nanog mailing list archives

Re: UK ISPs v. US ISPs (was RE: Network Level Content Blocking)


From: John Levine <johnl () iecc com>
Date: 11 Jun 2007 06:22:37 -0000


IIRC, AOL got whacked by a court years ago because they censored some
chat rooms and not others.  The court held that since they censored
some content, they lost their status as a common carrier and were
liable for other content they didn't censor (either by intent or
mistake).  This was a particularly interesting case, since the
implication was that ISPs who _don't_ censor content _are_ common
carriers, which I don't think has otherwise been touched upon in the
US.

I would be most interested in a citation of this alleged case.

Perhaps you are thinking of the Stratton Oakmont case in which a New
York court found Prodigy liable for for postings in some of their
online fora.  Since there is a section in the 1996 CDA specifically to
reverse the outcome of this case, anyone who cites this case as
relevant to the current situation in the US is just plain wrong.

Also, ISPs in the United States are not common carriers.  Even the
ISPs that are owned by phone companies (which are common carriers for
their phone service) are not common carriers.

Regards,
John Levine, johnl () iecc com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
Information Superhighwayman wanna-be, http://www.johnlevine.com, ex-Mayor
"More Wiener schnitzel, please", said Tom, revealingly.


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