Taming the Web

Not long ago, civil libertarians looked to cyberspace as the utopia of ultimate freedom, beyond the reach of restrictive technologies and government regulators.

Today, that dream may be fading with the hyper-speed of Internet time.

A combination of new technologies, recent laws and international restrictions--sometimes related, more often not--are making possible a kind of online regulation once thought impossible. Although no one predicts a global, overnight crackdown, proponents of Internet restrictions are turning increasingly to effective software filters and tracking programs that can create barriers on the Web and help find those who breach them.

Perhaps emboldened by the recent French court ruling against Yahoo, foreign governments are aggressively pursuing online initiatives ranging from bans on hate material to campaigns against piracy. Even more important are proposed international treaties that raise the specter of a true government on the multinational Internet for the first time.

Building fences, one by one
At the crux of the controversy is a new generation of software programs that can block specified content and track people based on their physical locations.

Filters face free-speech test
As a result of a new federal law, thousands of US libraries are facing a conundrum: filter Internet content against their will, or risk losing federal funds.

Nations head for global clash
Foreign governments are moving to regulate the Internet with growing frequency, raising the potential for the kind of conflict with US law not seen in years.

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