Thursday, August 24, 2006
Slippery slope
The comment most often heard yesterday about our work in getting Canadian ISPs to block access to 2 US websites was the concern about a slippery slope.
Once you start blocking for this, then the next thing you know:
There is no slippery slope to consider in assessing this request. There is no need to debate what constitutes free speech in this case. A call to murder an individual is what we are talking about.
Quite simply, such content doesn't belong in Canada, or in any democracy for that matter.
Do we need an independent review and adjudication body that is able to make such determinations in the future? Let's talk.
But first, let's get this particular garbage off our internet.
Technorati Tags:
CRTC, Racist, Illegal Content, Net Neutrality, Mark Goldberg
Once you start blocking for this, then the next thing you know:
- ISPs will be accountable to find the illegal content;
- we'll be blocking competitors' sites;
- we'll be blocking opposing views;
- we'll have the [music/movie/tv] industry asking for sites to be shut down.
- [insert your concern here]
There is no slippery slope to consider in assessing this request. There is no need to debate what constitutes free speech in this case. A call to murder an individual is what we are talking about.
Quite simply, such content doesn't belong in Canada, or in any democracy for that matter.
Do we need an independent review and adjudication body that is able to make such determinations in the future? Let's talk.
But first, let's get this particular garbage off our internet.
Technorati Tags:
CRTC, Racist, Illegal Content, Net Neutrality, Mark Goldberg
Comments:
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"Anyone really think that we should be defending that kind of content?"
There is a difference between defending the content and defending the right to publish that content, no?
There is a difference between defending the content and defending the right to publish that content, no?
There is no right to publish this kind of content. Not in Canada. Not in the US. Even the 1st Amendment has bounds.
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