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                Date: 2000-08-21
                 
                 
                Neues vom Filterwahn
                
                 
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      Nicht mehr ganz taufrisch, aber aufgrund der inhärenten  
Idiotie ein Must: eine Frau Babcock wurde von einem US- 
Provider nicht als Kunde akzeptiert, weil dessen  
Filtersoftware den "cock" nach "Bab" und damit den ganzen  
Namen blockierte.   
 
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relayed by  Bobson Wong <bwong@dfn.org> via gilc- 
plan@gilc.org 
 
WEB SITE BANS WOMAN WITH "UNACCEPTABLE" NAME 
 
NEWARK, N.J., August 18, 2000 - In a new twist on Internet  
censorship, Los Angeles attorney Sherril Babcock was  
blocked from joining the BlackPlanet.com online service - at  
least until she changes her name. 
 
When Babcock registered for access to BlackPlanet.com, a  
New York-based Web site dealing with African-American  
topics, she was told that her last name was "unacceptable,"  
presumably because it contained the word "cock," and she  
was not permitted to register. 
 
Suspecting the matter to be a simple matter of the site's  
overly ambitious censorware, she contacted  
BlackPlanet.com hoping to clear up the problem. She  
explained that "Babcock was my father's name as well, and I  
am very fond of him." 
 
Crystal Martin, BlackPlanet.com's Moderator for Member  
Services, responded. She apologized twice for the  
inconvenience, but said "unfortunately, the letters that form  
the word 'Cock' is [sic] unacceptable and will not be  
recognized by our system." 
 
Omar Wasow, BlackPlanet.com's executive director, intends  
to continue using the censorware. Though he described  
himself as a strong supporter of free speech, he defended his  
use of censorware as an attempt to not offend his site's  
membership, even though there would be casualties like  
Sherril Babcock. When asked if he would register Babcock  
manually, thereby bypassing the censorware, Wasow  
explained that if the censorware made bad decisions even  
only one percent of the time, it would have meant over 8,000  
manual entries given the current population of his online  
community. Babcock would just have to change her  
registration name to please the censorware. 
 
End of matter. Babcock is still not a member, and cyber- 
rights groups are having a good laugh over this latest episode  
of censorware's shortcomings. 
 
"Censorware is a non-solution for a non-problem. It doesn't  
block what it intends to, most of which doesn't hurt anyone,  
and it blocks far too much of what it shouldn't. It's a failure  
and it's scary that some want public libraries to adopt this  
junk," said Alan Brown, Internet development director for the  
Digital Freedom Network. 
 
The episode reminded Babcock of America Online's ban of  
the word "breast" in its chat rooms. The ban was only  
overturned when members of a breast cancer survivor's group  
complained that the ban left them with very little to talk about. 
 
According to the cyber-rights organization Peacefire, Internet  
censorware is so flawed that various versions have blocked  
Web sites including Time Magazine, the National  
Organization for Women, the Vatican, the Heritage  
Foundation, and even sites about dogs. 
 
"Would St. Francis of Assisi or Emily Dickinson also have  
been banned from BlackPlanet.com?", asked Bobson Wong,  
executive director of the Digital Freedom Network. 
 
The Digital Freedom Network (DFN) promotes human rights  
around the world by developing new methods of activism with  
Internet technology and by providing an online voice to those  
attacked simply for expressing themselves. DFN creates  
Internet applications to fight censorship, acquires technology  
tools for other activists, launches Internet-based campaigns  
on behalf of human rights, and serves as a technical resource  
for activists worldwide. 
 
DFN's Web site is http://dfn.org. 
 
 
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edited by  
published on: 2000-08-21 
comments to office@quintessenz.at
                   
                  
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