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Re: Publicity on PICS
>>At the same time, providers will be urged to rate their pages by filling out
>>an electronic questionnaire resulting in a "grade" for each site, on a scale
>>ranging from zero, the most innocuous, to four for each category.
>
> What was I saying about pressure to rate?
this is really horrible. I hope that no precedent of having internet
providers involvement in ratings is *ever* established. this proposal
reeks. separate ratings from content and delivery.
>>The system depends for its ratings on voluntary compliance by Internet
>>providers.
ugggghghghghg. not my ideal use of PICS. I hope that people don't
begin to believe that PICS is this system.
>>But there is no way to use the system to seek out pornography or violence on
>>the web, officials insisted.
I don't know why that would be a problem.
>>"To content-providers, I would say, 'Rate your sites' To parents I would
>>say, 'Set the levels for your children.' And to governments, I would say
>>humbly, 'Think again before censoring the net,"' Stephen Balkam, executive
>>director of the Recreational Software Advisory Council, told a news
>>conference.
>
> Note again the pressure for self-rating.
"content-providers" != internet providers. that former is OK. the
latter is a horrible nightmare. please, please, please,
I hope this system is not asking/demanding people who run hardware
& communication services to get into the rating business.
such a thing is atrocious and odious
and exactly what should be avoided.
>>A strength of PICS is that "it allows as many countries as would like to set
>>up a rating system," said Jim Miller, a research scientist who helped
>>develop the system. Adhering to the system would still be up to individual
>>households, however.
>
> Whatever became of market-ratings? Admittedly, they may mean that each
>country will be encouraged to given an example system... but I still don't
>like the idea of government involvement.
the government becomes just another rating agency. I don't like it either.
but as long as we emphasize, "the individual always has the ultimate
decision", which fortunately this press release does,
little can go awry, hopefully.