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Internet Freedom Decision
John Gilmore calls attention to a recent US District Court decision
which affirms controversial publication on the Internet:
This is a big deal; it is strong support for the idea that publications
should remain visible on the Internet UNTIL a judge has declared
them illegal. Current practice of complainers is to try to get
the material taken down immediately (typically by a service provider
who's afraid to get sued), and then fight over whether to put it back!
The case is in a defamation context, but might be applicable to the
more common trademark/copyright/trade secret (e.g. scientology or
domain name) censorship controversies.
We should put the decision on the Web, and publicize the case.
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See the decision and ACLU press release on it:
http://jya.com/sheehan.htm