EDRi sends open letter to EU Commissioners to oppose Internet blocking

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Deutsch: EDRi sendet offenen Brief an die EU-Kommission und lehnt Internetblock...


EDRi's letter was sent to Commissioners Cecilia Malmström (Home Affairs), Viviane Reding (Justice and Fundamental Rights) and Neelie Kroes (Digital Agenda).

The letter congratulates the Commissioners for their nominations and approval in their new portfolios. It welcomes the positive statements made by all three Commissioners on the need to respect fundamental rights and to insist that legislation is "evidence based". EDRi warns in the letter that the nature of the arguments surrounding Internet blocking is such that this positive approach will be under pressure right from the start, due to the pending re-launch of the "Proposal for a Council Framework Decision on combating the sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of children and child pornography, repealing Framework Decision 2004/68/JHA". That proposal, when originally launched in 2009, contained the populist, but profoundly flawed suggestion that Internet access providers be required to "block" access to illegal websites.

The issue at stake - child exploitation and child abuse images published online - is too serious to have policy based on headlines rather than effectiveness. As a result, EDRi's letter stated that, in order to develop an effective strategy, a thorough and diligent analysis needs to be done. Such an analysis would consider:

- The nature of the problem being tackled;
The proposal seeks to address illegal websites. These sites are almost all based in the territories of the EU's major trading partners. As a result, it is clearly inappropriate to adopt a strategy of blocking, which leaves the material online, criminals uninvestigated and victims unidentified.

- The legality of the measure being proposed;
Research undertaken by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) and a team of experts funded by the Open Society Institute in the last twelve months have highlighted major legal questions about the legality of imposing blocking obligations on Internet access providers or coercing them into this activity.

- The scope, scale and nature of possible unintended consequences; Internet blocking creates several dangers simultaneously. On the one hand, by creating the illusion of activity in the area of online child abuse websites, political pressure will be reduced and real international action to deal with the problem properly will become even less likely than it currently is. Secondly, as is obvious from the recent plague of orders in the EU to block (sometimes perfectly legal) gambling websites, once blocking is introduced, it will be used for more and more purposes. Thirdly, as current blocking technologies work very badly, there will be more and more calls for increasingly intrusive technologies to be employed to provide more effective blocking. Finally, more efficient blocking technologies will also be more effective at permitting Internet access providers to discriminate between the amount of access offered to different online resources, creating a non-neutral Internet, to the detriment of European consumers and to European innovation.

- The availability of less intrusive measures.
The EU's strategy of hotlines and "notice and takedown" needs to be rolled out internationally. This approach has been proven to work for the type of material being addressed in this context. Furthermore, it is time, at last, to fully respect the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, particularly with regard to the obligation on states party to take "all appropriate national, bilateral and multilateral measures to prevent the exploitative use of children in pornographic performances and materials." Finally, the European Financial Coalition on Child Pornography must be rescued from its inertia and paralysis, restrict itself to undertaking the same activities as its US counterparts (and not, for example "developing a framework to circumvent data protection regulations, bank secrecy codes, criminal legislation and contract law across the EU" as reported in one newspaper). EDRi stressed, however, that "industry "self-regulation" should never be used in a way which circumvents legal protections, democratic decision-making or places private business priorities ahead of those established by democratically-elected governments".

The European Commission plans to re-launch the legislative proposal at the end of March.

Banks urged to expose child porn money trails (9.11.2008)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2008/nov/09/child-porn-money-trials

EDRi's letter to the European Commission
http://www.edri.org/files/edri_open_letter.pdf

Proposal for a Council Framework Decision on combating the sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of children and child pornography, repealing Framework Decision 2004/68/JHA
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=CELEX:52009PC013...

Impact assessment to a Proposal for a Council Framework Decision on combating the sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of children and child pornography, repealing Framework Decision 2004/68/JHA (25.03.2009)
http://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=SEC:2009:0355:FI...

Report of the OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media on Turkey and Internet Censorship
http://www.osce.org/documents/rfm/2010/01/42294_en.pdf

OSI-funded research: Internet blocking balancing cybercrime responses in democratic societies - Executive summary (10.2009)
http://www.aconite.com/sites/default/files/Internet_Blocking_and_Democ...

OSI-funded research: Internet blocking balancing cybercrime responses in democratic societies - Full report (10.2009)
http://www.aconite.com/sites/default/files/Internet_blocking_and_Democ...