Is There Anyone The Government Didn't Subpoena For Their COPA Defense?
from the information-is-free...-for-the-government dept
Back in January, the well publicized story came out that Google was fighting the government over a subpoena for information on search data. Of course, the real story here may be much deeper: the fact that the government seems to feel free to randomly subpoena companies for info in cases they have no part in -- and that many of those companies don't have much of a problem giving up the info. Before, it was known that the government had asked for info from Google, Yahoo, AOL and MSN -- but it appears to go much deeper than that. InformationWeek filed a Freedom of Information Act request to see who the government had subpoenaed for this particular case and turned up the fact that the government sent subpoenas to at least 34 companies, including a number of ISPs and security firms. The case in question is the government's defense of the COPA law (Child Online Protection Act), which had been thrown out as unconstitutional. The government is looking for data to back up their position that the law should be allowed, with the key to its argument being that internet filters are not effective in stopping pornography from reaching minors. To back up that statement, it appears they subpoenaed everyone they could think of who might have data to support that position. It also appears that many those firms did, in fact, turn over the data (the fact that only Google's case went to court suggests they were the only ones who seriously resisted). At least Cablevision and Verizon put up some form of protest, objecting to the scope of the requests -- but mostly it looks like they were just annoyed by the amount of work it would involve, not the privacy of their users. What's interesting here isn't that the government might get access to such information -- but that they might get access to such info not as part of a criminal investigation in which the companies were a part, or which the users were a part. It certainly does raise some questions about the privacy of anyone's surfing and searching habits.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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just give up...
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The gov'ts reach is a serious problem
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Stop collecting information...
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Re: just give up...
Is the gov't looking at explicit allow filters, explicit deny filters, key word filters, or blacklist filters? This data is not meaningful in any sort of way other than to make large sweeping cuts towards what one group considers acceptable(and this point christian)
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Make whatever laws you want - the laws already exist to take these people down, just freakin' enforce them...
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Not Me!
oh wait.
Just was looking through my mail. Looks like I got mine.
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Re:
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And just how...
Basicly they'd wind up with a bunch of IP addy's associated with account holders (NOT minors) accessing IP addys of porn...
Maybe gov't employees are just looking for the good porn sites based on traffic.
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hey mark...
but most methheads dont look for your info over the net...they dig through your trash
i know this article is about gov.'t...
but if you are worried about identity theft
shredding documents is your best option
as for the gov't... i never trusted them anyway
i think there are better ways to prove that information
(oubviously!) i dont support access to child porn
but i doubt the gov'ts real point to all this is their law
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Goin after the kiddie molesters
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COPA
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There is internet outside of America!
Yes! people produce and consume pornography in other countries! and that porn can be accessed from your home computer and the US government can do nothing about it except pass more laws that will have no effect!
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COPA not the right deal
I suggest we need to Approve the .XXX domain.
That way I could filter it out EASIER! at my router!
http://markbnj.blogspot.com/2006/03/politics-or-tech-xxx-domain.html
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