and
Prodigy all offer parental control options free of charge to their
members. AOL has established an online area designed specifically
for children. The "Kids Only" parental control feature allows
parents to establish an AOL account for their children that
accesses only the Kids Only channel on America Online.15
- AOL plans to incorporate PICS-compatible capability into its
standard Web browser software, and to make available to
subscribers other PICS-compatible Web browsers, such as the
Netscape software.
- Plaintiffs CompuServe and Prodigy give their subscribers the
option of blocking all access to the Internet, or to particular
media within their proprietary online content, such as bulletin
boards and chat rooms.
- Although parental control software currently can screen for
certain suggestive words or for known sexually explicit sites, it
cannot now screen for sexually explicit images unaccompanied by
suggestive text unless those who configure the software are aware
of the particular site.
- Despite its limitations, currently available user-based
software suggests that a reasonably effective method by which
parents can prevent their children from accessing sexually
explicit and other material which parents may believe is
inappropriate for their children will soon be widely available.
Content on the Internet
- The types of content now on the Internet defy easy
classification. The entire card catalogue of the Carnegie Library
is on-line, together with journals, journal abstracts, popular
magazines, and titles of compact discs. The director of the
Carnegie Library, Robert Croneberger, testified that on-line
services are the emerging trend in libraries generally. Plaintiff
Hotwired Ventures LLC organizes its Web site into information
regarding travel, news and commentary, arts and entertainment,
politics, and types of drinks. Plaintiff America Online, Inc., not
only creates chat rooms for a broad variety of topics, but also
allows members to create their own chat rooms to suit their own
tastes. The ACLU uses an America Online chat room as an
unmoderated forum for people to debate civil liberties issues.
Plaintiffs' expert, Scott Bradner,16 estimated that 15,000
newsgroups exist today, and he described his own interest in a
newsgroup devoted solely to Formula 1 racing cars. America Online
makes 15,000 bulletin boards available to its subscribers, who
post between 200,000 and 250,000 messages each day. Another
plaintiffs' expert, Harold Rheingold, participates in "virtual
communities" that simulate social interaction. It is no
exaggeration to conclude that the content on the Internet is as
diverse as human thought.
- The Internet is not exclusively, or even primarily, a means of
commercial communication. Many commercial entities maintain Web
sites to inform potential consumers about their goods and
services, or to solicit purchases, but many other Web sites exist
solely for the dissemination of non-commercial information. The
other forms of Internet communication -- e-mail, bulletin boards,
newsgroups, and chat rooms -- frequently have non-commercial
goals. For the economic and technical reasons set forth in the
following paragraphs, the Internet is an especially attractive
means for not-for-profit entities or public interest groups to
reach their desired audiences. There are examples in the parties'
stipulation of some of the non-commercial uses that the Internet
serves. Plaintiff Human Rights Watch, Inc., offers information on
its Internet site regarding reported human rights abuses around
the world. Plaintiff National Writers Union provides a forum for
writers on issues of concern to them. Plaintiff Stop Prisoner
Rape, Inc., posts text, graphics, and statistics regarding the
incidence and prevention of rape in prisons. Plaintiff Critical
Path AIDS Project, Inc., offers information on safer sex, the
transmission of HIV, and the treatment of AIDS.
- Such diversity of content on the Internet is possible because
the Internet provides an easy and inexpensive way for a speaker to
reach a large audience, potentially of millions. The start-up and
operating costs entailed by communication on the Internet are
significantly lower than those associated with use of other forms
of mass communication, such as television, radio, newspapers, and
magazines. This enables operation of their own Web sites not only
by large companies, such as Microsoft and Time Warner, but also by
small, not-for-profit groups, such as Stop Prisoner Rape and
Critical Path AIDS Project. The Government's expert, Dr. Dan R.
Olsen,17 agreed that creation of a Web site would cost between
$1,000 and $15,000, with monthly operating costs depending on
one's goals and the Web site's traffic. Commercial online services
such as America Online allow subscribers to create Web pages free
of charge. Any Internet user can communicate by posting a message
to one of the thousands of newsgroups and bulletin boards or by
engaging in an on-line "chat", and thereby reach an audience
worldwide that shares an interest in a particular topic.
- The ease of communication through the Internet is facilitated
by the use of hypertext markup language (HTML), which allows for
the creation of "hyperlinks" or "links". HTML enables a user to
jump from one source to other related sources by clicking on the
link. A link might take the user from Web site to Web site, or to
other files within a particular Web site. Similarly, by typing a
request into a search engine, a user can retrieve many different
sources of content related to the search that the creators of the
engine have collected.
- Because of the technology underlying the Internet, the
statutory term "content provider,"18 which is equivalent to the
traditional "speaker," may actually be a hybrid of speakers.
Through the use of HTML, for example, Critical Path and Stop
Prisoner Rape link their Web sites to several related databases,
and a user can immediately jump from the home pages of these
organizations to the related databases simply by clicking on a
link. America Online creates chat rooms for particular discussions
but also allows subscribers to create their own chat rooms.
Similarly, a newsgroup gathers postings on a particular topic and
distributes them to the newsgroup's subscribers. Users of the
Carnegie Library can read on-line versions of Vanity Fair and
Playboy, and America Online's subscribers can peruse the New York
Times, Boating, and other periodicals. Critical Path, Stop
Prisoner Rape, America Online and the Carnegie Library all make
available content of other speakers over whom they have little or
no editorial control.
- Because of the different forms of Internet communication, a
user of the Internet may speak or listen interchangeably, blurring
the distinction between "speakers" and "listeners" on the
Internet. Chat rooms, e-mail, and newsgroups are interactive forms
of communication, providing the user with the opportunity both to
speak and to listen.
- It follows that unlike traditional media, the barriers to
entry as a speaker on the Internet do not differ significantly
from the barriers to entry as a listener. Once one has entered
cyberspace, one may engage in the dialogue that occurs there. In
the argot of the medium, the receiver can and does become the
content provider, and vice-versa.
- The Internet is therefore a unique and wholly new medium of
worldwide human communication.
Sexually
Explicit Material On the Internet
- The parties agree that sexually explicit material exists on
the Internet. Such material includes text, pictures, and chat, and
includes bulletin boards, newsgroups, and the other forms of
Internet communication, and extends from the modestly titillating
to the hardest-core.
- There is no evidence that sexually-oriented material is the
primary type of content on this new medium. Purveyors of such
material take advantage of the same ease of access available to
all users of the Internet, including establishment of a Web site.
- Sexually explicit material is created, named, and posted in
the same manner as material that is not sexually explicit. It is
possible that a search engine can accidentally retrieve material
of a sexual nature through an imprecise search, as demonstrated at
the hearing. Imprecise searches may also retrieve irrelevant
material that is not of a sexual nature. The accidental retrieval
of sexually explicit material is one manifestation of the larger
phenomenon of irrelevant search results.
- Once a provider posts content on the Internet, it is available
to all other Internet users worldwide. Similarly, once a user
posts a message to a newsgroup or bulletin board, that message
becomes available to all subscribers to that newsgroup or bulletin
board. For example, when the UCR/California Museum of Photography
posts to its Web site nudes by Edward Weston and Robert
Mapplethorpe to announce that its new exhibit will travel to
Baltimore and New York City, those images are available not only
in Los Angeles, Baltimore, and New York City, but also in
Cincinnati, Mobile, or Beijing -- wherever Internet users live.
Similarly, the safer sex instructions that Critical Path posts to
its Web site, written in street language so that the teenage
receiver can understand them, are available not just in
Philadelphia, but also in Provo and Prague. A chat room organized
by the ACLU to discuss the United States Supreme Court's decision
in FCC v. Pacifica Foundation would transmit George Carlin's seven
dirty words to anyone who enters. Messages posted to a newsgroup
dedicated to the Oklahoma City bombing travel to all subscribers
to that newsgroup.
- Once a provider posts its content on the Internet, it cannot
prevent that content from entering any community. Unlike the
newspaper, broadcast station, or cable system, Internet technology
necessarily gives a speaker a potential worldwide audience.
Because the Internet is a network of networks (as described above
in Findings 1 through 4), any network connected to the Internet
has the capacity to send and receive information to any other
network. Hotwired Ventures, for example, cannot prevent its
materials on mixology from entering communities that have no
interest in that topic.
- Demonstrations at the preliminary injunction hearings showed
that it takes several steps to enter cyberspace. At the most
fundamental level, a user must have access to a computer with the
ability to reach the Internet (typically by way of a modem). A
user must then direct the computer to connect with the access
provider, enter a password, and enter the appropriate commands to
find particular data. On the World Wide Web, a user must normally
use a search engine or enter an appropriate address. Similarly,
accessing newsgroups, bulletin boards, and chat rooms requires
several steps.
- Communications over the Internet do not "invade" an
individual's home or appear on one's computer screen unbidden.
Users seldom encounter content "by accident." A document's title
or a description of the document will usually appear before the
document itself takes the step needed to view it, and in many
cases the user will receive detailed information about a site's
content before he or she need take the step to access the
document. Almost all sexually explicit images are preceded by
warnings as to the content. Even the Government's witness, Agent
Howard Schmidt, Director of the Air Force Office of Special
Investigation, testified that the "odds are slim" that a user
would come across a sexually explicit site by accident.
- Evidence adduced at the hearing showed significant differences
between Internet communications and communications received by
radio or television. Although content on the Internet is just a
few clicks of a mouse away from the user, the receipt of
information on the Internet requires a series of affirmative steps
more deliberate and directed than merely turning a dial. A child
requires some sophistication and some ability to read to retrieve
material and thereby to use the Internet unattended.
Obstacles to Age
Verification on the Internet
- There is no effective way to determine the identity or the age
of a user who is accessing material through e-mail, mail
exploders, newsgroups or chat rooms. An e-mail address provides no
authoritative information about the addressee, who may use an
e-mail "alias" or an anonymous remailer. There is also no
universal or reliable listing of e-mail addresses and
corresponding names or telephone numbers, and any such listing
would be or rapidly become incomplete. For these reasons, there is
no reliable way in many instances for a sender to know if the
e-mail recipient is an adult or a minor. The difficulty of e-mail
age verification is compounded for mail exploders such as
listservs, which automatically send information to all e-mail
addresses on a sender's list. Government expert Dr. Olsen agreed
that no current technology could give a speaker assurance that
only adults were listed in a particular mail exploder's mailing
list.
- Because of similar technological difficulties, individuals
posting a message to a newsgroup or engaging in chat room
discussions cannot ensure that all readers are adults, and Dr.
Olsen agreed. Although some newsgroups are moderated, the
moderator's control is limited to what is posted and the moderator
cannot control who receives the messages.
- The Government offered no evidence that there is a reliable
way to ensure that recipients and participants in such fora can be
screened for age. The Government presented no evidence
demonstrating the feasibility of its suggestion that chat rooms,
newsgroups and other fora that contain material deemed indecent
could be effectively segregated to "adult" or "moderated" areas of
cyberspace.
- Even if it were technologically feasible to block minors'
access to newsgroups and similar fora, there is no method by which
the creators of newsgroups which contain discussions of art,
politics or any other subject that could potentially elicit
"indecent" contributions could limit the blocking of access by
minors to such "indecent" material and still allow them access to
the remaining content, even if the overwhelming majority of that
content was not indecent.
- Likewise, participants in MUDs (Multi-User Dungeons) and MUSEs
(Multi-User Simulation Environments) do not know whether the other
participants are adults or minors. Although MUDs and MUSEs require
a password for permanent participants, they need not give their
real name nor verify their age, and there is no current technology
to enable the administrator of these fantasy worlds to know if the
participant is an adult or a minor.
- Unlike other forms of communication on the Internet, there is
technology by which an operator of a World Wide Web server may
interrogate a user of a Web site. An HTML document can include a
fill-in-the-blank "form" to request information from a visitor to
a Web site, and this information can be transmitted back to the
Web server and be processed by a computer program, usually a
Common Gateway Interface (cgi) script. The Web server could then
grant or deny access to the information sought. The cgi script is
the means by which a Web site can process a fill-in form and
thereby screen visitors by requesting a credit card number or
adult password.
- Content providers who publish on the World Wide Web via one of
the large commercial online services, such as America Online or
CompuServe, could not use an online age verification system that
requires cgi script because the server software of these online
services available to subscribers cannot process cgi scripts.
There is no method currently available for Web page publishers who
lack access to cgi scripts to screen recipients online for age.
The
Practicalities of the Proffered Defenses
Note: The Government contends the CDA makes available three
potential defenses to all content providers on the Internet:
credit card verification, adult verification by password or adult
identification number, and "tagging".
Credit Card Verification
- Verification19 of a credit card number over the Internet is
not now technically possible. Witnesses testified that neither
Visa nor Mastercard considers the Internet to be sufficiently
secure under the current technology to process transactions in
that manner. Although users can and do purchase products over the
Internet by transmitting their credit card number, the seller must
then process the transaction with Visa or Mastercard off-line
using phone lines in the traditional way. There was testimony by
several witnesses that Visa and Mastercard are in the process of
developing means of credit card verification over the Internet.
- Verification by credit card, if and when operational, will
remain economically and practically unavailable for many of the
non-commercial plaintiffs in these actions. The Government's
expert "suspect[ed]" that verification agencies would decline to
process a card unless it accompanied a commercial transaction.
There was no evidence to the contrary.
- There was evidence that the fee charged by verification
agencies to process a card, whether for a purchase or not, will
preclude use of the credit-card verification defense by many
non-profit, non-commercial Web sites, and there was no evidence to
the contrary. Plaintiffs' witness Patricia Nell Warren, an author
whose free Web site allows users to purchase gay and lesbian
literature, testified that she must pay $1 per verification to a
verification agency. Her Web site can absorb this cost because it
arises in connection with the sale of books available there.
- 100. Using credit card possession as a surrogate for age, and
requiring use of a credit card to enter a site, would impose a
significant economic cost on non-commercial entities. Critical
Path, for example, received 3,300 hits daily from February 4
through March 4, 1996. If Critical Path must pay a fee every time
a user initially enters its site, then, to provide free access to
its non-commercial site, it would incur a monthly cost far beyond
its modest resources. The ACLU's Barry Steinhardt testified that
maintenance of a credit card verification system for all visitors
to the ACLU's Web site would require it to shut down its Web site
because the projected cost would exceed its budget.
- Credit card verification would significantly delay the
retrieval of information on the Internet. Dr. Olsen, the expert
testifying for the Government, agreed that even "a minute is [an]
absolutely unreasonable [delay] . . . [P]eople will not put up
with a minute." Plaintiffs' expert Donna Hoffman similarly
testified that excessive delay disrupts the "flow" on the Internet
and stifles both "hedonistic" and "goal-directed" browsing.
- Imposition of a credit card requirement would completely bar
adults who do not have a credit card and lack the resources to
obtain one from accessing any blocked material. At this time,
credit card verification is effectively unavailable to a
substantial number of Internet content providers as a potential
defense to the CDA.
Adult Verification by Password
- The Government offered very limited evidence regarding the
operation of existing age verification systems, and the evidence
offered was not based on personal knowledge. AdultCheck and
Verify, existing systems which appear to be used for accessing
commercial pornographic sites, charge users for their services.
Dr. Olsen admitted that his knowledge of these services was
derived primarily from reading the advertisements on their Web
pages. He had not interviewed any employees of these entities, had
not personally used these systems, had no idea how many people are
registered with them, and could not testify to the reliability of
their attempt at age verification.
- At least some, if not almost all, non-commercial
organizations, such as the ACLU, Stop Prisoner Rape or Critical
Path AIDS Project, regard charging listeners to access their
speech as contrary to their goals of making their materials
available to a wide audience free of charge.
- It would not be feasible for many non-commercial organizations
to design their own adult access code screening systems because
the administrative burden of creating and maintaining a screening
system and the ongoing costs involved is beyond their reach. There
was testimony that the costs would be prohibitive even for a
commercial entity such as HotWired, the online version of Wired
magazine.
- There is evidence suggesting that adult users, particularly
casual Web browsers, would be discouraged from retrieving
information that required use of a credit card or password. Andrew
Anker testified that HotWired has received many complaints from
its members about HotWired's registration system, which requires
only that a member supply a name, e-mail address and self-created
password. There is concern by commercial content providers that
age verification requirements would decrease advertising and
revenue because advertisers depend on a demonstration that the
sites are widely available and frequently visited.
- Even if credit card verification or adult password
verification were implemented, the Government presented no
testimony as to how such systems could ensure that the user of the
password or credit card is in fact over 18. The burdens imposed by
credit card verification and adult password verification systems
make them effectively unavailable to a substantial number of
Internet content providers.
The
Government's "Tagging" Proposal
- The feasibility and effectiveness of "tagging" to restrict
children from accessing "indecent" speech, as proposed by the
Government has not been established. "Tagging" would require
content providers to label all of their "indecent" or "patently
offensive" material by imbedding a string of characters, such as
"XXX," in either the URL or HTML. If a user could install software
on his or her computer to recognize the "XXX" tag, the user could
screen out any content with that tag. Dr. Olsen proposed a "-L18"
tag, an idea he developed for this hearing in response to Mr.
Bradner's earlier testimony that certain tagging would not be
feasible.
- The parties appear to agree that it is technologically
feasible -- "trivial", in the words of plaintiffs' expert -- to
imbed tags in URLs and HTML, and the technology of tagging
underlies both plaintiffs' PICS proposal and the Government's
"-L18" proposal.
- The Government's tagging proposal would require all content
providers that post arguably "indecent" material to review all of
their online content, a task that would be extremely burdensome
for organizations that provide large amounts of material online
which cannot afford to pay a large staff to review all of that
material. The Carnegie Library would be required to hire numerous
additional employees to review its on-line files at an extremely
high cost to its limited budget. The cost and effort would be
substantial for the Library and frequently prohibitive for others.
Witness Kiroshi Kuromiya testified that it would be impossible for
his organization, Critical Path, to review all of its material
because it has only one full and one part-time employee.
- The task of screening and tagging cannot be done simply by
using software which screens for certain words, as Dr. Olsen
acknowledged, and we find that determinations as to what is
indecent require human judgment.
- In lieu of reviewing each file individually, a content
provider could tag its entire site but this would prevent minors
from accessing much material that is not "indecent" under the CDA.
- To be effective, a scheme such as the -L18 proposal would
require a worldwide consensus among speakers to use the same tag
to label "indecent" material. There is currently no such
consensus, and no Internet speaker currently labels its speech
with the -L18 code or with any other widely-recognized label.
- Tagging also assumes the existence of software that recognizes
the tags and takes appropriate action when it notes tagged speech.
Neither commercial Web browsers nor user-based screening software
is currently configured to block a -L18 code. Until such software
exists, all speech on the Internet will continue to travel to
whomever requests it, without hindrance. Labelling speech has no
effect in itself on the transmission (or not) of that speech.
Neither plaintiffs nor the Government suggest that tagging alone
would shield minors from speech or insulate a speaker from
criminal liability under the CDA. It follows that all speech on
any topic that is available to adults will also be available to
children using the Internet (unless it is blocked by screening
software running on the computer the child is using).
- There is no way that a speaker can use current technology to
know if a listener is using screening software.
- Tags can not currently activate or deactivate themselves
depending on the age or location of the receiver. Critical Path,
which posts on-line safer sex instructions, would be unable to
imbed tags that block its speech only in communities where it may
be regarded as indecent. Critical Path, for example, must choose
either to tag its site (blocking its speech in all communities) or
not to tag, blocking its speech in none.
The Problems of
Offshore Content and Caching
- A large percentage, perhaps 40% or more, of content on the
Internet originates outside the United States. At the hearing, a
witness demonstrated how an Internet user could access a Web site
of London (which presumably is on a server in England), and then
link to other sites of interest in England. A user can sometimes
discern from a URL that content is coming from overseas, since
InterNIC allows a content provider to imbed a country code in a
domain name.20 Foreign content is otherwise indistinguishable
from domestic content (as long as it is in English), since foreign
speech is created, named, and posted in the same manner as
domestic speech. There is no requirement that foreign speech
contain a country code in its URL. It is undisputed that some
foreign speech that travels over the Internet is sexually
explicit.
- The use of "caching" makes it difficult to determine whether
the material originated from foreign or domestic sources. Because
of the high cost of using the trans- Atlantic and trans-Pacific
cables, and because the high demand on those cables leads to
bottleneck delays, content is often "cached", or temporarily
stored, on servers in the United States. Material from a foreign
source in Europe can travel over the trans-Atlantic cable to the
receiver in the United States, and pass through a domestic caching
server which then stores a copy for subsequent retrieval. This
domestic caching server, rather than the original foreign server,
will send the material from the cache to the subsequent receivers,
without placing a demand on the trans-oceanic cables. This
shortcut effectively eliminates most of the distance for both the
request and the information and, hence, most of the delay. The
caching server discards the stored information according to its
configuration (e.g., after a certain time or as the demand for the
information diminishes). Caching therefore advances core Internet
values: the cheap and speedy retrieval of information.
- Caching is not merely an international phenomenon. Domestic
content providers store popular domestic material on their caching
servers to avoid the delay of successive searches for the same
material and to decrease the demand on their Internet connection.
America Online can cache the home page of the New York Times on
its servers when a subscriber first requests it, so that
subsequent subscribers who make the same request will receive the
same home page, but from America Online's caching service rather
than from the New York Times's server.21
- Put simply, to follow the example in the prior paragraph,
America Online has no control over the content that the New York
Times posts to its Web site, and the New York Times has no control
over America Online's distribution of that content from a caching
server.
Anonymity
- Anonymity is important to Internet users who seek to access
sensitive information, such as users of the Critical Path AIDS
Project's Web site, the users, particularly gay youth, of Queer
Resources Directory, and users of Stop Prisoner Rape (SPR). Many
members of SPR's mailing list have asked to remain anonymous due
to the stigma of prisoner rape.
Plaintiffs'
Choices Under the CDA
- Many speakers who display arguably indecent content on the
Internet must choose between silence and the risk of prosecution.
The CDA's defenses -- credit card verification, adult access
codes, and adult personal identification numbers -- are
effectively unavailable for non-commercial, not-for-profit
entities.
- The plaintiffs in this action are businesses, libraries,
non-commercial and not-for-profit organizations, and educational
societies and consortia. Although some of the material that
plaintiffs post online -- such as information regarding protection
from AIDS, birth control or prison rape -- is sexually explicit
and may be considered "indecent" or "patently offensive" in some
communities, none of the plaintiffs is a commercial purveyor of
what is commonly termed "pornography."
III.CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
Plaintiffs have established a reasonable probability of eventual
success in the litigation by demonstrating that §§
223(a)(1)(B) and 223(a)(2) of the CDA are unconstitutional on their
face to the extent that they reach indecency. Sections 223(d)(1) and
223(d)(2) of the CDA are unconstitutional on their face. Accordingly,
plaintiffs have shown irreparable injury, no party has any interest
in the enforcement of an unconstitutional law, and therefore the
public interest will be served by granting the preliminary
injunction. Elrod v. Burns, 427 U.S. 347, 373-74 (1976); Hohe v.
Casey, 868 F.2d 69, 72 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 848 (1989);
Acierno v. New Castle County, 40 F.3d 645, 653 (3d Cir. 1994). The
motions for preliminary injunction will therefore be granted.
The views of the members of the Court in support of these
conclusions follow.
SLOVITER, Chief
Judge, Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit:
A.Statutory Provisions
As noted in Part I, Introduction, the plaintiffs' motion for a
preliminary injunction is confined to portions of two provisions of
the Communications Decency Act of 1996, § 223(a) and §
223(d), which they contend violate their First Amendment free speech
and Fifth Amendment due process rights. To facilitate reference, I
set forth those provisions in full. Section 223(a), the "indecency"
provision, subjects to criminal penalties of imprisonment of no more
than two years or a fine or both anyone who:
1) in interstate or foreign communications . . .
(B) by means of a telecommunications device
knowingly --
(i) makes, creates, or solicits, and
(ii) initiates the transmission of,
any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other
communication which is obscene or indecent, knowing that the
recipient of the communication is under 18 years of age, regardless
of whether the maker of such communication placed the call or
initiated the communication; . . .
(2) knowingly permits any telecommunications facility under his
control to be used for any activity prohibited by paragraph (1) with
the intent that it be used for such activity.
(emphasis added).
The term "telecommunications device" is specifically defined not
to include "the use of an interactive computer service," as that is
covered by section 223(d)(1).
Section 223(d), the "patently offensive" provision, subjects to
criminal penalties anyone who:
(1) in interstate or foreign communications
knowingly--
(A) uses an interactive computer service to send to a
specific person or persons under 18 years of age, or
(B) uses any interactive computer service to display in a manner
available to a person under 18 years of age, any comment, request,
suggestion, proposal, image or other communication that, in context,
depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by
contemporary community standards, sexual or excretory activities or
organs, regardless of whether the use of such service placed the call
or initiated the communication; or
(2) knowingly permits any telecommunications facility under such
person's control to be used for an activity prohibited by paragraph
(1) with the intent that it be used for such activity.
(emphasis added).
Two aspects of these provisions stand out. First, we are dealing
with criminal provisions, subjecting violators to substantial
penalties. Second, the provisions on indecent and patently offensive
communications are not parallel.
The government uses the term "indecent" interchangeably with
"patently offensive" and advises that it so construes the statute in
light of the legislative history and the Supreme Court's analysis of
the word "indecent" in FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726
(1978). However, the CDA does not define "indecent." Notwithstanding
Congress' familiarity with Pacifica, it enacted § 223(a),
covering "indecent" communications, without any language confining
"indecent" to descriptions or depictions of "sexual or excretory
activities or organs," language it included in the reference to
"patently offensive" in § 223(d)(1)(B). Nor does § 223(a)
contain the phrase "in context," which the government believes is
relevant.
The failure to define "indecent" in § 223(a) is thus arguably
a negative pregnant and subject to "the rule of construction that an
express statutory requirement here, contrasted with statutory silence
there, shows an intent to confine the requirement to the specified
instance." Field v. Mans, 116 S.Ct. 437, 442 (1995). See also
Gozlon-Peretz v. United States, 498 U.S. 395, 404 (1991) ("'[W]here
Congress includes particular language in one section of a statute but
omits it in another section of the same Act, it is generally presumed
that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in the disparate
inclusion or exclusion'") (quoting Russello v. United States, 464
U.S. 16, 23 (1983)).
Plaintiffs note the difference but do not press this as a basis
for distinguishing between the two sections in their preliminary
injunction arguments and therefore I will also use the words
interchangeably for this purpose, leaving open the issue for
consideration at the final judgment stage if it becomes relevant.
B.Preliminary
Injunction Standard
To obtain a preliminary injunction, plaintiffs must establish that
they are likely to prevail on the merits and that they will suffer
irreparable harm if injunctive relief is not granted. We also must
consider whether the potential harm to the defendant from issuance of
a temporary restraining order outweighs possible harm to the
plaintiffs if such relief is denied, and whether the granting of
injunctive relief is in the public interest. See Campbell Soup Co. v.
ConAgra, Inc., 977 F.2d 86, 90-91 (3d Cir. 1992); Bradley v.
Pittsburgh Bd. of Educ., 910 F.2d 1172, 1175 (3d Cir. 1990).
In a case in which the injury alleged is a threat to First
Amendment interests, the finding of irreparable injury is often tied
to the likelihood of success on the merits. In Elrod v. Burns, 427
U.S. 347 (1976), the Supreme Court emphasized that "the loss of First
Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably
constitutes irreparable injury." Id. at 373 (citing New York Times
Co. v. United States, 403 U.S. 713 (1971)).
Subjecting speakers to criminal penalties for speech that is
constitutionally protected in itself raises the spectre of
irreparable harm. Even if a court were unwilling to draw that
conclusion from the language of the statute itself, plaintiffs have
introduced ample evidence that the challenged provisions, if not
enjoined, will have a chilling effect on their free expression. Thus,
this is not a case in which we are dealing with a mere incidental
inhibition on speech, see Hohe v. Casey, 868 F.2d 69, 73 (3d Cir.),
cert. denied, 493 U.S. 848 (1989), but with a regulation that
directly penalizes speech.
Nor could there be any dispute about the public interest factor
which must be taken into account before a court grants a preliminary
injunction. No long string of citations is necessary to find that the
public interest weighs in favor of having access to a free flow of
constitutionally protected speech. See, e.g., Turner Broadcasting
System, Inc. v. FCC, 114 S. Ct. 2445, 2458 (1994); Virginia Bd. of
Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, 425 U.S. 748, 763-65
(1976).
Thus, if plaintiffs have shown a likelihood of success on the
merits, they will have shown the irreparable injury needed to entitle
them to a preliminary injunction.
C.Applicable
Standard of Review
The CDA is patently a government-imposed content-based restriction
on speech, and the speech at issue, whether denominated "indecent" or
"patently offensive," is entitled to constitutional protection. See
Sable Communications of California, Inc. v. FCC, 492 U.S. 115, 126
(1989). As such, the regulation is subject to strict scrutiny, and
will only be upheld if it is justified by a compelling government
interest and if it is narrowly tailored to effectuate that interest.
Sable, 492 U.S. at 126; see also Turner Broadcasting, 114 S. Ct. at
2459 (1994). "[T]he benefit gained [by a content-based restriction]
must outweigh the loss of constitutionally protected rights." Elrod
v. Burns, 427 U.S. at 363.
The government's position on the applicable standard has been less
than pellucid but, despite some references to a somewhat lesser
burden employed in broadcasting cases, it now appears to have
conceded that it has the burden of proof to show both a compelling
interest and that the statute regulates least restrictively. Tr. of
Preliminary Injunction Hearing at 121 (May 10, 1996). In any event,
the evidence and our Findings of Fact based thereon show that
Internet communication, while unique, is more akin to telephone
communication, at issue in Sable, than to broadcasting, at issue in
Pacifica, because, as with the telephone, an Internet user must act
affirmatively and deliberately to retrieve specific information
online. Even if a broad search will, on occasion, retrieve unwanted
materials, the user virtually always receives some warning of its
content, significantly reducing the element of surprise or "assault"
involved in broadcasting. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that a
very young child will be randomly "surfing" the Web and come across
"indecent" or "patently offensive" material.
Judge Dalzell's separate opinion fully explores the reasons for
the differential treatment of radio and television broadcasting for
First Amendment purposes from that accorded other means of
communication. It follows that to the extent the Court employed a
less than strict scrutiny standard of review in Pacifica and other
broadcasting cases, see, e.g., Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395
U.S. 367 (1969), there is no reason to employ a less than strict
scrutiny standard of review in this case.
D.The Nature of the
Government's Interest
The government asserts that shielding minors from access to
indecent materials is the compelling interest supporting the CDA. It
cites in support the statements of the Supreme Court that "[i]t is
evident beyond the need for elaboration that a State's interest in
`safeguarding the physical and psychological well-being of a minor'
is `compelling,'" New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 757
(1982)(quoting Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court, 457 U.S. 596,
607 (1982)), and "there is a compelling interest in protecting the
physical and psychological well-being of minors. This interest
extends to shielding minors from the influence of literature that is
not obscene by adult standards." Sable, 492 U.S at 126. It also cites
the similar quotation appearing in Fabulous Assoc., Inc. v.
Pennsylvania Public Utility Comm'n, 896 F.2d 780, 787 (3d Cir. 1990).
Those statements were made in cases where the potential harm to
children from the material was evident. Ferber involved the
constitutionality of a statute which prohibited persons from
knowingly promoting sexual performances by children under 16 and
distributing material depicting such performances. Sable and Fabulous
involved the FCC's ban on "dial-a-porn" (dealing by definition with
pornographic telephone messages). In contrast to the material at
issue in those cases, at least some of the material subject to
coverage under the "indecent" and "patently offensive" provisions of
the CDA may contain valuable literary, artistic or educational
information of value to older minors as well as adults. The Supreme
Court has held that "minors are entitled to a significant measure of
First Amendment protection, and only in relatively narrow and
well-defined circumstances may government bar public dissemination of
protected materials to them." Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville, 422
U.S. 205, 212-213 (1975)(citations omitted).
In Erznoznik, the Court rejected an argument that an ordinance
prohibiting the display of films containing nudity at drive-in movie
theatres served a compelling interest in protecting minor passersby
from the influence of such films. The Court held that the prohibition
was unduly broad, and explained that "[s]peech that is neither
obscene as to youths nor subject to some other legitimate
proscription cannot be suppressed solely to protect the young from
ideas or images that a legislative body thinks unsuitable for them."
422 U.S. at 213-14. As Justice Scalia noted in Sable, "[t]he more
pornographic what is embraced within the . . . category of
`indecency,' the more reasonable it becomes to insist upon greater
assurance of insulation from minors." Sable, 492 U.S. at 132 (Scalia,
J., concurring). It follows that where non-pornographic, albeit
sexually explicit, material also falls within the sweep of the
statute, the interest will not be as compelling.
In part, our consideration of the government's showing of a
"compelling interest" trenches upon the vagueness issue, discussed in
detail in Judge Buckwalter's opinion but equally pertinent to First
Amendment analysis. Material routinely acceptable according to the
standards of New York City, such as the Broadway play Angels in
America which concerns homosexuality and AIDS portrayed in graphic
language, may be far less acceptable in smaller, less cosmopolitan
communities of the United States. Yet the play garnered two Tony
Awards and a Pulitzer prize for its author, and some uninhibited
parents and teachers might deem it to be material to be read or
assigned to eleventh and twelfth graders. If available on the
Internet through some libraries, the text of the play would likely be
accessed in that manner by at least some students, and it would also
arguably fall within the scope of the CDA.
There has been recent public interest in the female genital
mutilation routinely practiced and officially condoned in some
countries. News articles have been descriptive, and it is not
stretching to assume that this is a subject that occupies news groups
and chat rooms on the Internet. We have no assurance that these
discussions, of obvious interest and relevance to older teenage
girls, will not be viewed as patently offensive - even in context -
in some communities.
Other illustrations abound of non-obscene material likely to be
available on the Internet but subject to the CDA's criminal
provisions. Photographs appearing in National Geographic or a travel
magazine of the sculptures in India of couples copulating in numerous
positions, a written description of a brutal prison rape, or
Francesco Clemente's painting "Labirinth," see Def. Exh. 125, all
might be considered to "depict or describe, in terms patently
offensive as measured by contemporary community standards, sexual or
excretory activities or organs." 47 U.S.C. § 223(d)(1). But the
government has made no showing that it has a compelling interest in
preventing a seventeen-year-old minor from accessing such images.
By contrast, plaintiffs presented testimony that material that
could be considered indecent, such as that offered by Stop Prisoner
Rape or Critical Path AIDS project, may be critically important for
certain older minors. For example, there was testimony that one
quarter of all new HIV infections in the United States is estimated
to occur in young people between the ages of 13 and 20, an estimate
the government made no effort to rebut. The witnesses believed that
graphic material that their organizations post on the Internet could
help save lives, but were concerned about the CDA's effect on their
right to do so.
The government counters that this court should defer to
legislative conclusions about this matter. However, where First
Amendment rights are at stake, "[d]eference to a legislative finding
cannot limit judicial inquiry." Sable, 492 U.S. at 129 (quoting
Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia, 435 U.S. 829, 843 (1978)).
"[W]hatever deference is due legislative findings would not foreclose
our independent judgment of the facts bearing on an issue of
constitutional law." Id.
Moreover, it appears that the legislative "findings" the
government cites concern primarily testimony and statements by
legislators about the prevalence of obscenity, child pornography, and
sexual solicitation of children on the Internet. Similarly, at the
hearings before us the government introduced exhibits of sexually
explicit material through the testimony of Agent Howard Schmidt,
which consisted primarily of the same type of hard-core pornographic
materials (even if not technically obscene) which concerned Congress
and which fill the shelves of "adult" book and magazine stores.
Plaintiffs emphasize that they do not challenge the Act's
restrictions on speech not protected by the First Amendment, such as
obscenity, child pornography or harassment of children. Their suit is
based on their assertion, fully supported by their evidence and our
findings, that the CDA reaches much farther.
I am far less confident than the government that its quotations
from earlier cases in the Supreme Court signify that it has shown a
compelling interest in regulating the vast range of online material
covered or potentially covered by the CDA. Nonetheless, I acknowledge
that there is certainly a compelling government interest to shield a
substantial number of minors from some of the online material that
motivated Congress to enact the CDA, and do not rest my decision on
the inadequacy of the government's showing in this regard.
E.The Reach of the Statute
Whatever the strength of the interest the government has
demonstrated in preventing minors from accessing "indecent" and
"patently offensive" material online, if the means it has chosen
sweeps more broadly than necessary and thereby chills the expression
of adults, it has overstepped onto rights protected by the First
Amendment. Sable, 492 U.S. at 131.
The plaintiffs argue that the CDA violates the First Amendment
because it effectively bans a substantial category of protected
speech from most parts of the Internet. The government responds that
the Act does not on its face or in effect ban indecent material that
is constitutionally protected for adults. Thus one of the factual
issues before us was the likely effect of the CDA on the free
availability of constitutionally protected material. A wealth of
persuasive evidence, referred to in detail in the Findings of Fact,
proved that it is either technologically impossible or economically
prohibitive for many of the plaintiffs to comply with the CDA without
seriously impeding their posting of online material which adults have
a constitutional right to access.
With the possible exception of an e-mail to a known recipient,
most content providers cannot determine the identity and age of every
user accessing their material. Considering separately content
providers that fall roughly into two categories, we have found that
no technology exists which allows those posting on the category of
newsgroups, mail exploders or chat rooms to screen for age. Speakers
using those forms of communication cannot control who receives the
communication, and in most instances are not aware of the identity of
the recipients. If it is not feasible for speakers who communicate
via these forms of communication to conduct age screening, they would
have to reduce the level of communication to that which is
appropriate for children in order to be protected under the statute.
This would effect a complete ban even for adults of some expression,
albeit "indecent," to which they are constitutionally entitled, and
thus would be unconstitutional under the holding in Sable, 492 U.S.
at 131.
Even as to content providers in the other broad category, such as
the World Wide Web, where efforts at age verification are technically
feasible through the use of Common Gateway Interface (cgi) scripts
(which enable creation of a document that can process information
provided by a Web visitor), the Findings of Fact show that as a
practical matter, non-commercial organizations and even many
commercial organizations using the Web would find it prohibitively
expensive and burdensome to engage in the methods of age verification
proposed by the government, and that even if they could attempt to
age verify, there is little assurance that they could successfully
filter out minors.
The government attempts to circumvent this problem by seeking to
limit the scope of the statute to those content providers who are
commercial pornographers, and urges that we do likewise in our
obligation to save a congressional enactment from facial
unconstitutionality wherever possible. But in light of its plain
language and its legislative history, the CDA cannot reasonably be
read as limited to commercial pornographers. A court may not impose a
narrowing construction on a statute unless it is "readily
susceptible" to such a construction. Virginia v. American Booksellers
Ass'n, 484 U.S. 383, 397 (1988). The court may not "rewrite a . . .
law to conform it to constitutional requirements." Id. Although we
may prefer an interpretation of a statute that will preserve the
constitutionality of the statutory scheme, United State v. Clark, 445
U.S. 23, 27 (1980), we do not have license to rewrite a statute to
"create distinctions where none were intended." American Tobacco Co.
v. Patterson, 456 U.S. 63, 72 n.6 (1982); see also Consumer Party v.
Davis, 778 F.2d 140, 147 (3d Cir. 1985). The Court has often stated
that "absent a clearly expressed legislative intention to the
contrary, [statutory] language must ordinarily be regarded as
conclusive." Escondido Mut. Water Co. v. La Jolla Band of Mission
Indians, 466 U.S. 765, 772 (1984)(quoting North Dakota v. United
States, 460 U.S. 300, 312 (1983)).
It is clear from the face of the CDA and from its legislative
history that Congress did not intend to limit its application to
commercial purveyors of pornography. Congress unquestionably knew how
to limit the statute to such entities if that was its intent, and in
fact it did so in provisions relating to dial-a-porn services. See 47
U.S.C. § 223(b)(2)(A) (criminalizing making any indecent
telephone communication "for commercial purposes"). It placed no
similar limitation in the CDA. Moreover, the Conference Report makes
clear that Congress did not intend to limit the application of the
statute to content providers such as those which make available the
commercial material contained in the government's exhibits, and
confirms that Congress intended "content regulation of both
commercial and non-commercial providers." Conf. Rep. at 191. See
also, 141 Cong. Rec. S8089 (daily ed. June 9, 1995) (Statement of
Senator Exon).
The scope of the CDA is not confined to material that has a
prurient interest or appeal, one of the hallmarks of obscenity,
because Congress sought to reach farther. Nor did Congress include
language that would define "patently offensive" or "indecent" to
exclude material of serious value. It follows that to narrow the
statute in the manner the government urges would be an impermissible
exercise of our limited judicial function, which is to review the
statute as written for its compliance with constitutional mandates.
I conclude inexorably from the foregoing that the CDA reaches
speech subject to the full protection of the First Amendment, at
least for adults.1 In questions of the witnesses and in colloquy
with the government attorneys, it became evident that even if
"indecent" is read as parallel to "patently offensive," the terms
would cover a broad range of material from contemporary films, plays
and books showing or describing sexual activities (e.g., Leaving Las
Vegas) to controversial contemporary art and photographs showing
sexual organs in positions that the government conceded would be
patently offensive in some communities (e.g., a Robert Mapplethorpe
photograph depicting a man with an erect penis).
We have also found that there is no effective way for many
Internet content providers to limit the effective reach of the CDA to
adults because there is no realistic way for many providers to
ascertain the age of those accessing their materials. As a
consequence, we have found that "[m]any speakers who display arguably
indecent content on the Internet must choose between silence and the
risk of prosecution." Such a choice, forced by sections 223(a) and
(d) of the CDA, strikes at the heart of speech of adults as well as
minors.
F.Whether CDA is
Narrowly Tailored
In the face of such a patent intrusion on a substantial category
of protected speech for adults, there is some irony in considering
whether the statute is narrowly tailored or, as sometimes put,
whether Congress has used the least restrictive means to achieve a
compelling government interest. See Sable, 492 U.S. at 126. It would
appear that the extent of the abridgement of the protected speech of
adults that it has been shown the CDA would effect is too intrusive
to be outweighed by the government's asserted interest, whatever its
strength, in protecting minors from access to indecent material.
Nonetheless, the formulation of the inquiry requires that we consider
the government's assertion that the statute is narrowly drafted, and
I proceed to do so.
In this case, the government relies on the statutory defenses for
its argument of narrow tailoring. There are a number of reasons why I
am not persuaded that the statutory defenses can save the CDA from a
conclusion of facial unconstitutionality.
First, it is difficult to characterize a criminal statute that
hovers over each content provider, like the proverbial sword of
Damocles, as a narrow tailoring. Criminal prosecution, which carries
with it the risk of public obloquy as well as the expense of court
preparation and attorneys' fees, could itself cause incalculable
harm. No provider, whether an individual, non-profit corporation, or
even large publicly held corporation, is likely to willingly subject
itself to prosecution for a miscalculation of the prevalent community
standards or for an error in judgment as to what is indecent. A
successful defense to a criminal prosecution would be small solace
indeed.
Credit card and adult verification services are explicitly
referred to as defenses in § 223(e)(5)(B) of the CDA. As is set
forth fully in the detailed Findings of Fact, these defenses are not
technologically or economically feasible for most providers.
The government then falls back on the affirmative defense to
prosecution provided in § 223(e)(5)(A) for a person who "has
taken, in good faith, reasonable, effective, and appropriate actions
under the circumstances to restrict or prevent access by minors to a
communication specified in such subsections . . . including any
method which is feasible under available technology." The government
emphasizes that "effective" does not require 100% restriction, and
that this defense is "open-ended" and requires only reasonable
efforts based on current technology.
But, as the evidence made clear, there is no such technology at
this time. The government proffered as one option that would
constitute a valid affirmative defense under § 223(e)(5)(A) a
"tagging" scheme conceived by Dr. Olsen in response to this lawsuit
whereby a string of characters would be imbedded in all arguably
indecent or patently offensive material. Our Findings of Fact set
for