-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/18070.html?wnpg=2
<A HREF="http://www.wired.com/news/news/politics/story/18070.html">Political
News from Wired News</A>
-----
First-Hand Lesson in Censorship
by Declan McCullagh
9:00 a.m.  23.Feb.99.PST
Michaun Jensen's troubles began innocently enough in a computer lab at
Southern Utah University. She was researching a sociology paper on
censorship of offensive words and images.
Her first offense was viewing an erotic Web site. A student complained.
The lab monitor walked over to Jensen's computer and warned her.

"He said, 'You need to stop,'" said Jensen, a 19-year-old junior.

Then she followed links to a Hitler Was A Pagan site, which features a
photo of Adolf Hitler alongside Italian dictator Benito Mussolini with
arm extended in a Fascist salute.

That was enough to prompt Gary Stewart, the student overseeing the
computer lab, to kick her out for violating the university's rules on
computer use.

It also fueled a campus debate -- including a front-page article last
week in the school newspaper -- that began simmering last year over the
breadth, scope, and constitutionality of the policy, which bars students
from downloading or viewing "objectionable material."

Of course, Southern Utah University, nestled in conservative Cedar City,
Utah, is not alone in drawing up such rules. Many administrators have
grown nervous about Internet use, and in their recent book, The Shadow
University Alan Kors and Harvey Silverglate list dozens of fear-reaching
examples.

Southern Utah University draws an unusually clear line, however, barring
computer users from reading controversial newspapers or books online,
even if the same publication appears in the school library. The
university says neither faculty members nor students may use computers
to "acquire, store, or display" material that is "racially offensive" or
"objectionable."

Jensen's professor argues that the school's library offers plenty of
books about Hitler, as well as microfiche copies of Playboy going as far
back as 1953.
=====
First-Hand Lesson in Censorship Page 2
9:00 a.m.  23.Feb.99.PST

continued
"What they're really after is to keep students from looking at
pornography," said Dan Pence, an associate professor of sociology and
Jensen's instructor. "This seems to be a pretty clear example of taking
as much control as you can get away with."

Pence and other social science faculty members voiced their views
loudly, and repeatedly, last fall when they returned to campus to find
the administration had quietly adopted the new rule over the summer.

Administration officials downplayed the rule at a December meeting, and
said it wouldn't be used to stifle "legitimate" research. A committee
voted to reevaluate the regulation, but not to dispense with it.

According to the campus newspaper, university attorney Michael Carter
said at the time: "If someone has a legitimate educational purpose [for
viewing a Web site], that should be all right."

Carter did not return phone calls from Wired News, but a spokesman did.
"The student who asked Ms. Jensen to leave the lab did what he was
obligated to do under the current policy," said Neal Cox, director of
public relations. "The bottom-line desire we would have is that students
coming from diverse backgrounds feel comfortable in the presence of one
another."

Valuing comfort over freedom might be constitutional at a private
university -- where the First Amendment does not apply -- but not at a
public school where free-speech rights are protected, critics say.

"It's not constitutional. The First Amendment constrains what government
agencies can do," said Carl Kadie, a research programmer in Redmond,
Washington, and Electronic Frontier Foundation volunteer who founded the
group's Computers and Academic Freedom project.

"These policies infuriate me, but not just because they are unjust and
unconstitutional. They infuriate me because the policy makers implicitly
deny that justice and the Constitution even apply to computers," Kadie
said.

Federal district courts have ruled that similar speech codes -- that
apply only offline -- violate First Amendment guarantees of free speech.


Jensen has not been disciplined further, though school policy allows her
account to be suspended. The school's spokesman said he did not know of
any plans to do so.

"The school is saying we're just children and we don't know what we're
talking about," Jensen said.
Related Wired Links:
Censoring Censorware
12.Feb.99
Court Limits Online Speech
11.Feb.99
Library Filters Must Go
23.Nov.98
Virginia: Professors Don't Really Need Net
-----
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Amen.
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Kris

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