- From: <bede@scotty.mitre.org>
- Date: Wed, 21 Jun 1995 22:04:47 -0400
- To: peterd@bunyip.com
- Cc: www-talk@www10.w3.org
From: Peter Deutsch <peterd@bunyip.com> Date: Wed, 21 Jun 1995 12:29:00 -0400 [ . . . ] I'm absolutely convinced that commercial quality information is coming, but I seriously doubt that it will _replace_ that which is on the net today. Rather, we can expect it to complement the many free offerings. After all, nobody is paying for most of what is out there right now yet many, many people continue to put up their offerings and they do so for a variety of non-monetary rewards. This is a fundamental part of the attraction of the net and I expect it will continue to be so. On the net, everyone's a publisher... I certainly don't claim commercialized information resources will completely replace free resources, Peter! On the other hand, I think many of the free resources we have now will charge for access, if only for the sake of cost recovery -- once the means to do this become available. So, for example, some government and university archives will undoubtedly charge "fair and reasonable" fees for delivering electronic documents. I'm still perfectly free to publish my autobiography, digitized Polaroid snaps from my vacation in Montreal, and an audio chat link to my cat, Teenie --- all at no charge. Your point about the mass of free information being a major attraction is very well taken, though. The exponential growth of uncensored free information exchanged over the global Internet in the last few years is also a spectacular justification of the roughly 20 years of R&D represented in our current IP-based packet-switched Internet. For the sake of our kids, at least, we need to do everything we can to ensure this trend can't be choked off by censors or rampant commercialization. But we're getting way off-topic... [ . . . ] The problem with this approach, as you point out, is that it provides nothing more than hints and thus wont work in all cases (after all, there are people that can't/wont rate their offerings for whatever reason). Because censors will still have to do other forms of client side filtering anyways, and because these hints don't provide any benefit to the rater, Ah, but there *is* a benefit to the rater, and I'll get back to this in just a sec... I don't see this proposal serving any real purpose except to show people who are hot under the collar right now that we're doing "something". I don't think this "something" necessarily has to be done just for enabling potential censorship, but it seems fairly clear that unless there is something visibly available in the spec (not necessarily perfect in itself or universally applicable) to support content ratings, there could be legislative action requiring us to slap content ratings on every shred of accessible information on the net. What a nightmare (also Lawyer Heaven). I suggested that *embedded* labeling could amount to nothing more than a hint, because in the present scheme of things the geographic location of a document is a required part of the context needed to determine its "rating" (if any). The only realistic way to handle a content "rating" in a document server is at the protocol or transaction level. Given some rules about various destinations, you can probably come up with an acceptably reliable document rating for each destination. What the client or end user does with a content rating in hand is not of any concern to the document server (it's not knowable, in any case). Obviously, if your market is elementary schools, you might want to pay much closer attention to content ratings than if you're aiming for college campuses. Note that in this scheme all the automated censorship is happening on the client side. Servers could do censorship, of course, but I think such a scheme depends wholly on the availability of reliable authentication, and discussing that would lead into stuff like FORTEZZA-like smart cards, certificates, crypto keys, and such. It might be nice to have the hint, but I don't see it as becoming widely used. After all, what is my incentive to me to provide these hints? I'm based in Canada, and unless the U.S. plans an invasion some time soon (something we of course can't rule out... ;-) I'm outside your jurisdiction right now... Different countries have different standards, of course. Having a spec for a content rating line in the spec for HTTP headers doesn't mean everyone uses it the same way, if at all. That's one reason I suggested placing rating information in the protocol, not the document itself. The sort of thing you *might* consider putting in a document might be some relevant "objective" features about the document known to be of importance to various ratings schemes. Who knows what bizarre features these could be... Now, about those benefits to the rater: one can quite easily imagine import restrictions on digital goods requiring labeling. For example, merely possessing child pornography is illegal in the U.S. so news that such material is entering the country via the Internet could quickly lead to import labeling restrictions, complete with fines or jail for the hapless recipient of unlabeled or "improperly" labeled imported bits. Local laws always have a form of jurisdiction in foreign countries in that if you, over "there", want to market your stuff "here", then your goods can be required to comply with completely arbitrary local restrictions on imports to "here". Note that the folks who actually enforce these restrictions on you are your potential customers over "here", not the cops. The obvious benefit to the rater is a market. - Bede McCall <bede@mitre.org> The MITRE Corporation Tel: (617) 271-2839 Bedford, Massachusetts FAX: (617) 271-2423
Received on Wednesday, 21 June 1995 22:04:51 UTC