NYTimes BITS blog- AT&T and Other I.S.P.’s May Be Getting Ready to Filter

AT&T and Other I.S.P.’s May Be Getting Ready to Filter

Internet civil rights organizations oppose network-level filtering, arguing that it amounts to Big Brother monitoring of free speech, and that such filtering could block the use of material that may fall under fair-use legal provisions — uses like parody, which enrich our culture.
Rick Cotton, the general counsel of NBC Universal, who has led the company’s fights against companies like YouTube for the last three years, clearly doesn’t have much tolerance for that line of thinking.
“The volume of peer-to-peer traffic online, dominated by copyrighted materials, is overwhelming. That clearly should not be an acceptable, continuing status,” he said. “The question is how we collectively collaborate to address this.”

2 Responses to “NYTimes BITS blog- AT&T and Other I.S.P.’s May Be Getting Ready to Filter”

  1. fatsavage Says:

    You are one of only a half dozen posting in the “content filtering” category. keep it up and pass this category along to like minded Patriots.

  2. fatsavage Says:

    You might want to know that posting to your site takes effort – but keep up the good work

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