Internet and FoE
Internet and FoE
Supervisor:
Gregor Noll
Abstract
Internet challenges the right to freedom of expression. On the one hand, Internet
empowers freedom of expression by providing individuals with new means of
expressions. On the other hand, the free flow of information has raised the call for
content regulation, not least to restrict minors access to potentially harmful information.
This schism has led to legal attempts to regulate content and to new self-regulatory
schemes implemented by private parties. The attempts to regulate content raise the
question of how to define Internet in terms of public sphere and accordingly protect
online rights of expression. The dissertation will argue that Internet has strong public
sphere elements, and should receive the same level of protection, which has been given
to rights of expression in the physical world. Regarding the tendency towards selfregulation, the dissertation will point to the problem of having private parties manage a
public sphere, hence regulate according to commercial codes of consumer demand rather
than the principles inherent in the rights of expressions, such as the right of every
minority to voice her opinion. The dissertation will conclude, that the time has come for
states to take on their responsibility and strengthen the protection of freedom of
expression on Internet.
29.600 words
Table of Contents
Abstract..............................................................................................................................2
1. Introduction...................................................................................................................4
1.1. Point of departure...................................................................................................4
1.2. Aim of dissertation..................................................................................................6
2. System, lifeworld and Internet.......................................................................................7
2.1. The concepts of system and lifeworld.....................................................................7
2.2. Internet as lifeworld ...............................................................................................9
2.3. Internet as system.................................................................................................13
3. Internet as a new communicative sphere......................................................................19
3.1. Functional characteristics of Internet....................................................................19
3.2. Internet and other types of media.........................................................................22
3.3. Internet as public sphere.......................................................................................24
3.4. Access to Internet.................................................................................................28
3.5. State protection.....................................................................................................29
4. Freedom of expression ................................................................................................31
4.1. Legal point of departure.......................................................................................31
4.2. Freedoms protected..............................................................................................32
4.3. Admissible restrictions..........................................................................................36
4.4. Political statements...............................................................................................40
5. Cases ...........................................................................................................................42
5.1. State regulatory cases...........................................................................................42
US District Court for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania, Multnomah Public Library v.
U.S. Complaint 2 April 2001. Referred to as (Lawsuit on CHIPA)..............................43
5.1.1. Public space and cyberspace..........................................................................45
5.1.2. Internet as media ...........................................................................................47
5.1.3. Right to express opinions...............................................................................49
5.1.4. Margin of appreciation ..................................................................................53
5.1.5. Necessity test ................................................................................................54
5.1.6. Right to receive information..........................................................................55
5.2. Self-regulatory cases.............................................................................................58
6. Discussion....................................................................................................................62
6.1. Level of protection ...............................................................................................62
6.2. Internet and mass media .......................................................................................64
6.3. Filters and the right to receive information ..........................................................65
6.4. Online decency and moral standards.....................................................................69
6.5. Regulation of cyber assemblies.............................................................................71
6.6. Regulation of access ............................................................................................72
6.7. Positive state obligation .......................................................................................73
7. Conclusion ..................................................................................................................74
Bibliography.....................................................................................................................76
1. Introduction
1.1. Point of departure
In his 1998 report to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur on
the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression outlined
the case against government regulation of Internet access and content as follows: "The
new technologies and, in particular, the Internet, are inherently democratic, provide the
public and individuals with access to information and sources and enable all to participate
actively in the communication process. The Special Rapporteur also believes that action
by States to impose excessive regulations on the use of these technologies and, again
particularly the Internet, on the grounds that control, regulation and denial of access are
necessary to preserve the moral fabric and cultural identity of societies is paternalistic.
These regulations presume to protect people from themselves and as such, are inherently
incompatible with the principles of the worth and dignity of each individual"
(E/CN.4//1998/40:IIC4).
In 1999 a consortium of executives from the main media and information technology
industries established The Global Business Dialogue. The consortium points to the
inconsistent international regulation in cyberspace and argues that parliaments are
challenging them to develop effective self-regulatory mechanisms. One of the areas,
which the consortium addresses, is content regulation, led by Walt Disney.
In December 2000 the United States Congress passed the Childrens Internet Protection
Act, which requires schools and libraries to install "technology protection measures" to
shield minors from adult content. Two coalitions of US civil liberties groups, library
associations, websites and individual library patrons will now challenge the federal law
that mandates the use of filtering software in schools and libraries receiving federal
grants for computers or Internet access.
In January 2001 a Danish public library announced that it had made filtering mandatory
on its public computers, in order to block access to pornography and other indecent
material for both adults and minors. The library announced that pornography is not
information according to the librarys definition of information and therefore is not
protected as such.
In January 2000 an executive from the Danish web portal Jubii.dk described how Jubii
automatically, and without notifying their users, changes indecent expressions in their
chat rooms in order to facilitate a more decent online environment.
*
Internet challenges the right to freedom of expression safeguarded in the international
human rights treaties. On the one hand, Internet empowers freedom of expression by
providing individuals with new means of imparting and seeking information. On the other
hand, the free flow of information has raised the call for content regulation, not least to
restrict minors access to potentially harmful information.
In the US the call for state intervention has so far led to the US Communication Decency
Act in 1996, the Childrens Online Protection Act in 1998, and the Childrens Internet
Protection Act in 2000. On the European level, governments have not sought to the
same degree to regulate potentially harmful content by legislation, but are increasingly
encouraging private parties, such as Internet Service Providers, to self-regulate.
The legal attempts to regulate content on Internet raises the question of how to define
Internet in terms of public sphere and accordingly balance the online rights of expression
against the restrictions necessary in a democratic society. In other words, which level of
protection should be provided for the communicative sphere of cyberspace?
Also, the tendency towards private parties self-regulation raises some interesting issues
from a human rights perspective. Freedom of expression is a protection of individuals
right to voice opinions and to receive information without state interference. This
freedom builds on the presumption that the public sphere is managed, or at least
supervised, by the state. However, on Internet, the public sphere is neither managed nor
supervised by the state, but by private parties whom increasingly self-regulate in order to
secure a safe online environment. This raises the question of positive state obligations;
specifically how to secure freedom of expression in a public sphere managed by private
parties?
How the characteristic features of Internet differ from other media types.
The legal and political space so far defined for regulating online expressions and
information retrieval, including self-regulatory tendencies.
For the theoretical basis, the dissertation will draw on Habermas description of
modernity as consisting of system and lifeworld. The theory will be used as a framework
for discussing the evolution of Internet from the first lifeworld oriented vision to todays
reality, which is a penetrated sphere of private entities, regulation and commercialisation.
In assessing Internet as a new communicative sphere, the focus will be on Internets
functional characteristics and how it resembles and differs from other media. The
concept of system and lifeworld will further be used to discuss Internet in terms of public
versus private sphere.
As a legal basis, the dissertation will use Article 10 of the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms and the related case law of the
European Court. The level of protection provided for by the right to freedom of
expression will be discussed by examining the scope of application of Article 10. The
legal assessment will include some current policy tendencies in the field of freedom of
expression and Internet.
In order to define the legal and political space so far defined for online content
regulation, some recent cases will be examined. The cases will primarily deal with two
types of content regulation, namely state legislative measures and self-regulatory
schemes.
The final part of the dissertation will discuss the level of protection that should be
provided for online expressions, including the issue of positive state obligations in order
to protect freedom of expression in a communicative sphere managed by private parties.
Closely connected to communicative actions is the concept of public sphere and public
opinion. According to Habermas, events and occasions are public when they, in contrast
to closed or exclusive affairs, are open to all, in the same sense as we speak of public
places or public houses (Habermas 1989:1). The public sphere appears as a specific
domain, the public domain versus the private, where communicative action can flourish
and form public opinion (Ibid:2). It is through communicative actions in the public
sphere that lifeworld gains its potential for opposing the system, by fostering the publics
role as a critical judge (Ibid).
Whereas lifeworld is symbolic in its nature, the system is material. The system represents
societies economic-administrative apparatus, which is not reproduced through
communicative action but through money and power. The system is a norm free social
sphere, where subsystems (economic and political) are regulated by anonymous and
language free media1. Since these media are not based on communicative actions (where
you need to present arguments) they allow for much faster and more effective
interactions.
Habermas uses the concepts of system and lifeworld to characterise modern societies
with two main tendencies. On the one hand, a growing complexity where still more
interactions are mediated by the systems media (money and power) and where still more
subsystems are created to deal with this complexity. On the other hand, an increasing
uncoupling of system and lifeworld that is social integration and system integration.
Habermas is concerned about this development because the system increasingly gets
disconnected from norms and values, in which it should be anchored (Habermas
1992:154). But he is also optimistic in the sense that he believes the rationality inherent
in communicative actions can re-establish the coupling between system and lifeworld.
This distinction between social and system integration is one of the main differences
between Habermas and a system thinker such as Luhmann. For Luhmann, there is no
distinction between system and lifeworld, but only between different subsystems.
Accordingly, different system perspectives replace lifeworld as a common linguistic and
cultural background and the normative base, which it implies. Modern societies consist
merely of media-mediated subsystems, which has as their main task to reduce
Media simulate some of the features of language, for instance the structure of raising and redeeming
claims, whereas the structure of mutual understanding is not reproduced (Habermas 1992:263).
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appearance, since no editors or power structures would prevent the individual from
voicing her opinion. And appearance is important for participating in the public sphere. If
individuals do not appear, that is are neither seen nor heard, they do not exist as a public
voice. "Only in the light of the public sphere did that which existed become revealed, did
everything become visible to all. In the discussion among citizens issues were made
topical and took on shape (Habermas 1989:4).
If we look at Habermas description of public opinion, we see why the first perception of
cyberspace held such promise for a stronger public sphere. Drawing on C.W. Mills,
Habermas characterises the formation of public opinion by: (1) virtually as many people
express opinions as receive them. (2) Public communications are so organised that there
is a chance immediately and effectively to reply to any opinion expressed in public.
Opinions formed by such discussion (3) readily find an outlet in effective action, even
against if necessary the prevailing system of authority, and (4) authoritative
institutions do not penetrate the public, which is thus more or less autonomous in its
operation (Habermas 1989:249). Some of these characteristics, particularly the equal
possibility of receiving and expressing opinions, are precisely some of the features, which
distinguish Internet from traditional mass media, as we shall see in the following chapter.
Habermas stresses that opinions cease to be public opinions when they are entangled in
the communicative structure of mass. This is due to the characteristics of mass media
such as (1) far fewer people express opinions than receive them, thus the community of
publics become an abstract collection of individuals who receive impressions from the
mass media. (2) The communications that prevail are so organised that it is difficult or
impossible for the individual to answer back immediately or with any effect. (3) The
realisation of opinion in action is controlled by authorities who organise and control the
channels of such action, and (4) the mass has no autonomy from institutions; on the
contrary, agents of authorised institutions penetrate this mass, reducing any autonomy it
may have in the formation of opinion by discussion (Ibid). Accordingly, the public sphere
of the modern world dominated by mass media has lost part of its pre-modern potential
for forming public opinions.
Another point made by Habermas when discussing the evolution of communication in the
public sphere is the change in the opinion power structure, thus the need to protect the
diversity of the public dialogue from the public itself. Whereas the threat to public
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opinion used to be authoritative powers such as the king or state, the threat is
increasingly the public itself. Wherever the apparently no less arbitrary power of the
public itself had taken the place of princely power, the accusation of intolerance was now
leveled against the public opinion that had become prevalent. The demand for tolerance
was addressed to it and not to the censors who had once suppressed it. The right to the
free expression of opinion was no longer called on to protect the publics rational-critical
debate against the reach of the police but to protect the nonconformists from the grip of
the public itself (Habermas 1989:134).
The early vision of cyberspace held the potential for a revitalised public sphere, a sphere
free from traditional power structures; built on consensus-oriented communication from
the bottom-up by the participants. In this way, Internet represented a potential for
strengthening communicative actions. It could be a new means for opposing the systems
colonisation of lifeworld.
And Internet does bear promising features for strengthening pluralism and empowering
civil society. Here are a few practical examples to illustrate:
Easier to get your message out: Through e-mail and websites, human rights
organisations in Egypt and the Palestinian territories can disseminate information
more effectively than before, despite modest resources and limited access to local
media (HRW 1999:17).
New means for suppressed media: When Radio B92 in Belgrade was closed by
the authorities, the station put its programming on the Internet using a Dutch
Service Provider. Radio Free Europe, Voice of America and Deutche Welle
picked up the station and broadcasted it back into Serbia. In response to this, the
government allowed the station back on the air (GILC 1998:C).
Easier to meet and discuss: Citizens of Arab countries have been able to
debate with Israelis in chat rooms at a time when it was difficult for them to have
face-to-face contact, telephone conversations, and postal correspondence, due to
travel restrictions and the absence of phone or mail links between many Arab
countries and Israel (HRW 1999:18).
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Chinese government sometimes blocks the site, users in China have found ways
to access it (GILC 1998:B).
Easier to find information, for instance from a specific minority group: An Arab
Gay and Lesbian website (www.glas.org) caters to people who, in many Arab
countries, have few places to obtain information pertaining to their sexual
orientation (HRW 1999:19).
Easier access to public information, for instance new laws, decision making and
so on: Through the European Unions website (europa.eu.int) the public can gain
access to all EU publications in several languages.
Easier access to global information: For Indian children in the Chiapas region in
Mexico, a few computers with Internet access have meant access to a global
library of information3.
However, promising these new possibilities were, and presently are, the development of
cyberspace over the last five years has led to a situation where Internet is a mixture of
liberal potential and the reality of strong system influence. Before we take a look on the
tendencies of system colonisation, let me try to sum up the essential features of the
(modern) public sphere before and after Internets entrance onto the scene.
The public sphere before Internet was characterised by mass media as the main mediator
of public opinion. With mass media, public dialogue is channelled through a filter where
editors choose, which information to present. Using Luhmanns system terminology, we
could say that the system of mass media acts according to a communicative code, that
determines, which information is selected for publishing or broadcasting, and which
information is not (Qvortrup 2001:237). The media cannot present all information, or
voice every public opinion, thus system selection is necessary.
information providers to the degree that they provide saleable stories, but their primary
role is as more or less passive information receivers. From an individual point of view,
Internet access is part of El Mono Pintado - a project to empower Indian children in Chiapas,
Mexico. For further information see http://www.pangea.org/ropalimpia/enotbre2.htm (in Spanish).
3
12
Until 1991 the National Science Foundation forbade its use for commerce (Lessig 1999:39).
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certificate authorities to provide for digital certificates. Also the issue of regulation of
encryption, that is governments access to secured communication through recovery
keys, has been subject to political debate and regulation for the last five years 5. This
transformation from openness to secureness is one example of new system regulations, in
this case the commercial sector and governments redefining the rules of cyberspace.
Commercialisation new actors and gatekeepers
Another aspect of e-commerce is the increasing focus on the control of cyberspace
infrastructure and content, in order for private enterprises to gain market shares from the
cyber market. This is changing the media picture and introduces new coalitions of actors.
Traditional players in media publishers and broadcasters are being joined by partners
from the telecommunication sector, from the IT industry and from the financial service
sector. New alliances form new trans-national corporations. As Information becomes
the most tradable commodity in the world, many of the major industry players will be
global corporations richer than many medium sized-countries. They will have enormous
power (CoE 1998:162).
Some of the new alliances bring together information carriers and content providers,
which give these enterprises increasing power to combine control of access with control
of content6. This can be a step in the direction of access providers as gatekeepers that
filter access and content due to corporate interests, thus system imperatives of power
and money. The development potentially moves a still larger part of cyberspace from the
public sphere to a system sphere mediated by power and money and potentially
endangers individuals right to uncensored and non-discriminatory access to the public
sphere7. So far the media market has argued for self-regulation, but at the European level
there is political pressure for a new regime of national and international rules to limit
concentration of media resources and to safeguard pluralism (Ibid:163)8.
Companies that were once bastions of unregulability are now becoming producers of technologies that
facilitate regulation. For example, Network Associates, interior of the encryption program PGP, was
originally a strong opponent of regulation of encryption; now it offers products that facilitate corporate
control of encryption and recovery of keys (Lessig 1999:52).
6
Free access to a diversity of information sources and creative products is under pressure as a result of
the strong trend towards consolidation on the global online market. In all the essential domains of this
market one finds a strong degree of concentration among key players (Hamelink 2000:146).
7
The creation of one of the worlds largest companies to exploit the new technologies; the merging of
British Telecom and the United States telephone conglomerate MCI is one example of a new multibillion-scale actor. It is also an example of infrastructure and content merging, since MCI have
partnership with Rupert Murdochs large media company News Corporation (CoE 1998:162).
8
The most recent EU initiative in this field is the Green Paper on the convergence of the
telecommunications, media and information technology sector, and the implications for regulation
(COM 97, 623). The Green Paper states that competition rules are not enough to safeguard media
5
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range of projects directed at making Internet a safer place, not least for children. The
projects are divided into three main areas: establishment of Hotlines, development of
rating and filtering systems and awareness building amounting to a total of 25 Million
ECU (Decision no. /98/EC).
A last aspect of Internet regulation to be mentioned here is the issue of Internet Service
Providers (ISPs) liability. Some countries, such as Tunisia, have tried to regulate ISPs
through Internet specific legislation, which holds ISPs liable for content they host or
carry (HRW 1999:35). Other countries such as Singapore regulate ISPs through
licensing terms demanding that they block access to foreign websites and newsgroups
deemed harmful to national morals (GILC 1998:II). In Europe the issue has been
debated since 199514. The Commission in the Communication on Illegal and Harmful
Content on the Internet stressed that Internet access and host service providers play a
key role in giving users access to Internet content. It should not however be forgotten
that the prime responsibility for content lies with authors and content providers. ISPs
should not be targeted by the individual governments and law enforcement bodies where
the ISPs have no control of the Internet content (COM 1996, 487:4b). Also, the most
recent European Directive on electronic commerce seeks to establish legal certainty
through an exemption from liability for intermediaries who act only as a "mere conduit"
for access to information (Directive 2000/31/EC).
New self-regulatory schemes
As illustrated above, the EU increasingly appeals to private parties ability to selfregulate, not least in the field of potentially harmful content. In 1999 some of the worlds
most powerful business players15 established the Global Business Dialogue on electronic
commerce (GBDe) with the aim to establish standards for electronic commerce thereby
promoting self-regulatory systems instead of legislation. In the field of content, the
working group is lead by the Walt Disney Company, with the aim to: continue the
development of and promote adherence to online codes of conduct and other selfregulatory mechanisms, in order to discourage the distribution of harmful and illegal
In 1998 Germany made headline with the CompuServe trial, where the managing director was held
responsible for making available prohibited content (child pornography in newsgroups) to users and
passed a suspended sentence for two years (Mayer 1998:151). In 1996 the French government proposed
legislation by which ISPs should monitor and censor content on their servers. The French Constitutional
Court struck down the proposal for being imprecise (Liberty 1999:184).
15
The forum is made up of executives from e.g. Hewlett Packard, Microsoft, AOL, Bertelsmann, France
Telecom, Walt Disney Co., Deutche Bank, DaimlerChrystler, Toshiba Corp, NEC Corp.
14
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content and to protect the interests of all users of electronic commerce, particularly
minors (GBDe Paris Recommendations:3). GBDe is one example of private parties
taking on the task of self-regulation.
Another example is PICS (Platform for Internet Content Selection), a technical standard
being developed by the World Wide Web consortium in order to supports parents ability
to filter material, which their children access on the web. PICS will provide for third
parties, as well as individual content providers, to rate content on the web. The
participants in the PICS working group include most of the major service providers, IT
industry, content providers and consumer organisations16. I will return to the discussion
of PICS and filter software in chapter six.
A third example is the ongoing debate on whether Internet Service Providers should selfregulate potentially harmful content on their servers, for instance by following common
codes of conduct17. In June 2000 the Danish Internet Service Provider Get2Net
announced that they would remove websites with filthy content from their servers
(Berlingske Tidende, 8 June 2000) The announcement started a public debate on the
issue of ISP self-regulation in Denmark, and other major Danish service providers such
as Cybercity and Scandinavia Online opposed the idea of ISPs in the role as moral
regulators (Computerworld Online, 9 June 2000c). The debate was followed by a
conference in January 2001, where Get2Net announced that they would opt for
voluntarily filter solutions based on user choice instead of removing content18.
The issue of Internet content self-regulation has been debated under the headline of
INFOEthics at annual UNESCO conferences for the last four years. It was also the
theme of an OECD forum in 1998. Up till now no common agreement has been reached
on the issue.
The increasing focus on Internet regulation, whether it be by applying existing laws,
developing Internet-specific laws, applying content-based license terms to ISPs, or
governments encouragement of self-regulation by private parties, are all examples of
For further information see http://www.w3.org/PICS/.
It should be noted, that the issue of ISP self-regulation differs essentially from the traditional use of
the term. Normally self-regulation is when a profession, for example journalists, doctors or a company
decide how to regulate their own behavior by setting ethical standards for the profession. However, with
ISPs the issue is not regulation of their own behavior but instead regulation of the behavior of their
customers, specifically the moral character of their communication.
18
For further information on the case see http://www.get2net.dk or http:// www.digitalrights.dk .
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system gaining control over still more areas of the initially free public sphere of
cyberspace. The tendency of increasing commercialisation of Internet combined with the
concentration of access and content providers indicate a commercial cyber sphere, in
which the initial lifeworld potential for civil society is under strong pressure. If the
current trend continues, governance of and access to cyberspace will, within a few
years, be controlled by a concentrated group of media/IT/telecom market leaders, leaving
little space for free information access and content diversity. Of course one could argue
that for cyber techies there will always be a way to steer clear of system regulation.
However, for the majority of Internet users; the mainstreamers, the system regulated
and commercialised sphere of Internet is increasingly setting the agenda.
Hence, the initial potential for a stronger civil society through a revitalised and
interactive public sphere is currently being challenged by system colonisation. States in
non-democratic regimes seek to suppress the free flow of information by for instance ISP
control, whereas states in democratic regimes encourage self-regulation by private
parties in order to regulate potentially harmful content. Commercial players are
increasingly in control of access to information in cyberspace, potentially endangering
individuals right to freely impart and receive information, thus gaining the benefit of an
empowered lifeworld. The process of system colonisation is still under way, but it is
difficult to contest that Internet today contains a legal and commercial sphere
representing strong system influence.
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One-to-one communication is provided for by e-mail, which allows users to address and
transmit a message to one or more people. E-mail is in principle comparable to sending a
letter, but unlike postal mail it is generally not sealed and can be accessed or viewed on
intermediate computers between sender and recipient, unless the message is encrypted.
One-to-many communication is provided for by listserv, which is automatic mailing list
services, allowing for communication about particular subjects of interest to a group of
people. Listserv can be open, in the sense that users can add or remove their names from
the mailing list, or closed in the sense that membership is controlled by an
administrator.
Many-to-many communication is possible through distributed message databases; socalled newsgroups. Newsgroups are open discussions on particular topics, where users
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do not subscribe to a mailing list (as with listserv), but can access the database at any
time. Newsgroups can be both open and moderated.
One-to-one, one-to-many or many-to-many communication can also take place through
Internet relay chat, which allows two or more users to engage in a real time dialogue by
typing messages that appear immediately on the other participants computer screen.
Some chat conversations are moderated or include channel operators.
Telnet provides for real time remote computer utilization, as a method to access and
control remote computers in real time. Telnet can for instance be used to connect to and
access a remote librarys online catalogue.
Information retrieval can be done by different methods. Ftp (file transfer protocol) and
Gopher are both simple methods to list the names of computer files available on a remote
computer, and to transfer the files to a local computer. The most well-known and
widespread approach however is World Wide Web (WWW). WWW is a series of
documents stored on different computers all over Internet; a platform through which
people and organisations can communicate through shared information. The web uses a
hypertext formatting language (HTML) and programs that browse the web. Hyperlinks
allow information to be organized and accessed in flexible ways, and allow users to
locate and view related information although information is stored on numerous
computers all over the world. 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 (Ibid:10).
World Wide Web also provides for publishing information; making information
available on WWW. Publishing requires that the publisher have a computer with W3C
server software connected to Internet, and that the information is formatted according to
the rules of the web standard. Web publishing is simple enough that individual users and
small organisations can use WWW to publish home pages, equivalent to individualised
newsletters. Web publishers can either make their websites open to all Internet users or
make information accessible only to those with advance authorisation. Most publishers
choose to keep their sites open to all in order to give their information the widest
possible audience. In order to search for particular information among the public sites,
search engines are used.
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The open, decentralised nature of WWW differs essentially from previous information
systems, for instance database systems such as Lexis, PolInfo and Dialog, which were
closed both in the sense that they required varying access software (as opposed to the
common standard of the web browser) and in the lack of a possibility for inter-linkage of
information.
Following on from this brief outline of the functional characteristics of Internet, I will
now examine how Internet differs from other types of media.
3.2. Internet and other types of media
In 1996, the European Commission noted: A unique characteristic of the Internet is that
it functions simultaneously as a medium for publishing and for communication. Unlike in
the case of traditional media, the Internet supports a variety of communication modes:
one-to-one, one-to-many, and many-to-many. An Internet user may speak or listen
interchangeably. At any given time, a receiver can and does become content provider, of
his own accord, or through re-posting of content by a third party. The Internet
therefore is radically different from traditional broadcasting. It also differs radically from
a traditional telecommunication service (COM 96, 487:7).
Let me illustrate by comparing the functionality of Internet with those of telephone, mass
media and common-interest assemblies.
Telephone (one to one): Similar to a telephone, Internet allows for interactive
communication between users or small groups in real time, regardless of location.
However, unlike the telephone, Internet also allows single users to communicate
instantly with large groups of people, thereby greatly extending the reach of the message.
Furthermore, the cost of communication is significantly smaller on Internet when
compared to long distance telephone calls, thereby lowering the access barriers.
Mass Media (one to many): Similar to mass media (radio, television, print media),
Internet allows the broadcaster to reach a large audience. But, unlike mass media,
Internet enables any user to be a publisher or broadcaster since editorial control is shifted
from a small elite; editors and producers, to every user. Where mass media represent a
closed, edited, communication system, Internet holds an open, interactive communication
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sphere where everyone can be both speaker and listener19. Recalling Habermas
preconditions for the formation of public opinion, we can argue that Internets
interactive nature provides the public with a communicative sphere that is essentially
different from mass media, because the distance entailed in the closed, one-way
communication structure of mass media is replaced by an open, two-way communicative
structure, where every user can speak, listen and disagree. The programs sent by the
new media curtail the reactions of their recipients in a peculiar way. They draw the eyes
and ears of the public under their spell but at the same time, by taking away its distance,
place it under tutelage, which is to say they deprive it of the opportunity to say
something and to disagree (Habermas 1989:171). Whereas mass media is a
representation of lifeworld; an instrument for the public sphere, Internet to a stronger
degree is public sphere with new means for the public to participate.
Also the cost factor differs. Where mass media have large production and distribution
costs, the marginal cost of Internet communication is very low20. The marginal cost of
adding another website, sending another e-mail message, or posting to a newsgroup is
essentially zero (GILC 1998:IIA). It is a forum for expression in which the traditional
access and cost barriers are effectively lower; hence exclusion is in principle not
possible21. In relation to growth rate, the speed of Internet penetration is significantly
faster than previous media, making Internet the fastest growing tool of communication
ever. Whereas radio took 38 years to gain widespread acceptance22 and television took
13 years, WWW has taken 4 years (UNDP 1999:58).
Common-interest communities (many to many): Similar to physical world assemblies,
Internet has common-interest communities, which can be created and shared by a number
of individuals. However, on Internet these communities are independent of the users
physical location and are more accessible in the sense that individuals have stronger
means of seeking and finding common-interest groups from all over the world. Also, the
cost factor to participate in global online-communities is considerable lower than the
physical worlds travel expenses.
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 (District Court on CDA:16).
20
In the pre-modern stage of the print media also the press was characterized by low production cost and
many small publishers (Habermas 1989:168).
21
The low cost factor preconditions the presence of basic telecom infrastructure in the country, thus it
might be significantly higher in developing countries.
22
UNDP define widespread acceptance as years from inception to 50 million users (UNDP 1999:58).
19
23
Besides the functional characteristics inherent in existing media, Internet also provides
for fundamentally new means of Information retrieval. The easy and low cost access to
seek information globally is something that goes beyond the functionality of existing
media. Individuals ability to actively seek and respond to information is perhaps the
single most unique feature of Internet communication. Contrary to the communicative
actions of mass media, which is based on one-way, saleable information, Internet provide
the individual with means for consensus-oriented communicative actions in a public
cyber sphere, which is in principle accessible for all.
3.3. Internet as public sphere
By combining the different functional elements of Internet, we see a mixture both of
existing media and of private and public communication. The communicative sphere of
Internet is open and public in the sense that everyone in principle can access WWW or
newsgroups, but it also provides for more closed and private communication, via e-mail23
or chat rooms dedicated to a particular topic.
World Wide Web is a public sphere, in principle accessible for everyone like a public
park or building, but it is also a commercial sphere managed by private entities. Even
though WWW is often named the information superhighway it paradoxically contains
no public street but only public locations in the form of websites or cyber assemblies.
The websites can be commercial sites selling products or advertisement, they can
represent non-profit entities such as NGOs, or they can be individuals means for
communicating a message. Regarding information retrieval, this is a private action in a
public sphere comparable to seeking information in the physical world, but with
essentially different means due to the digital form of the information. Individuals who
wish to search for, or receive, certain material can find information on a global scale by
using search engines. This differs essentially from going to a local library, bookstore or
travel agency, where the information retrieval is bound to physical limits. A Danish
citizen who wishes to access the various exhibitions of the Museum of Modern Art in
New York has no comparable means of doing so except to enter the museums website
E-mail communication as the most clear-cut personal communication in cyberspace has not to the
same degree as WWW been subject to the discussion of content regulation, but rather to privacy related
issues such as users right to use strong cryptography (technical means to secure the privacy of
correspondence) and users right to privacy in relation to surveillance, for instance at the workplace or
related to cyber crime.
23
24
and look at the pictures in digital form. Similarly, a Danish homosexual who wishes to
find information on the gay community in San Francisco, can, by the use of keywords,
find information on Internet, thereby foregoing the alternatives of travel and phone calls,
both implying a much higher cost level. Let us take a closer look at the public and semipublic sphere of cyberspace and compare it to the physical world24.
The physical public sphere features among others the following characteristics:
Individuals interact physically with other people while in the public sphere.
Individuals can only to a certain extent avoid information when moving around
in the physical sphere, since information such as signs, posters, pictures and
sound (mass media) forces itself on us to a strong degree.
Whereas the World Wide Web features among others the following characteristics:
Individuals can access the public room in private thus impart or receive
information while being alone.
As illustrated above, being in the public cyber sphere is a more private act than being in
the physical sphere, since you can hide your identity and be in the public sphere while at
home. But it is also a more public act, since your expressions are searchable and
accessible for a world community, thus giving the expressions a much larger reach and
potential audience. These unique features of cyberspace are an important part of its
defining characteristics.
At this point, I will not elaborate on the commercial part of Internet but refer to chapter two, where
the increasing commercialization of cyberspace is described.
24
25
When imparting information the individual has less control over the effect of the
expressions, since there is no means of controlling the potential audience as opposed to
the physical world where you would, to a stronger degree, know who you were speaking
to. The opposite feature characterizes the information retrieval process. Individuals in
cyberspace have stronger control over which information they receive, since they to a
higher degree affirmatively seek information. We could therefore argue that the need to
protect individuals from receiving harmful content is less pressing in cyberspace than in
the physical world, where individuals are more likely to be confronted by unsolicited
signs, posters, noise, pictures and sound. If the cyberspace in which the information
superhighway operates is regarded as analogous to public space, then First Amendment
principles evident outside of the electronic media suggest that the burden may be on
users of the information superhighway to avoid unwanted messages by electronically
averting their eyes. In other words, accessing the information superhighway may be like
walking onto a city street, and users should be expected to cope with the wide array of
entertainment, annoyance, and offence that normally takes place there (Harward Law
Review quoted in Lessig 1999:38).
When comparing cyberspace with public space, Lessig points to the burden on the users
to electronically avert their eyes, thus cope with the variety of potentially offensive
information in the same way as they would do when walking in a street. Yet, in contrast
to the physical world, cyberspace is not zoned in districts, such as red light districts or
family neighbourhoods, and therefore individuals do not have the same means of
recognising safe and less safe areas. They do on the other hand have new means of
avoiding information due to the characteristics of affirmative information retrieval
outlined above. However, since the access to information is easier in cyberspace, also the
access to provoking or disturbing expressions is easier. In the physical world people only
encounter a minimum of the existing information, whereas the diversity of expressions is
more accessible in cyberspace. We could argue that cyberspace gives freedom of
expression a reality check as to how much diversity a society can actually cope with.
Recalling Habermas definition of public sphere25, let us finally examine the semi-public
sphere of cyberspace that contains chat, listsserv and newsgroups. These cyber
assemblies are public in the sense that they are accessible by all, but unlike physical
Arrangements are public when they (in contrast to closed or exclusive affairs) are open to all, in the
same sense as we speak of public places or public houses (Habermas 1989:1).
25
26
public assemblies private parties manage them. Cyber assemblies are typically organised
according to a topic, and can have moderators or electronic door men, who monitor
discussions and censor expressions, which fall outside the ambit of the discussion forum.
Thus the defined topic, potential audience or moral/ethical criteria of the service or
content provider define the permitted expressions. Unlike the physical world cyberspace
do not have publicly managed space, such as street or parks. Much of free speech law is
devoted to preserving spaces where dissent can occur spaces that can be noticed and
must be confronted by non dissenting citizens. People have a right to the sidewalks,
public streets, and other traditional forums. They may go there and talk about issues of
public import or otherwise say, whatever they want. Constitutional law in real space
protects the right of the passionate and the weird to get in the face of the rest (Lessig
1999:69). Since cyberspace do not have public space, comparable to streets in the
physical world, the role of cyber assemblies is crucial as public meeting places. However,
given that cyber assemblies are anchored in the commercial sphere, the codes of system
(consumer demand) prevail over the codes of lifeworld (rights of expression), as we shall
further explore in chapter five and six.
From the fact that the communicative sphere of Internet is characterised by being open,
participatory and with content pluralism as strong as the minds of human beings26, it
follows that Internet is essentially different from mass media. Using Habermas
terminology, we would say that Internet is anchored in lifeworld, and though it is
increasingly colonised by the system, the features of its communicative sphere holds
some of the characteristics of the pre-modern public sphere: A sphere where
communication can flourish from the bottom-up, a sphere which is in principle accessible
for all.
Mass media, though they represent lifeworld, are operating within systems power
structure and money imperative. The mass media concept is therefore not transferable to
cyberspace, but needs to be replaced by a concept that takes into account the complexity
of content and functionality on Internet, not least the twilight zone between public and
private. Since freedom of expression is a protection of public sphere communication, it is
essential that Internet is clearly defined in terms of private and public communication
It is no exaggeration to conclude that the content on the Internet is as diverse as human thoughts
(District Court on CDA:15).
26
27
Mass media, especially print media, have developed borderlines between the public and private sphere
for many years, whereas the borderlines in cyberspace are still being negotiated.
27
28
See UNDP Human Development Report 1999 (p. 63) for a figure over Internet users worldwide.
28
29
Providers30. This gives Internet Service Providers a state-like power over both private
and public sphere communication and challenges the freedoms, which human rights are
meant to protect. It also raises the question of how far the states positive obligation
goes towards protecting individuals from interference by third parties. Private parties
self-regulation potentially involve privatised censorship, where Internet Service Providers
restrict individuals freedom of expression in cyberspace by limiting which
communicative actions are allowed on their servers and/or by removing content, which
they find offensive, as illustrated by the Danish example in chapter two. The fact that
Internet is still a relatively new communicative sphere and currently not clearly defined in
terms of public, commercial and private borderlines indicates that the rights of expression
lack the level of state protection, which the physical world has developed over decades.
Freedom of expression: state protection in the physical world and in cyberspace
State
Individuals
State
Telecom system
-> Protection through telecom regulation
Individuals
State
Media system
-> Protection through media regulation
Individuals
State
Cyberspace
-> Protection to a higher degree
left to private parties self-regulation
Individuals
Summing up this chapter, I wish to stress two main issues. One is that Internet cannot
merely be perceived as a new media, comparable to mass media, but must rather be seen
as a new communicative sphere encompassing both system and lifeworld. The many
commercial elements of Internet co-exist with both personal/private means of
communication and a public sphere, which provide individuals with essentially new
means of expressing themselves, seeking information, meeting, debating, and potentially
opposing the system.
The other point relates to the level of state protection outlined above. If we accept
Internet as a new communicative sphere with strong lifeworld elements, we need to
As discussed in chapter two, Internet is not a legal vacuum and states do enforce existing law, and
have made several attempts to regulate the ISP industry. However, the current trend in relation to legal
but potentially harmful content is that the ISP industry is encouraged to self-regulate.
30
30
consider whether this public sphere calls for positive state obligations in order to protect
individuals right to express themselves and to seek information free from interference by
third parties. These two issues will be explored further in the following chapters, after
first analysing the right to freedom of expression.
4. Freedom of expression
This chapter will examine the right to freedom of expression provided for by article 10 of
the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms, and outline some of the political statements made in relation to Internet and
freedom of expression.
4.1. Legal point of departure
Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right31, which draws on values of
personal autonomy and democracy. Freedom of expression is closely connected to
freedom of thought and is a precondition for individuals self-expression and selffulfilment. The right to express oneself enables an open debate about political, social and
moral values, and encourages artistic and scholarly endeavour free of inhibitions (Jacobs
and White 1996:223). Freedom of expression is not absolute, since open debate and
personal autonomy can cause conflict between the values and rights respected by the
system. Therefore, rights of expression can be limited by the system.
The right to freedom of expression is provided for in the Universal Declaration on
Human Rights Article 19, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Article
19, the American Convention on Human Rights Article 13, The African Charter on
Human and Peoples Rights Article 9, and the European Convention for the Protection of
Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms Article 10. The point of departure of this
chapter will be Article 10 of the European Convention (ECHR) and the related case law.
1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to
hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by
public authority and regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not prevent States from
requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema enterprises.
In its very first session in 1946, the UN General Assembly stated, Freedom of information is a
fundamental human right and is the touchstone of all the freedoms to which the United Nations is
consecrated (A/RES/59(1): Para.1).
31
31
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may
be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by
law and are necessary in a democratic society, in the interests of national security,
territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the
protection of health or morals, for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for
preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the
authority and impartiality of the judiciary (Article 10, ECHR).
The European Court (the Court) has described freedom of expression as one of the
essential foundations of a democratic society, one of the basic conditions for its progress
and for the development of every man (Handyside 1976:23). Paragraph one of Article 10
lays down the freedoms protected, whereas paragraph two sets conditions for legitimate
restrictions on these freedoms. If the conditions laid down in the second paragraph are
not fulfilled, a limitation on freedom of expression will amount to a violation of the
European Convention.
Using Habermas concepts of system and lifeworld, we would say that Article 10,
paragraph one provides protection for the individuals and press right to exercise
communicative actions in the public sphere, whereas paragraph two provides for
legitimate system restrictions on this freedom32. The legitimate system restrictions are in
principle only connected to the state, and not private parties, since the Convention
regulates a relationship between the individual and the state. However, as we shall see
later on, the question of positive state obligations might extend to protecting individuals
from restrictions by third parties.
4.2. Freedoms protected
The freedoms protected in article 10, paragraph one are:
Freedom to hold opinions. The freedom implies that the state must not try to
indoctrinate its citizens nor make distinctions between those holding specific
opinions and others. The freedom gives citizens the right to criticise the
government and form opposition33.
A set of basic rights concerned the sphere of the public engaged in rational-critical debate (freedom
of opinion and speech, freedom of press, freedom of assembly and association, etc.) (Habermas
1989:83).
33
Certain positions have inherent limitations to the right to express opinions, for example civil servants
and prisoners.
32
32
Freedom to impart information and ideas, which give citizens the right to
distribute information and ideas through all possible lawful sources.
Freedom of the press. The freedom is not explicitly mentioned in paragraph one,
but has been underlined by the Court in several cases, where the Court has put
strong emphasis on the publics right to know35.
Freedom of radio and TV broadcasting. The freedom is applicable also for radio
and television broadcasting, since the specific possibility to introduce a licensing
procedure implies that the freedom as such must be applicable36.
Since strong content diversity is one of the main features of Internet communication, it is
interesting to see to which degree a potential diversity of expressions is protected under
Article 10. In an important judgment from 1976 the Court stressed the pluralism of
expressions protected under Article 10. Subject to paragraph 2 of Article 10, it is
applicable not only to information or ideas that are favourably received or regarded as
inoffensive or as a matter of indifference, but also to those that offend, shock or disturb
the state or any sector of the population. Such are the demands of that pluralism,
tolerance and broadmindedness without which there is no democratic society
(Handyside 1976:23)37. As illustrated by the judgment, the contents of the expressions
seem to be irrelevant to the applicability of Article 10. The fact that the information
concerned is of a commercial nature or that the freedom of expression is not exercised in
a discussion of matters of public interest is also indifferent (Van Hoof 1998:559).
UDHR Article 19 and ICCPR Article 19 refer also to the right to seek information.
The Court has often stressed the public interest or public debate factor, for instance in the Sunday
Times case 1979, the Lingens case 1986 and the Jersild case 1994.
36
For a long time the Commission saw no incompatibility between state monopolies of radio and TV
and the Convention. However, in 1993 the court gave judgment in the Austrian radio monopoly case
(Informationsverein Lentia and others 1993), where the Commission had come to the conclusion that a
violation of Article 10 existed. The issue is also mentioned in CCPR General Comment 10: "Effective
measures are necessary to prevent such control of the media as would interfere with the right of everyone
to Freedom of Expression" (UNHCHR 1983:1).
37
In assessing the right to freedom of expression provided for in the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights Article 19, also the Human Rights Committee has stressed that all forms of expressions
are entitled to the same degree of protection. Article 19, paragraph 2, must be interpreted as
encompassing every form of subjective ideas and opinions capable of transmission to others, which are
compatible with article 20 of the Covenant, of news and information, of commercial expression and
advertising, of works, of art, etc; it should not be confined to means of political, cultural or artistic
expression (CCPR/C/47/D/359/1989).
34
35
33
Up to this point no cases concerning Internet content regulation and Article 10 have
come before the European Court. However, cases have been raised before courts in the
US, which I will examine in the following chapter. First, here is an outline of some of the
key concepts concerning Article 10.
The fact that Article 10 protects the free expression of opinions implies that a rather
strong emphasis is laid on the protection of the specific means by which the opinion is
expressed38. Any restriction of the means will imply a restriction of the freedom to
receive and impart information and ideas. However, the means by which a particular
opinion is expressed are protected only insofar as they are means, which have an
independent significance (exclusive means factor) for the expression of the opinion (Van
Hoof 1998:559)39. Since there exists no comparable alternative for individuals to
communicate in cyberspace, one could argue that the independent significance of
Internet as a specific means for expressing opinions and receiving information is rather
strong.
Another important concept in Article 10, not least in the light of Internets borderless
nature, is the term regardless of frontiers. The term indicates that the state must admit
information from beyond the frontiers of the country, both to be imparted and received,
subject to the possible restrictions laid down in the second paragraph 40. The term is not
applied very much in case law, but is interesting in the light of upcoming cases related to
Internet.
The Court has applied a strict supervision on preventive restraints on expressions
reflected in those cases where the Court has held that the intended purpose of the ban on
publication, the prevention of the disclosure of information, could no longer justify the
prohibition because the information had already become public from another source. This
was the case in The Observer and Guardian case from 1991, where the Court held that
since the information (Spycatcher) was now in the public domain, and therefore no
Article 10 applies not only to the content of information but also to the means of transmission or
reception since any restriction imposed on the means necessarily interferes with the right to receive and
impart information (Autronic AG 1990:23).
39
Van Hoof states that since case law attributes to the first paragraph of Article 10 a broad protection,
one may expect that Internet, as a new and increasingly important means to impart and receive
information, will come within the ambit of Article 10, as far as it has an independent significance for
the expressions of opinions (Van Hoof 1998:563).
40
For judgments concerning the imparting and receiving of information from abroad see Groppera
Radio AG and others 1990 or Autronic AG 1990.
38
34
longer confidential, no further damage could be done to the public interest that had not
already been done (The Observer and Guardian 1991: Para.42). When discussing
content regulation on Internet it is important to bear in mind, that regulatory means such
as governments bans on certain information, as carried out in Singapore or China, or
mandatory filters on public computers, as carried out in Denmark or the US, are
restricting access to information, which is already in the public World Wide Web
domain41. Thus it is not a question of preventing the disclosure of the information, but
rather a question of restricting individuals access to information, which is already made
public.
Regarding individuals right to receive information, the term indicates that the collection
of information from any source should in principle be free, unless legitimate restrictions
under paragraph two can be raised (Van Hoof:562). In line with this interpretation the
Court has ruled that the right to receive information basically prohibits a government
from restricting a person from receiving information that others wish or may be willing
to impart to him(Leander 1987:29).
It is still not clear to what extent the freedom to receive information entails an obligation
on the part of the state to impart information (Van Hoof:565). According to Council of
Europes 1982 Declaration on the Freedom of Expression and Information the member
states shall pursue an open information policy in the public sector, including access to
information, in order to enhance the individuals understanding of, and his ability to
disseminate freely political, social, economic and cultural matters (CoE 1982:1-2).
Although the declaration is not a legal document is does give some direction as to the
legal/political trend within the member states.
Regarding the level of protection provided for by Article 10, paragraph one is primarily a
negative obligation on the state not to interfere in individuals right to express opinions.
It might however also entail positive obligations on the state to protect individuals from
third party interference, thus raising the question of Drittwirkung42. The Court has held
that, although the essential object of many provisions of the Convention is to protect the
The US and Danish cases will be explored in the following chapter.
Van Hoof speak of a kind of indirect Drittwirkung in cases where provisions of the Convention notably Articles 3, 10 and 11 - imply state measures in order to make their exercise possible, i.e. the
rights inferred for individuals imply a positive obligation on the part of the Contracting States to take
measures vis--vis third private parties (Van Hoof 1998:23).
41
42
35
Whereas the first and third point concern restrictions referring to the interest of the
system, the second point concerns restrictions referring to lifeworld, that is the freedoms
of other individuals.
Politicians can use libel-statutes to curtail criticism in an effective manner. It is therefore important
that politicians right to be protected against libel does not amount to outlawing criticism. In the Lingens
case, the Court held that the penalty imposed on Mr Lingens (a journalist convicted for public
defamation) amounted to a kind of censure, which could discourage him from making criticism of that
kind in the future (Lingens 1986).
43
36
A key concept entailed in paragraph two is that of duties and responsibilities. Duties
and responsibilities play a particularly important part in three circumstances. Firstly, in
cases regarding freedom of the press, secondly in cases where the person possesses a
special status, and thirdly in cases where the protection of morals is involved (Van Hoof
1998:576).
The Court has often stressed that it is incumbent on the press to impart information and
ideas on political issues as well as other areas of public interest. Not only does the press
have the task of imparting such information and ideas: the public also has a right to
receive them (Lingens 1986:26). Accordingly, restrictions on freedom of expression
where the press is involved are interpreted narrowly by the Court (Ibid:571). Also,
several cases have been raised concerning the issue of restrictions on persons with
special status, such as soldiers, teachers, civil servants, and servicemen. Case law shows
that the Court does not easily accept restrictions on freedom of expression due to special
duties and responsibilities on these groups (Van Hoff 1998:578). We could argue that
even though these persons act in a capacity as system representatives (for instance the
school system), their right to freedom of expression (that is lifeworld communication)
seems to prevail over their system relation when the Court balances the interest of
system respectively lifeworld. Finally, duties and responsibilities play an important part in
cases where the protection of morals is invoked to justify a restriction on freedom of
expression44. Case law seems to indicate that if the concept of morals is involved on good
grounds then this leads to a broad margin of appreciation, since state authorities are
found to be in a better position to judge national morals 45. Thus the system of state
authorities can - to a relatively strong degree - invoke the protection of morals as a
legitimate ground for restricting individuals freedom of expression.
When assessing a restriction on freedom of expression, the Court applies a three-part test
(1) The restriction must be prescribed by law46 and meet the corresponding criteria of
precision and accessibility, (2) it must have a legitimate aim as provided in Article 10
See Handyside 1976, Mller and others 1988, Otto-Preminger-Institut 1994.
It is not possible to find in the domestic law of the various Contracting States a uniform European
conception of morals. The view taken by their respective laws of the requirements of morals varies from
time to time and from place to place, especially in our era, which is characterised by a rapid and farreaching evolution of opinions on the subject. By reason of their direct and continuous contact with the
vital forces of their countries, State authorities are in principle in a better position than the international
judge to give an opinion on the exact content of these requirements as well as on the "necessity" of a
"restriction" or "penalty" intended to meet them (Handyside 1976: Para.48).
46
From this follows, that it is in principle the national parliament, who must decide whether or not a
restriction should be possible.
44
45
37
paragraph two, and (3) it must be necessary in a democratic society. The term
necessary in a democratic society implies that there must be a pressing social need for
the limitation and that it must be proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued (Guardian
and Observer 1991: Para.40). The necessity test is the ultimate and decisive criterion for
the Court 47. When assessing the proportionality of the restriction in question, the Court
examines whether the formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties imposed on the
exercise of freedom of expression are proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued, that is
the restriction should not be overbroad nor be permitted if a less restrictive alternative
would serve the same goal.
Article 10 paragraph two leaves to the contracting states a margin of appreciation48. The
margin is given both to the domestic legislator and to the bodies that interpret and apply
the laws in force. The Contracting States enjoy a certain margin of appreciation in
assessing the need for interference, but this margin goes hand in hand with European
supervision, whose extent will vary according to the case. Where there has been an
interference with the exercise of the rights and freedoms guaranteed in paragraph 1 of
article 10, the supervision must be strict, because of the importance of the rights in
question (Autronic AG 1990: Para.61). Since perceptions on whether information
should be restricted on morals grounds vary considerably from country to country;
national standards are challenged by the borderless nature of Internet. Digitalised
information flows freely from one country to another, and it is more difficult for at state
to protect national moral standards by banning online information than it is in the
physical world.
The borderless nature of Internet challenges the national protection of morals in several
ways. One problem is determining ownership of the information; where the information
originates49. Another problem is related to the fact that information being subject to
content ban in one country can easily move to a server in another country, from where it
Whilst the adjective necessary within the meaning of Article 10, paragraph 2, is not synonymous
with indispensable, neither has it the flexibility of such expressions as admissible, ordinary,
useful, reasonable or desirable. Nevertheless it is for the national authorities to make the initial
assessment of the reality of the pressing social need implied by the notion of necessity in this context
(Handyside 1976: Para.48 shortened).
48
Margin of appreciation is a certain measure of discretion left to the states (Van Hoff 1998:83).
49
"Generally the laws governing ownership and control of a host computer linked to the Internet are the
laws of the place of jurisdiction where the host is physically located typically a state or country.
However, the governing laws also can be those of the legal home of the host's owner for example a
corporation in Delaware can operate a computer in New York, and the laws of either state (or both) may
apply" (Tolhurst quoted in Lessig 1999:19).
47
38
is just as accessible for the user50. A third problem concerns the balance of protecting
legal standards in one country without infringing on the freedoms of citizens in another
country. In the French Yahoo! case51, where the Nazi information in question was
located on a server in the US, the French court ruled that Yahoo France was obliged to
find a way to stop French users from participating in auctions of Nazi memorabilia on its
US website, to redress violations of French laws banning advertisement, sale or
exhibition of any object that might insight racial hatred. Yahoo! implemented the court
order by removing the Nazi action site from their US server thereby protecting French
legal standards but at the same time infringing on the Americans constitutionally
protected freedom of speech, since the information was legal in the US. The problem
relates to the difficulty in restricting online information to certain users or geographical
districts, since Internet is not zoned according to identity or geography, which I shall
return to in the following chapter.
As illustrated above, Internet challenges the concept of a national margin of appreciation,
which has so far been the primary means for the Court to deal with the moral diversity
within the member states. In chapter five we shall explore how the American Courts have
dealt with the issue of varying moral community standards, and how the EU proposes to
deal with the problem.
Summing up on Article 10, it can be said that generally restrictions are interpreted
narrowly. However, case law seems to indicate that political ideas in the broadest sense
(public interest speech) leads to a more narrow margin of appreciation, whereas cases
concerning morals leads to a broader margin of appreciation 52. Thus the systems
discretion when restricting lifeworld expressions in the field of morals is broader than in
the field of political expressions. After this examination of the legal point of departure for
freedom of expression, I will illustrate some of the recent international policy tendencies
in the field of Internet and freedom of expression.
When a text is published on the Internet, it becomes almost unstoppable; thanks to the solidarity of
the Internet, and the activism of various freedom fighters, it can be copied, protected and presented in
many places, on mirror sites on every continent (Reporters sans frontiers 2001:1).
51
In November 2000 a French court ordered Yahoo! to devise a way to block Nazi paraphernalia from
being auctioned through its site in countries where the items are outlawed, such as France. The court
said Yahoo! would be charged a fine of $13,905 (100,000 francs) each day for supporting the Nazi items
on its auction site (International League against Racism and Anti-Semitism (LICRA) and The Union of
French Jewish Students (UEJF) v. Yahoo, Tribunal de Grande Instance de Paris, decision of 24.11.00).
52
It should be noted that the number of cases, which support this conclusion are still relatively few (Van
Hoof 1998:578).
50
39
The pursuit of an open information policy in the public sector, including access to
information, in order to enhance the individuals understanding of, and his ability
to disseminate freely political, social, economic and cultural matters.
Also UNESCO has addressed the issue of Internet and freedom of expression in a 1999
draft on Cyberspace Law, which is a set of principles to be promoted by UNESCO
(excerpts, my emphasis) (UNESCO 1991:4-5).
CoE (the MM-S-OD specialist group) is currently (June 2001) preparing a draft recommendation on
self-regulation on Internet, but the draft is not yet public. For further information see
http://www.humanrights.coe.int/media/events/2001/FORUM-INFO(EN).doc
53
40
Ethics Principle: States and users should promote efforts, at the local and
international levels, to develop ethical guidelines for participation in the new
cyberspace environment.
Free expression Principle: States should promote the right to free expression and
the right to receive information regardless of frontiers.
The United Nations Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to
freedom of opinion and expression, Mr Abid Hussain, has also stressed Internets effect
on freedom of expression. In his annual reports of 1998, 1999 and 2000 to the
Commission on Human Rights, the Special Rapporteur underlines the importance of
Internet in the free flow of information, ideas and opinions. For instance, Internets
potential for bringing out dissenting voices and shaping the political and cultural debate
(E/CN.4/2000/63). According to the Special Rapporteur, Internet is inherently
democratic, and online expressions should be guided by international standards and be
guaranteed the same protection as is given to other forms of expression (Ibid).
As illustrated above, international organisations have made rather strong statements
related to Internet and freedom of expression. CoE stress the absence of any arbitrary
controls or constrains on participants in the information process and argues for a free
flow of information, thus broadening the scope of the freedom of expression. The
Special Rapporteur wishes to give online expressions the same protection as is given to
other forms of expression, and UNESCO underlines the issue of general access to
Internet at community level. UNESCO also stress that states should preserve and expand
the public domain in cyberspace, which, according to the framework of Habermas, can
be seen as an encouragement to protect the lifeworld-oriented communicative sphere in
cyberspace. UNESCO further proposes the development of ethical guidelines for
41
5. Cases
I will now examine some recent cases, which deal with the dilemma of online content
regulation. Since there have not been any cases concerning Internet and freedom of
expression before the European Court, I will employ some of the most well-known US
judgments in the field of Internet communication. Chapter five will explore the main
arguments of the cases, whereas chapter six will use the cases to discuss the legal and
political space so far defined for regulating online expressions drawing on the framework
of system and lifeworld. The cases concern the two main types of content regulation.
The first type is state regulation on individuals right to express opinions and receive
information. The second type is private parties self-regulation. Here follows a brief
introduction to the cases concerning state regulation.
5.1. State regulatory cases
Restrictions on the right to express opinions
The most well known legislation on online content regulation is the US Communication
Decency Act (CDA), which passed as part of the Telecommunications Act in 1996. The
CDA sought to impose criminal penalties on anyone who used Internet to communicate
material that, under contemporary community standards, would be deemed patently
offensive to minors under 18 of age. The CDA provided two affirmative defences to
prosecution: 1) use of credit card or other age verification system and 2) any good faith
effort to restrict access by minors. The law was passed by congress and signed by the
president in January 1996, but was ruled unconstitutional first by the District Court for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in June 1996 54 then by the Supreme Court in June
199755.
US District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania: Reno, Attorney General of the United
States; et al. v. American Civil Liberties Union et al. Civil Action no. 96-963, decided 11.6.1996.
Referred to as (District Court on CDA).
55
"As a matter of constitutional tradition, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that
governmental regulation of the content of speech is more likely to interfere with the free exchange of
ideas than to encourage it. The interest in encouraging freedom of expression in a democratic society
outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship" (concluding paragraph). US Supreme
Court: Reno, Attorney General of the United States; et al. v. American Civil Liberties Union et al.
54
42
Following CDA, the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) was enacted in Congress in
October 1998, as an attempt to cure the constitutional defects of CDA. COPA sought to
impose criminal penalties against any commercial website that made material that is
deemed "harmful to minors" available on the World Wide Web to anyone under 17 years
of age. Thus COPA was narrower in scope aiming only at commercial communications
published on WWW. Federal judges struck down COPA in 1998, 1999 and 2000 56 and
the Supreme Court has now (May 2001) decided to hear the arguments on COPA.
Restrictions on the right to receive information
The latest initiative from the American Congress aiming at protecting children on
Internet is the Childrens Internet Protection Act (CHIPA) targeted at all schools and
public libraries that accept federal money. The law mandates that Internet-connected
computers be equipped with software that block or filter out material deemed obscene
or harmful to minors. Adults must also use filtered terminals, but they have the option
of asking library supervisors to override the filter for "bona fide research or other lawful
purpose." CHIPA was attached to the federal budget bill and passed in Congress
December 2000. In March 2001, the American Civil Liberties Union57 and the American
Library Association, along with several individual users, libraries and public agencies,
filed lawsuits in federal court calling the law unconstitutional58.
Another important case concerning public libraries and Internet is the Loudoun Co.
Library Case; a US civil action concerning a public library policy, which prohibited
library patrons access to certain content-based categories of Internet publications. Ten
individual plaintiffs claimed that the librarys Internet policy infringed on their right to
free speech under the First Amendment. Defendant, the Board of Trustees of the
Loudoun County Library, argued that a public library has an absolute right to limit what
it provides to the public and that any restrictions on Internet access do not implicate the
Case no. 96-511, decided 26.6.1997. Referred to as (Supreme Court on CDA).
56
We will affirm the District Court's grant of a preliminary injunction because we are confident that
the ACLU's attack on COPA's constitutionality is likely to succeed on the merits (p.4). US Court of
Appeals For The Third Circuit: Reno, Attorney General of the United States; et al. v. American Civil
Liberties Union et al. Case no. No. 99-1324, Opinion filed 22.6.2000. Referred to as (Appeals Court on
COPA).
57
This is the first time since the development of the local, free public library in the 19th century that
the federal government has sought to require censorship in every single town and hamlet in America
(Senior Attorney Chris Hansen in ACLU News Wire, 19.12.2000).
58
US District Court for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania, Multnomah Public Library v. U.S.
Complaint 2 April 2001. Referred to as (Lawsuit on CHIPA).
43
First Amendment. In its judgment, the District Court for the Eastern district of Virginia
stressed that although defendant is under no obligation to provide Internet access to its
patrons, it has chosen to do so and is therefore restricted by the First Amendment in the
limitations it is allowed to place on patron access59.
In December 2000 the Danish Parliament considered a proposal, B46, to mandate the use
of filtering technology on all public computes in order to protect children. Following the
first hearing in Parliament the proposed Act was replaced by a parliamentary
recommendation, which proposes that libraries, schools and so forth should establish
local Net-etiquettes60. Subsequently, Birkerd Public Library announced that they had
installed filter software on all their public computers in order to prevent library patrons
and minors from accessing websites containing pornographic information. According to
Birkerd library, pornographic material is not information within the librarys definition
of information, and therefore has no protection as such61.
In the following I will explore the cases using the structure of: Public space and
cyberspace, Internet as media, right to impart information, margin of appreciation,
necessity test, and the right to receive information.
The proposed legislation in CDA, COPA, and CHIPA can all be categorised as state
attempts to regulate the communicative sphere of Internet. Whereas CDA is directed at
all communications taking place on Internet, thus encompassing both system and
lifeworld, COPA is restricted to communications in the commercial sphere of Internet. If
we look at the kind of communication the Acts are aiming at, CDA and COPA both seek
to restrict individuals rights to express opinions, whereas CHIPA and B46 aim at
restricting individuals right to receive information. This is also the question at issue in
the two Library cases, Loudoun and Birkerd, which both concern library policies that
"Defendant has asserted a broad right to censor the expressive activity of the receipt and
communication of information through the Internet with a Policy that (1) is not necessary to further any
compelling government interest; (2) is not narrowly tailored; (3) restricts the access of adult patrons to
protected material just because the material is unfit for minors; (4) provides inadequate standards for
restricting access; and (5) provides inadequate procedural safeguards to ensure prompt judicial review.
Such a Policy offends the guarantee of free speech in the First Amendment and is, therefore,
unconstitutional" (VII:Conclusion). US District Court for the Eastern district of Virginia: Mainstream
Loudoun, et al. v. Board of trustees of the Loudoun Country Library, et al., Civil action no. 97-2049-A,
Opinion of 7.4.1998. Referred to as (District Court on Loudoun).
60
For speeches of the Parliament Hearing on B46 see
http://www.ft.dk/Samling/20001/MENU/00550064.htm (in Danish)
61
For the Librarys arguments on the filter debate see http://www.birkerod.bibnet.dk/filterdebat.htm (in
Danish)
59
44
restrict individuals right to receive information by the use of mandatory filters. Common
to the cases on self-regulation, which I shall return to later, is the fact that they are
content restrictions enforced by private parties. The various means of self-regulation
might be subject to government support, as exemplified by the EU supporting the
development of codes of conduct, but their enforcement is neither subject to democratic
control nor judicial review.
5.1.1. Public space and cyberspace
The cases, which most explicitly discuss Internets nature as public, private and
commercial sphere, are the District and Supreme Courts judgment on CDA. When
examining the proposed content restriction on online speech in CDA, the Court takes as
a precondition that Internet communication is entitled to First Amendment protection,
thus First Amendment protection applies with the same force on Internet as it does in the
print media or in the physical public sphere. The Court acknowledges that Internet is
both a means of public, private and commercial communication, that is encompasses
both system and lifeworld62.
In assessing the public sphere of Internet, the Courts stress the communicative potential
for individuals and NGOs and argue that Internet is an attractive means for non-profit
entities or public interest groups to reach their desired audience. As examples are cited
Human Rights Watch website on reported human rights abuses around the world and the
Critical Path Aids Project, which offers information on safer sex, the transmission of HIV
and the treatment of AIDS (District Court on CDA:15). Using the terminology of system
and lifeworld, we could say that the Courts emphasise Internets potential for
empowering lifeworld by underlining the new communicative potentials for civil society.
When comparing cyberspace with physical space, the Supreme Court stressed the wide
variety of communication methods, which Internet contains and its essentially unique
nature as a medium, which I will return to below.
The most explicit comparison to physical space, however, is when the Court assesses
CDA in the light of physical zoning regulation, and discusses to what extent CDA can be
When discussing Internets nature the Court differentiates between readers and publishers. From the
readers' viewpoint, Internet is compared to a vast library including millions of readily available and
indexed publications and a sprawling mall offering goods and services. From the publishers' point of
view, it constitutes a vast platform from which to address and hear from a world wide audience of
millions of readers, viewers, researchers, and buyers (Supreme Court on CDA:6).
62
45
said to constitute a sort of "cyber zoning" on the Internet. In the physical world, a zoning
law is valid if (1) it does not unduly restrict adult access to the material; and (2) minors
have no First Amendment right to read or view the banned material (Supreme Court on
CDA:20). In its physical zoning regulation the Court has taken as a precondition that an
adult zone, once created, can actually preserve adults access while denying minors
access to the regulated expressions. Before today, there was no reason to question this
assumption, for the Court has previously only considered laws that operated in the
physical world, a world that with two characteristics that make it possible to create
"adult zones": geography and identity (Ibid:21). For instance, a minor in the physical
world can attend an adult dance show only if he enters an establishment that provides
such entertainment. And should the minor attempt to enter, he will not be able to conceal
completely his identity (or his age). Thus, the twin characteristics of geography and
identity enable the establishment to prevent children from entering, but to let adults
inside (Ibid).
46
The Court also stressed that physical zoning regulation, such as keeping adult movie
theatres out of residential neighbourhoods, aims not at the content of the films shown in
the theatres, but rather at the secondary effects, such as crime and deteriorating property
values, that these theatres foster. Since CDA applies broadly to the entire universe of
cyberspace and since the purpose of CDA is to protect children from the primary effects
of "indecent" and "patently offensive" speech, rather than any secondary effect of such
speech, CDA is found to be essentially different from real world zoning regulation. The
CDA is a content based blanket restriction on speech, and, as such, cannot be "properly
analysed as a form of time, place, and manner regulation (Ibid:12).
Summing up on the Courts assessment of cyberspace compared to physical space, it is
stressed that:
Internet especially empowers individuals and NGOs by providing them with easy
and inexpensive means of communication.
Internet lacks the physical worlds characteristics of geography and identity, thus
making it difficult to zone cyberspace according to place or identity. Accordingly,
it is difficult to protect minors access to indecent expressions, without unduly
restricting adults freedom of expression.
47
provide no basis for qualifying the level of First Amendment scrutiny that should be
applied to Internet (Supreme Court on CDA:12).
In arguing for the less invasive nature of Internet, the Courts stressed (1) the element of
affirmative steps. Contrary to mass media, the receipt of information on Internet requires
a series of affirmative steps more deliberate and directed than merely turning a dial
(Ibid:4). Whereas users might be unprepared for pictures and sound from television and
radio, which enter the living room once the devices are turned on, Internet requires the
user to take affirmative steps by typing in keywords in a search engine and choosing the
site to access, in order to encounter information. Similarly, accessing newsgroups,
bulletin boards, and chat rooms requires several steps. Merely turning on the computer
does not provide the individual with unwanted information63. The District Court stated,
that evidence adduced at the hearing showed significant differences between Internet
communication and communications received by radio or television. Although content on
Internet is just a few clicks of a mouse away from the user, a child requires some
sophistication and some ability to read to retrieve material and thereby to use the Internet
unattended
(District
Court
on
CDA:17).
The Courts also underlined the (2) element of pre-warning. The Courts agreed that in
most cases the user receives some kind of information on websites content before taking
the deliberate decision to access the content, thus users do seldom encounter content by
accident (Supreme Court on CDA:8). Due to the element of pre-warning, which was
found to be essentially different from the element of assault involved in broadcasting,
the Court agreed that communications over the Internet do not to the same degree
invade an individuals home or appear on ones computer screen unbidden (Ibid:12).
The Court also found that almost all sexually explicit images are preceded by warnings as
to the content, thus users are not likely to come across a sexually explicit sight by
accident64.
Demonstrations at the preliminary injunction hearings showed that it takes several step to enter
cyberspace. On the World Wide Web, a user must normally use a search engine or enter an appropriate
address. Similarly, accessing newsgroups, bulletin board, and chat rooms require several steps (District
Court on CDA:16-17, shortened).
64
The governments 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 (District Court on CDA:17).
63
48
In arguing for the lack of spectrum scarcity related to Internet communication, the
Supreme Court underlined that, whereas censorship of radio and television is based on
spectrum scarcity65, Internet can hardly be considered a scarce expressive commodity,
since it provides relatively unlimited, low cost capacity for communication of all kinds
(Supreme Court on CDA:8). In assessing broadcast regulation, the Court argued that
whereas radio and television has a long history of regulation, Internet has no comparable
history to broadcast regulation, and has not been subject to the type of government
supervision and regulation that has attended the broadcast industry (Ibid:12). Thus the
District and Supreme Courts agreed that Internet is essentially different from
broadcasting media, and represents a unique and wholly new medium of worldwide
human communication (District Court on CDA:16). The District Court also stressed the
fact that Internet bears stronger resemblance to telephone communication than to mass
media. Due to the unique characteristics of Internet, the Supreme Court agreed that
Internet as a medium, unlike broadcasting media, receives full First Amendment
protection (Supreme Court on CDA, Syllabus:B).
Summing up on the Courts assessment of Internet as a media, it is stressed that:
In the US indecency laws are unconstitutional when applied to print media, while broadcast spectrum
scarcity has been used as a rationale to apply indecency laws to broadcast media. Fur further information
see http://www.spectacle.org/freespch/faq.html.
65
49
In assessing the scope of the CDA, the Courts agreed that it violates the First
Amendment due to its vagueness, over broadness and many ambiguities concerning the
scope. The communication at issue, whether denominated indecent or patently
offensive is entitled to constitutional protection and the CDA as a government-imposed
content-based restriction on speech must only be upheld it is justified by a compelling
government interest and if it is narrowly tailored to effectuate that interest (District
Court on CDA:23). The Supreme Court stated that CDAs use of undefined terms such
as indecent and patently offensive was likely to provoke uncertainty among speakers
as to content and relation between the two terms (Supreme Court on CDA: Syllabus: D).
For instance, each of the two parts of the CDA uses a different linguistic form. The first
uses the word "indecent", while the second speaks of material that "in context, depicts or
describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community
standards, sexual or excretory activities or organs". The linguistic vagueness combined
with the severity of CDAs criminal penalties may well cause speakers to remain silent
rather than communicate even arguably unlawful words, ideas and images (Supreme
Court on CDA:8). The Court found that the uncertainty of the terms used undermines
the likelihood that the CDA has been narrowly tailored to the goal of protecting minors
from potentially harmful material. Thus the scope of the Act being overly broad was a
main defect found by the Court. Applying the terminology of the European Court, the
Act was not proportionate to the legitimate aim pursued, nor was the law precise
enough.
The Court confirmed that the government has a compelling interest in protecting
children, but argued that although the protection of children is an important goal, it
should not interfere with the legitimate rights of adults to speak or listen to matters not
fit for children. As an example, the Court mentions chat rooms. If, for instance, an adult
knows that one or more members of a 100 person chat group is a minor, and it therefore
would be a crime to send the group an indecent message, this would surely burden
communication among adults (Ibid:15).
Regarding the issue of potentially harmful material, the Court stressed that potentially
harmful material is not by nature different than other material, since sexually explicit
material is an integral part of the different kinds of Internet communications and a search
engine might retrieve material of a sexual nature through an imprecise search, just as it
might retrieve other irrelevant material. The accidental retrieval of sexually explicit
50
51
indirect burdens upon web publishers (Ibid:14). Both systems would require an
individual seeking to access material, otherwise permissible to adults, to reveal personal
information. Because of the likelihood that many adults would choose not to reveal this
personal information, websites complying with COPA might experience a loss of traffic,
thus be discriminated compared to other commercial sites simply because they contained
material, which might be harmful to minors. Pursuant to the strict scrutiny analysis of
COPA the Court held that COPA placed too large a burden on protected expressions. In
particular, the high economic cost related to implementing an age verification system
could cause web publishers to cease to publish the material. Furthermore, the difficulty in
shielding minors from potentially harmful content might lead web publishers to censor
more information than necessary. Therefore, both CDA and COPA would impose a
disproportionate burden on web publishers, and might have a negative effect on the free
availability of constitutionally protected material. The Court concluded that the
government lacks an interest in enforcing an unconstitutional law, and that losing First
Amendment freedoms, even if only for a moment, constitutes irreparable harm(Ibid:16).
In assessing less restrictive means, the Court examined filter solutions, which I shall
return to below. The conclusion was that the public interest factor weighs in favour of
having access to a free flow of constitutionally protected speech, and that the
government had not proved that less restrictive means would not be at least as effective
in achieving the legitimate purposes of CDA and COPA.
Summing up on the Courts assessment of individuals right to impart information on
Internet, a few points should be emphasised:
The protection of children is an important goal, but it should not interfere with
the legitimate rights of adults to speak or listen to matters not fit for children.
52
53
Cyber Patrol developed by Microsoft was the first application to be compatible with the PICS standard
and works on the basis of a CyberNot list containing sites in twelve categories ranging from
violence/profanity to material related to the sale of consumption of alcohol, beer or wine (Ibid:12).
68
54
A public library has an absolute right to limit what it provides to the public.
In the Loudoun case, the Court stated that by purchasing Internet access, the library had
made all Internet publications instantly available to its patrons. Unlike a book purchase,
no extra expenditure of library time or resources is required to make a particular Internet
publication available to a library patron. In contrast, a library must expend resources to
restrict access to a publication that is otherwise immediately available. (District Court on
Loudoun:5). The Court compared Internet to a collection of encyclopaedias from which
the library had removed portions deemed unfit for library patrons. As such the Librarys
Board action is more appropriately characterized as a removal decision (Ibid). In
assessing the librarys purchase argument, the Court concluded that the Library had
misconstrued the nature of Internet, since by purchasing one such publication
(Internet) the library had purchased them all.
Regarding the discretion assigned to the library in selecting material, the Court stated
that First Amendment applies to, and limits, the discretion of a public library to place
content-based restrictions on access to constitutionally protected materials within its
collection. A public library like other enterprises operated by the State, may not be run
in such a manner as to prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion,
or other matters of opinion (Ibid:6). The selection of content is also mentioned in the
Danish Library Law where it is stated that materials must not be excluded on the ground
of religion, politics or morals69, and that Danish public libraries are obliged to provide
2. The aim of public libraries is achieved through quality, diversity and actuality when selecting the
material, which is made available. In the selection process only these criteria, and not the materials
religious, moral or political character, must be decisive (Danish Library Law 2000:Article 2, my
69
55
translation).
The issue of filters being too broad in scope has also been addressed by the President of the American
Library Association: If the same standards used in online filters were applied to a librarys books, our
shelves would be practically empty (American Library Association President Nancy Kranich in Seattle
Post-Intelligencer, 27 March 2001).
71
The Danish Minister of Information Technology and Research, Ms Birthe Weiss, at the Parliament
Hearing on B46. 5.12.2000.
70
56
the Governments efforts to develop a network society for all72. The Danish government
has thus decided on the importance of citizens access to Internet, but has not made any
statements on the issue of mandatory filters, for example in Birkerd library. It is
currently unclear whether Birkerds filter initiative can be said to violate citizens right
to receive information in the same way as the Loudoun library case, since the case has
not been tried before a Danish court.
The Loudoun judgement is also interesting in light of the upcoming case on CHIPA.
According to CHIPA there is no universal service for schools or libraries that fail to
implement a filtering or blocking technology for computers with Internet access.
Accordingly libraries are obliged to install a filter technology in order to filter or block
child pornographic materials, obscene materials, and materials deemed harmful to
minors. In the lawsuit against CHIPA, the main arguments concern (Lawsuit on
CHIPA:3-4):
Meeting the Acts requirements will inevitably lead to the suppression of vast
amounts of protected Internet speech that would otherwise be available to public
library patrons.
Congress use of its spending power to conscript public libraries into its
censorship program, thus requiring libraries to do what Congress could not:
directly restrict access to information in a traditional sphere of free expression.
The public libraries are an important resource in the government's efforts to develop a network
society for all. A new Act on library activities will give the population better possibilities of having
access to information. In accordance with the Bill, the public libraries will, in addition to books,
etcetera, be under an obligation to provide access to the Internet and digital information resources and to
lend music media and CD-ROMs. Finally, in accordance with the Bill, it will be possible to search and
order materials at the libraries via the Internet (The Ministry of Research and Information Technology
2000: Para.11).
73
The Act therefore present public libraries with an impossible choice: either install mechanical,
imprecise, and incredibly broad speech restrictions on Internet resources, or forgo vital federal funds to
which the libraries are otherwise entitled (Lawsuit on CHIPA:4).
72
57
As stated above, the CHIPA case has yet to be decided, and time will show how the
Supreme Court assesses the arguments presented above, not least in the light of the CDA
and Loudoun cases.
Summing up on restrictions on individuals right to receive information enforced through
library policies, the Court has stressed that:
First Amendment applies to, and limits, the discretion of a public library to place
content-based restrictions on access to constitutionally protected materials within
its collection.
Concluding on the level of protection, which (American) Courts have assigned to online
expressions up till now, the Courts have decided on full First Amendment protection and
stressed the diversity of expressions protected in the communicative sphere of
cyberspace. Furthermore, the Court has stressed the limits in a public librarys
discretion in restricting individuals right to access online material. The level of
protection provided for online expressions will be further discussed in the following
chapter employing Habermas concepts of system and lifeworld.
After this examination of the legal space so far defined for exercising freedom of
expression in cyberspace, I will now turn to the issue of self-regulation; more precisely,
the issue of private parties restricting freedom of expression on Internet.
5.2. Self-regulatory cases
As outlined in chapter two, a current trend in online content regulation is the
development of self-regulatory schemes. Self-regulation refers to situations in which an
58
industry, of its own accord, devises its own means of regulation. The means of selfregulation take many forms, and I have chosen a few illustrative examples, which
concern: content restrictions through customer contracts, content restrictions through
access denial, content restrictions through code(s) of content and/or combined with
rating and filtering systems, and content restrictions enforced through chat and
newsgroups policies.
Especially in Europe, the support for self-regulation has long been a proposed path for
regulating content on Internet in order to strengthen the protection of minors and human
dignity within the member states, as outlined in the Action Plan on Promoting Safer Use
of the Internet (Decision No 276/1999/EC). As part of the Action Plan, the PICS rating
standard are supported as a means of neutral content labelling74. In assessing selfregulation, the Commission stresses that the various industries have a key role to play in
developing and implementing solutions to the problem of protecting minors and human
dignity. It is therefore vital that they be mobilised and organised effectively at European
level. According to the Commission, the main tasks, which the Industry should work on,
are: (COM 96, 483:20)
Identifying areas where there may be a need for common standards on the
labelling of material.
59
assessed in the light of the principle of freedom of expression, protection of privacy and
the free movement of services. The codes aim at voluntarily adoption and
implementation by the private parties concerned. One of the objectives is to ensure that
minors do not gain access, without the consent of their parents or teachers, to legal
content, which may impair their physical, mental or moral development (COM 97,
570:13). The EU policy can be seen as reflecting the difficulties related to different
Europeans standards on morals, where self-regulation is proposed as a path to extend
international control over expressions. The implementation of codes of conduct by
private parties, as proposed by the EU, is one example of states encouraging selfregulation in order to deal with the issue of legal but potentially harmful content on
Internet.
Another example of self-regulation is the Global Business Dialogue on Electronic
Commerce (GBDe), referred to in chapter two, which is a partnership among executives
of the leading e-commerce industry - established in January 1999. GBDe points to the
inconsistent international regulation and the inflexible regulatory constrains in
cyberspace, and argues that parliaments are challenging them to develop effective selfregulatory and market-driven mechanisms that are not limited to national borders, and to
address critical policy issues76. "We feel we have a role to play in the shaping of public
policy. We are capable of rising above narrow geographic issues and competitive issues
to realize the majesty of this new medium"77. GBDe is primarily working in the field of ecommerce, but the issue of content is also addressed under the organisations Principles
and Recommendations. The work on content, led by Walt Disney Company, stresses
that governments should recognize freedom of expression on the Internet to the same
extent as it is recognized in "conventional", offline forms of communication.
Furthermore, it stresses that it is the role of business to continue the development of and
promote adherence to online codes of conduct and other self-regulatory mechanisms, in
order to discourage the distribution of harmful and illegal content and to protect the
interests of all users of electronic commerce, particularly minors (GBDe Paris
Recommendations 1999:3). Judging from the information on their website, GBDe has
not yet taken further steps in regulating content on Internet. However, with the main
GBDe recommends appropriate business and government action on the following issues:
Authentication and Security, Consumer Confidence, Content/Commercial Communications, Information
Infrastructure (including interoperability and Internet governance), IPR, Jurisdiction, Liability,
Protection of Personal Data, and Tax/Tariffs (GBDe, Working Groups 2001).
77
Chairman of Time Warner, Gerald Levin in Wall Street Journal, 15 January 1999.
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partners from the IT and media industry collaborating, the means for developing selfregulatory schemes in the field of content regulation for example by implementation of
common codes of conduct is a possible scenario, not least given the objective of
protecting minors.
Another means of content regulation is through the conditions, which Internet Service
Providers set out in their customer contracts. One example is the Danish Internet Service
Provider, Cybercity, whose customer guidelines contains the following statement:
"Homepages must not contain any kind of pornography, racist expressions or
expressions, which might degrade minority groups or people with certain sexual
orientations. Rules for homepages also apply for communication in newsgroups and
for imparting of e-mails (Cybercity Guidelines:1, my translation).
As illustrated, individuals are - according to Cybercitys guidelines - not permitted to
impart legal pornographic material, discuss such issues in newsgroups, nor communicate
it using e-mail. I will return to the consequences of such privatised content restrictions in
the following chapter, but first a few more illustrative cases on self-regulation.
Another example of content regulation has recently occurred in Sweden, where the
website Flashback (www.flashback.se) has been subject to access restriction. Flashback
is a website, which allows dialogue on controversial subject such as nazism, paedophilia,
and Hells Angels, as long as the communications comply with Swedish legislation.
Flashback has been denied Internet access by all Swedish Internet Service Providers, and
is now hosted by a foreign Internet service provider (Politiken Internet, 12 May 2001).
Finally, there is the issue of content regulation in chat fora and newsgroups, where
expressions are restricted typically by topic or decency norms defined by the content
provider. In the Chat forums of the Danish content provider Jubii.dk, robots and
censorship is used for individuals to feel more welcome and to keep troublemakers out
(Politiken.dk, 12 January 2000). Robots are used to get people involved in chatting, each
robot equipped with its own personality. Users often do not know that they are
discussing with robots, which have the task of making especially new Chat users feel at
ease by engaging them in conversations. Jubii Chat is also automatically altering dirty
language, without informing the users. This is done in order to protect other users from
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6. Discussion
6.1. Level of protection
The protection of freedom of expression provided for by Article 10 mainly concerns
public sphere communication, hence it is crucial when discussing the level of protection,
We are not the police, but we have made rules, which apply to everyone and which secures, that
users can feel secure and think that it is nice to be on the Chat (Partner in Jubii Martin Thorborg in
Politiken.dk, 12 January 2000 (my translation)).
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We are a service that prides ourselves of a wide-ranging appeal to a wide range of individuals. But at
the same time we are also a family service (AOL Vice President Katherine Bourseenik in New York
Times, 31 January 1999.
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entitled to constitutional protection, thus providing for Internet speak the same level of
diversity protection as would apply to communication in the physical world. As
discussed in chapter three, the variety of expressions, as they exist in society, are more
accessible in cyberspace. Due to geographical limits, people only encounter a very
limited degree of the existing expressions in the physical world. On Internet however,
people can access a great variety of expressions and be disturbed accordingly. This
makes the public cyber sphere both more open and accessible but also more potentially
provoking. On Internet, freedom of expression is for real.
Following the Courts assessment in the CDA judgments and the statements of the
Special Rapporteur, Internet is acknowledged as partly public sphere with strong
lifeworld potentials. Internet has given new means for individuals to voice their opinion,
disagree, seek information - thus be in the public sphere. Therefore expressions in the
public cyber sphere should be entitled to the same level of protection, which is provided
for expressions in the physical public sphere. The alternative would be a less protected
sphere, where the rights of expression would not apply with the same force as they do in
the physical world.
6.2. Internet and mass media
The Courts decision not to perceive Internet as a mass media is important, because it
points to the essential different nature of Internet communication. In relation to mass
media, Article 10 does not include a general right to have access to broadcasting time on
radio or television. This limitation is due to the specific characteristics of mass media; the
inherent resource limitations on infrastructure due to the scarcity in broadcasting
channels and broadcasting time. Therefore, Article 10 cannot provide the individual with
a general right to voice their opinion through mass media81. As stressed by the CDA
judgments, these preconditions do not exist in cyberspace, since Internet has no
limitations - neither in channels nor in broadcasting time but in principle provides for
unlimited airtime for every individual. Acknowledging that Internet is not a scarce
commodity further implies that the scarcity argument used for content regulation of mass
media cannot be used on Internet.
In relation to mass media, the Commission has stressed that certain circumstances may occur in which
the barring of a specific person or group may result in a violation of Article 10, either in combination
with Article 14 or by itself, since the individual access to broadcasting time must not be discriminatory
(X and association of Z 1972:86).
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64
Furthermore, Internet does not have the invasive nature of broadcasting. As outlined in
chapter three and stressed by the Courts, Internet is characterised by active information
retrieval, where the individual makes several affirmative steps in order to process
information. Also, the element of pre-warning was emphasised as fundamentally different
from the element of assault involved in broadcasting. Using Habermas terminology,
we could argue that these characteristics of Internet communication are precisely what
makes cyberspace resemble lifeworld, and what gives it its potential for strengthening the
public sphere. On Internet, virtually as many people express opinions as receive them and
there is a chance immediately and effectively to answer back any opinion expressed in
public. This is in contrast to mass media, where a system enrolled in system codes of
money and power is assigned to represent lifeworld.
Accordingly, it is misguiding to use the mass media concept on Internet. As stressed in
chapter three and emphasised by the Courts on CDA, Internet is more than a new media.
Internet is a commercial sphere but it is also a public and personal sphere, used by
individuals when they speak, discuss, meet, or search for information. Internet is a
wholly new means for human communication, which combines, adds to - and differs essentially from previous media. When assessing the level of protection that should be
provided for Internet communication it is therefore more adequate to compare Internet
to physical public space than to mass media, thus provide for online expressions the
highest level of protection.
6.3. Filters and the right to receive information
As illustrated in chapter four, the Court has ruled that the right to receive information
prohibits a government from restricting a person from receiving information that others
may wish or may be willing to impart to her (Leander 1987). The unlimited right to
receive information is also implied in the CoE Declaration, referred to in chapter four,
where member states have agreed to the objective of absence of censorship or any
arbitrary constraints on participants in the information process, on media content or on
the transmission and dissemination of information. It is also in accordance with the
statements made by the Special Rapporteur. In his 2000 annual report, the Special
Rapporteur states that measures to restrict online communication on the ground that
control, regulation and denial of access is necessary to preserve the moral fabric and
cultural identity of societies is paternalistic, and presume to protect people from
themselves (E/CN.4/2000/63:20). The Special Rapporteur further argues that such
65
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are not transparent and have never been subject to judicial review. As long as filters are
only implemented at end-user level, this is not necessarily a problem, since the user
(unless she is a child) has a free choice when using the filter and the inherent norms.
However, the problem arises if filters are expanded vertically and implemented at
common access points. Then the user has no longer a choice, but to subject him or
herself to the commercial norms of the filter thereby only gaining access to a limited part
of the cyber conversations.
As stressed in the Danish debate on B46, and also in both judgments on CDA and
COPA, filters are also overbroad in scope; they restrict more than intended by the
inherent moral norms. Recalling the European Courts principle of non-discrimination,
we can therefore argue that should authorities by legitimate means restrict individuals
right to receive information, then this restriction should be applied in a nondiscriminatory fashion. The non-discriminatory principle is also part of the UNESCO
Universal Service Principle outlined in chapter four, whereby Internet shall be accessible
by all individuals, on a non-discriminatory basis regardless of geographic location. I
would argue that applying filters to Internet access in public libraries is discriminatory in
two senses.
Firstly, it discriminates against those citizens who have no other means of Internet
access, thereby undermining the equalizing aspect of providing Internet in public libraries
as stressed in the Danish IT-policy. Citizens with no access to the public sphere of
Internet are currently restricted in their information access and have no other means but
the physical public space to seek information and express their opinions. They are
excluded from the radically stronger means of appearance on Internet, hence referred to
the physical public sphere and its inherent limitations. Providing Internet in public
libraries is a means for ensuring cyber-access for all. When the library restricts Internet
access by the use of mandatory filters, they discriminate the citizens who access Internet
through their public library by allowing them to access only a limited part of the cyber
conversations.
Secondly, applying filters on Internet in public libraries also provides for discriminatory
information access, since information is being excluded on normative grounds (defined
by private parties) that are neither visible nor transparent to the individual seeking
information in the public sphere of Internet. As stressed in the Danish debate on B46, in
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the CDA judgment and in the lawsuit on CHIPA, filter software with built-in norms
(model 1) is overbroad in scope thus restricting more content than intended by the
norms86. But even if filters functioned perfect, we could still argue, that is it
disproportionate to restrict individuals right to receive information by technical means,
that determine which legal information should be accessible for adults and which should
not. The right to receive information implies a free choice on the individual to choose,
which information to encounter in the public cyber sphere. Regarding minors the aim to
protect them from potentially harmful is legitimate. However, even with minors filters
might be disproportionate since they do not take into account the different age groups,
family norms, cultural diversity and so on. The lifeworld norms, which filters attempt to
standardise are anchored in the individual, the language and the culture, and will vary
accordingly.
As stressed by the Court on CDA, also the rating-based filtering (model two) is
problematic. Rating-based filtering function as an inclusion list, thus only material that
has been subject to prior rating will be receivable. Therefore, until all online content
has been rated, this type of filtering will be discriminatory, not least against the lifeworld
conversations (individuals or non-profit organizations), which are imposed a burden of
rating as a precondition for appearance in cyberspace.
Following the Courts assessment in CDA and the Loudoun case, we should protect
individuals right to express themselves without the demand of rating their expression
and to receive information in the public sphere of cyberspace without arbitrary
information exclusion. Filter software with built-in moral criteria defined by private
parties and used in public libraries, provides for discriminatory information access and
furthermore discriminates against citizens who have no other means than to access the
public sphere of Internet at their public library.
6.4. Online decency and moral standards
The problem of varying moral standards was raised in the CDA case, where the
government sought to define decency in terms of local community standards. The
Court stressed Internets global character, and the unduly infringement on online
The American organization Peacefire.org has made an assessment of five blocking programs: Cyber
Patrol, SurfWatch, Bess, AOL Parental Controls, and SafeServer to examine how many sites each
program blocked as "pornography", and of those sites, how many were actually pornographic.
Peacefires error rates ranged from 20% (AOL) to 80% (Cyber Patrol) (Peacefire 2000:1).
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speakers if they were to comply with the standard of the community most likely to be
offended by the expression. Due to the difficulty in zoning Internet speakers cannot be
demanded to speak according to the standards of the community with the lowest
common denominator, since they have no means of restricting their expression from
entering any community in the public cyber sphere. Contrary to physical public sphere,
the public cyber sphere is global - hence you potentially speak to a world audience.
Internet thereby accentuates the problem of varying moral standards, which the
European Court up till now has dealt with in terms of a national margin of appreciation.
The focus on developing ethical guidelines for participation in cyberspace, as proposed in
UNESCOs Ethics Principle (chapter four), or the EU suggestion of common codes of
conduct (chapter five) both point to the difficulty of varying moral standards in the public
sphere of cyberspace. However, as discussed in chapter three, Internet provides the
individual with stronger means of avoiding information, since information retrieval is to a
stronger degree based on affirmative steps. One could therefore argue that the very
nature of Internet bears part of the solution to the problem of varying moral standards on
legal content - namely that Internet provides individuals with new means of seeking, but
also avoiding, information.
Nevertheless, the problem still prevails when information is legal in one country and
illegal in another, as illustrated by the Yahoo! example. Precisely because Internet cannot
be zoned in geography, Yahoo! found no other means but to remove the Nazi material
from their US servers in order to comply with the French Court order, thereby removing
the information from the public cyber sphere altogether.
If the common moral or ethical standards proposed by the EU and UNESCO are
implemented by private parties self-regulation or the use of filters at common access
points, it would run contrary to CoEs policy objective regarding absence of any arbitrary
controls or constraints on participants in the information process, since both selfregulatory schemes and filters are potentially arbitrary in their exclusion of information.
Self-regulatory schemes managed by private entities would lack the legitimacy of the rule
of law and transparency, which is part of democracy. The use of filters at common access
points would restrict individuals right to freely choose, which information to receive.
Hence the encouragement of private parties to increasingly self-regulate in order to
provide a safer online environment is a problematic path seen from a democratic
70
perspective. This leads me to the second question of the dissertation, namely how to
protect freedom of expression in a communicative sphere managed by private parties.
6.5. Regulation of cyber assemblies
The issue of cyber assemblies exemplified by Jubii and AOL touches the very core of
cyberspace being a public, private and commercial sphere, but managed by private
parties. The question points to the dilemma of whether to perceive cyber assemblies as
public sphere - where communication is protected under the right to freedom of
expression -, or whether to perceive them as privatised meeting forums, thus subject to
privatised restrictions. Currently, they are services provided for in the commercial sphere
of cyberspace connected to commercial content providers. Since they are privately
managed, it implies a legitimate right to subject the services to restrictions; for instance
by automatically altering expressions such as dick or whore in order to secure a
clean environment. AOL and Jubii are commercial parties, and they have a legitimate
right to regulate according to the codes of their system. Or do they? It all depends on
whether we apply a system or lifeworld perspective.
Seen from a system perspective they are merely following the rules of the game
money, corporate profile and customer demand. However, looked upon from a lifeworld
perspective, freedom of expression is the protection of every minority to voice her
opinion, to oppose the system. This protection cannot be regulated according to system
codes of money and power; the minority protection inherent in freedom of expression is
simply not for sale. How would we feel if our physical public spaces were run by private
parties who restricted, which expressions they would allow, and decided that certain
words would be censored since they could be harmful to minors passing in the street. If
there was no longer a single public place, where individuals could exercise their freedom
of expression without interference from private parties.
Again, it all depends on the perception of Internet. In cyberspace the only public places
to meet and discuss are cyber assemblies since there is no public outdoor area. There
is no exit from the privately managed sphere to a public street or park. If we perceive
cyber assemblies as public sphere, where individuals can meet and voice their opinion,
then we could also call for a positive state obligation to protect the right to freedom of
expression in this sphere. Consequently we could argue, that private parties management
of this sphere should comply with the principles we would assign to lifeworld
71
public meeting places to a system sphere where commercial codes prevail over rights of
expression. This could possibly mean that the lifeworld potential of Internet - the
essentially new means for freedom of expression in the public sphere - will eventually
disappear if the present tendencies in the field of self-regulation continues. If we accept
that expressions in cyber assemblies (or on personal websites) can be restricted according
to system codes, rather than lifewold rights of expressions, we risk loosing the public
sphere, which Internet currently holds.
6.6. Regulation of access
As illustrated by the Swedish example, the expressions of Flashback were denied access
to cyberspace from every Swedish Internet Service Provider. Thus the only means of
appearance for the discussions on Flashback was through a foreign Internet Service
Provider. This is not necessarily a problem, as long as the individual can choose another
service provider. However, what if service providers on a global level decided that they
did not want to host websites with certain types of content? If they all agreed on codes
of conduct restricting morally offensive expressions. Then the minority protection
entailed in the right to freedom of expression would not prevail on Internet. Then certain
legal expressions would no longer have means of appearance on Internet.
The customer contract of Cybercity is another example of private parties setting
restrictions on expressions. Referring to the discussion above, it is legitimate from a
system perspective - but problematic when perceived from a lifeworld perspective. Again
we can argue, that if this type of customer contract becomes the norm, one might fear
that individuals or organisations with marginalized views - whether of a political, sexual,
or religious character - will be denied access to Internet. Currently, individuals have the
option to change service provider if they are being restricted. But the tendency outlined
in the previous chapter is hard to ignore. Private parties such as the collaboration of
GBDe increasingly engage themselves in self-regulation in order to meet the demand of
their customers for a safer online environment. And governments, as exemplified by the
EU, increasingly encourage this tendency of self-regulation.
GBDe has addressed content as a specific area and has designated Walt Disney as the
72
responsible private party. Will this eventually imply that the diversity of Internet, of
expressions as they exist in society, will be replaced by a Disney version of reality? Will
the lifeworld elements currently present cease to exist because the reality of the new
public sphere is too offensive or provoking? We need to recall that there is nothing in
cyberspace that does not exist in the physical world. The variety of expressions on
Internet derives from human beings. The only difference is that whereas freedom of
expression in the physical public sphere has limited reach and means of appearance, the
public cyber sphere is far-reaching and with stronger means of appearance, thus making
the diversity of opinions more visible and accessible to everyone. In this sense we could
argue that Internet gives freedom of expression practical reality. In the public sphere of
Internet, freedom of expression is not merely a principle but effectively a new way for
individuals to voice their opinion and seek information. This is what gives the
communicative sphere of Internet its potential. But it is also the feature behind the call
for content regulation, not least by private parties concerned with consumer demand.
6.7. Positive state obligation
If we acknowledge that part of cyberspace can be perceived as public sphere, the
freedom to express opinions in this sphere should be entitled to protection by the state.
The protection is not only a matter of non-interference by the state, but might also entail
positive state obligations to protect individuals against interference from third parties as
discussed in chapter four.
Even though commercial parties in principle have a right to limit, which expressions are
allowed on their servers, the current development towards Internet Service Providers
setting standards for the legal content allowed to be communicated by their customers is
a de facto restriction on individuals right to express opinions in the public sphere of
cyberspace and could lead to a situation where certain discussions have no means of
appearance. To draw a parallel to the physical public space would be a situation where
public space was outsourced to private parties who restricted, which expressions were
allowed when individuals met on a street corner, or when they spoke in a public park.
The question is whether such a situation would not require positive measures of state
protection in order to provide an effective respect of individuals freedom of expression.
If private parties managed physical public space, we could surely demand that it was
supervised by the state in order to secure compliance with fundamental rights of the
individual.
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7. Conclusion
Norms codified in codes of conduct, customer contracts and/or access criteria, chat
policies, or filtering systems can be effective regulators. However, with the right to
freedom of expression, which is by its very nature a protection of minorities or dissenters
to voice their opinion, privately defined set of norms to regulate online communication is
a problematic path. Since freedom of expression is meant to protect especially those
communications that shock, offend or disturb; thus the legitimate right of lifeworld to
oppose system, one should be very cautious towards a development where private
parties define, which conversations shall be allowed, and which shall not. Self-regulation
is a dangerous path when applied to public sphere communication, since it
commercialises something that is not commerceable.
74
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