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Anonymity and SPAM

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Bill of Rights protects free speech, but there are still times when we do not ... The Court ruled that distribution of anonymous political leaflets (by an ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anonymity and SPAM


1
Anonymity and SPAM
  • The Good, the Bad and the Ugly!

2
Anonymous?
  • The quality or state of being anonymous, which is
    the condition of having a name or identity that
    is unknown or concealed. RFC 2828www.w3.org/200
    3/glossary/subglossary/ws-gloss.rdf/
  • Anonymity is the state of not being identifiable
    within a set, called the "anonymity set". When
    referring to human beings, we say that a person
    is anonymous when the identity of that person is
    not known. Being anonymous usually is a result of
    not disclosing one's identity. This may be simply
    because the person was not asked, as in an
    occasional encounter between strangers, or
    because the person is unable or unwilling to
    tell. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymity
  • "Anonymity" and "confidentiality" do not have the
    same meaning and are not interchangeable.www.virg
    inia.edu/vprgs/irbsbsterminology.html

3
Anonymous?
  • Why would someone want to be anonymous?
  • The Founding Fathers often chose anonymity in
    their protests by using pseudonyms on printed
    material or not listing authorship at all.
  • Signing the Declaration of Independence was a
    very big deal!
  • Is this new to the Internet?
  • Is Anonymity on the Internet more important than
    in real life?

4
Anonymous Internet Services?
  • Should people be able to Email and Surf the Web
    anonymously?
  • Anonymizer.com
  • Zero-Knowledge System
  • SafeWeb
  • Some of these providers use encryption services
    so that even the ISP cannot identify the user

5
Anonymous Internet Services?
  • SafeWeb
  • developed tools to assist individuals living
    under governments that limit Internet access such
    as China, and Iran.
  • CIA uses SafeWeb
  • So no one knows youre a spy!

6
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • Bill of Rights protects free speech, but there
    are still times when we do not want to be
    identified?
  • Examples?

7
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • In 1995 the Supreme Court invalidated an Ohio
    law under which a women was fined for
    distributing pamphlets against a proposed school
    tax without putting her name on them.
  • The Court ruled that distribution of anonymous
    political leaflets (by an individual) is an
    exercise of freedom of speech protected by the
    First Amendment.
  • The Court said anonymous pamphleteering is not
    a pernicious, fraudulent practice, but an
    honorable tradition of advocacy and of dissent.
    Anonymity is a shield from the tyranny of the
    majority.

8
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • As a result of this Ohio ruling, a federal court
    threw out a 1996 Georgia law against using a
    false identity on the Internet.
  • But, going to court to enforce ones rights can
    be expensive. Often the threat of legal action
    shuts down free speech.

9
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • The ability to post anonymously is good.
  • Is it?
  • Is it always good?
  • How do we filter truth from fiction?
  • How do we protect ourselves from libel or
    defamation of character?

10
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • Because of its potential to shield criminal
    activity or because they consider it bad
    netiquette some services choose to discourage or
    prohibit anonymity. Some require identification
    of all members and users. Some do not accept any
    e-mail from known anonymous re-mailer sites.
  • On the other hand, Web sites that emphasize
    debate on controversial issues or have discussion
    groups on socially sensitive topics often
    consider anonymity to be a reasonable way to
    protect privacy and encourage open, honest
    discussion.

11
Anonymity and Free Speech
  • Anonymity on the Internet issued for criminal and
    antisocial purposes including the planning of
    terrorist attacks.
  •  
  • Law enforcement officials argue for laws that
    require ISPs to maintain records of the true
    identity of each user and to maintain records of
    online activity for a specific period of time for
    potential use in criminal investigations.

12
Anonymity and Free SpeechProtecting the Many
from the Few
  • This Can limit Free Speech because the basic
    rules of our legal system change!
  • To do so we become
  • Innocent until proven guilty

13
SPAM
  • Electronic junk mail or junk newsgroup postings.
    Some people define spam even more generally as
    any unsolicited e-mail. Real spam is generally
    e-mail advertising for some product sent to a
    mailing list or newsgroup. http//www.webopedia.c
    om/TERM/s/spam.html
  • The Internet version of junk mail. Spamming is
    sending the same message to a large number of
    mailing lists or newsgroups usually to advertise
    something.www.4guys.com/glossary.cfm

14
SPAM
  • A new survey shows American business e-mail users
    indicate the difference between spam and
    desired e-mail is whether the user has previously
    transacted business with the sender.
  • http//dc.internet.com/news/article.php/2199981

15
SPAM
  • First Amendment Guarantees Free Speech
  • Is SPAM a variant of Free Speech?

16
SPAM and Free Speech
  • Can the use of filters by organizations and
    companies such as AOL, MSN and ISPs use of SPAM
    viewed as violations of the sender or the
    receivers free speech?
  • Is AOL like a membership organization with
    property where SPAM is an invasion of private
    property or like the Post Office?

17
SPAM and Free Speech
  • What about anti-SPAM listing services that
    provide lists of SPAMers.
  • Who get included?
  • Who decides?
  • Is a Harris Poll survey SPAM?

18
SPAM, Free Speech and the Legal System?!
  • Thirty-six states have tried by enacting their
    own versions of anti-spam laws
  • Only two state prosecutions were ever
    successfully brought against spammers, and only
    one was able to enforce its law against an
    out-of-state spammer.
  • http//www.jcil.org/journal/articles/380.html

19
SPAM, Free Speech and the Legal System?!
  • CAN-SPAM Act of 2003
  • The Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited
    Pornography and Marketing Act requires
    unsolicited commercial e-mail messages to be
    labeled (though not by a standard method) and to
    include opt-out instructions and the sender's
    physical address. It prohibits the use of
    deceptive subject lines and false headers in such
    messages. The FTC is authorized (but not
    required) to establish a "do-not-email" registry.
    State laws that require labels on unsolicited
    commercial e-mail or prohibit such messages
    entirely are pre-empted, although provisions
    merely addressing falsity and deception would
    remain in place. The CAN-SPAM Act took effect on
    January 1, 2004.http//www.spamlaws.com/federal/su
    mm108.shtmls877
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