====================================================================== NOTICE: The following is copyrighted material, reproduced here by the kind permission of the of the Lincoln Journal-Star newspaper. (c) 1995 Journal-Star Printing Co., Lincoln, Nebraska. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ====================================================================== SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1995 Page 6B EDITORIALS ~~~~~~~~~~ Opinions of the Journal-Star Internet: Decency net full of holes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PROVOCATIVE. Sexy. Tantalizing. Sizzling. A long line of adjectives spice up the appeal of bulletin board services advertised in the back pages of a computer magazine. Such bold sales pitches are enough to make the blood boil in parents of children forever curious about the accessing wonders of the computer keyboard, along with -- gulp -- certain other things. And now, riding resolutely through the dust of the Information Superhighway to put a stop to it all is U.S. Sen. Jim Exon. Exon and his faithful companion, Sen. Slade Gorton of Washington, have introduced the Communications Decency Act of 1995. They want to protect children from the pornographic evils of the Internet. It is a commendable enough impulse. But Exon, normally a careful and cautious doer of legislative deeds, has responded impulsively and chosen badly this time. The place to clamp down on the information parents regard as unsuitable for their children's eyes is on the receiving end -- in the home -- not on the transmittal end. Not surprisingly, shows of support for the Exon-Gorton rescue mission are hard to find. Opposition to its attack on free speech and other implications seem to be popping up all over, including in the offices of such other Senate Democrats as Patrick Leahy of Vermont. "None of us want children to be delving into pornography," Leahy said in the most recent issue of Newsweek, "but let's not deal with it in a way that cripples one of the best communication successes in decades." Enthusiastic users of the Internet are buzzing around like swarms of angry hornets -- and rightly so. Among the sources of incredulity: How do well-meaning senators mean to apply national law to an international network? Who will set the standards for decency and the indecency that could attract fines as high as $100,000 and prison terms as long as two years? Why punish the bearers of computer messages when it is the user who decides to access information clearly lableled for adults? Exon has made an honest effort to meet one of the biggest objections by adding the word "knowingly" to the section that covers "the transmission of any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image or other communication which is obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, or indecent." But he is advocating the impossible in monitoring tasks for reasons that include that computer messages are indecipherable while in transit. For parents who do want to subscribe to adults-only services, it is already possible to block access to their children through more convenient means than a padlock or a 24-hour watch on the computer screen. Subscribers to America Online and other Internet services can use access coding that lets them in and keeps mischievous offspring out. Software that will better filter the information stream in the home is being developed. The federal government cannot and should not restrict youngsters' access to adults-only magazines and videos by locking the doors of the stores where they are sold. There and on the computer highway, there are better and fairer ways to proceed. ====================================================================== Dave Furstenau df@unlinfo.unl.edu LINCOLN, NEBRASKA