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- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!yoyo.aarnet.edu.au!myall.awadi.com.au!flash.pax.tpa.com.au!britt!dclunie
- From: dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au (David Clunie)
- Newsgroups: aus.aarnet
- Subject: Re: Aarnet should not be pornographic!
- Date: 24 Dec 1992 10:57:58 GMT
- Organization: Her Master's Voice
- Lines: 126
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1hc53mINNa4@flash.pax.tpa.com.au>
- References: <1992Dec22.085300.1@mrluv2.dsto.oz.au>
- Reply-To: dclunie@pax.tpa.com.au
- NNTP-Posting-Host: britt.pax.tpa.com.au
-
- Ah yet another person who wants to inflict his morality on others ...
-
- To give my opinion in response to your opinion ...
-
- In article 1@mrluv2.dsto.oz.au, ryanph@mrluv2.dsto.oz.au () writes:
- >
- >The Internet newsgroup, alt.binaries.pictures.erotica, is just a forum for
- >pornographic images to be exchanged worldwide.
- >
- > 1) The images are pornographic, not 'erotic': consult any of your
- >female colleagues for their opinions
-
- So what ? This distinction has proven to be a difficult one for courts to deal
- with in may countries depending on how draconian the laws are, but
- regardless, I believe that the net should be a forum for free speech, and if
- someone wants to exercise such a right they should be encouraged to do so. If
- this is against the law in this country then the laws need to be changed.
-
- I do not buy this "pornography promotes violence to women" argument that is
- frequently promulgated. There is no good evidence that this is the case that
- I am aware of. Men's attitudes to women in this country are so bad anyway that
- I doubt that pornography plays much of a role.
-
- > 2) The images are largely _illegally_ scanned-in images from
- >pornographic magazines (so that there is copyright infringement)
-
- If this is in fact the case, as it often is I gather, then it is up to those
- copyright holders to seek redemption, and demonstrate that a breach has
- occurred and who is responsible for it ... no easy task I am sure, and of
- very dubious financial benefit. In some countries, such as in Australia I
- understand, some copyright violations are a crime. Finding an offender to
- pinpoint in this situation may be a bit difficult though. A local legal
- opinion on this would be interesting to hear.
-
- > 3) The usage of these images is NOT one of the uses of AarNet that our
- >employers want to be paying for
-
- Speak for your own employer. You may well be right on this score. I dare say most
- couldn't care less unless it directly interferes with their profitability. On the
- other hand it may well breach the AARNet acceptable use policy, which probably
- exists just in case some enterprising and bored reporter chooses to focus
- their attention, rather than to seriously limit bandwidth consumption. This
- media problem has occasionally arisen in the US and Canada (the latter having
- seriously fascist laws about this sort of thing similar to Australia and
- New Zealand), but usually blows over pretty soon, and the status quo is restored.
-
- >Other reasons to remove the group (and any similar groups):
- >
- > * the scandal that would be attached to Aarnet and the Internet more
- >generally if this were to reach the conventional media
-
- What's life without a scandal or two ? Who appointed you moral guardian of the
- AARNet ? Besides, a bit of scandal might make more people aware of the existence
- and value of a network like AARNet and increase the available funding.
-
- > * there are better things to spend multi-megabytes of storage space on
-
- Then don't get the group. I don't tell you what to do with your disk space. Don't
- tell me what to do with mine.
-
- > * women are badly enough represented on computer networks without
- >further turning them away with the sexual harassment implicit in the
- >promulgation of such pornographic images.
-
- Give us a break. If women are badly represented on the net, and I dispute this
- assertion, then it is because they are badly represented in the workforce
- that uses the net. Besides, I know plenty of female news readers who like these
- groups. Women have a sex life too believe it or not, though few are aroused by
- the same visual "erotica" aka "pornography" that men are, those with more extreme
- tastes do seem to find a lot of the pictures worthwhile (one of the largest
- recent series was posted by a woman in germany). There are also plenty of male
- pictures for the gay males. I suppose you want these removed on the grounds they
- are demeaning to men or perhaps because you think homosexuals should be wiped
- off the face of the earth (a common attitude among censorship oriented types).
-
- >If you think that the newsgroup is 'harmless fun': see what your female
- >colleagues, friends, wives, secretaries think ===== particularly in light of
- >the fact that your employer is paying for it. Legally, it is a clear case of
- >sexual harassment.
-
- I think you may find that the definition of sexual harassment, morally and
- legally is not that clearcut. Furthermore there seems to be great debate
- recently that some contemporary legislation in this regard has gone a bit
- overboard. Again, as always, if they don't want to see it, they don't need to
- look at it. Anyone who goes to the trouble of entering a group called
- "alt.binaries.pictures.erotica" and then downloading, concatenating, uudecoding
- and displaying a picture clearly described as "two pregnant hamsters go down on
- each other" is asking for what they get ! These pictures certainly don't just
- pop up on the screen. Intersetingly most of the cases I have heard of in US
- and Canadian universities have arisen when juvenile undergraduates have
- deliberately caused such images to pop up on screens where women are working or
- studying ... even I agree that this is despicable behaviour, but hardly a
- direct consequence of the carraige of the groups by the net. It's not the
- gun, it is the person behind it, that is the problem.
-
- >nb: I am _not_ talking from a moral 'high ground'. I am _not_ a card-carrying
- >member of the Moral Majority. However, pornography generally is demeaning to
- >women, and I believe that it is particularly poor in the present context.
-
- Perhaps you think of yourself as a well meaning liberal, but whenever you seek
- to curb the behaviour of others you are inflicting your morals on another person.
- In a society such as ours, presumed intolerable evils such as murder and child
- abuse and rape are prohibited, as I believe they should be. To go further though
- and attempt to censor one's thoughts and reading material, be they on paper or
- electronically, is to me repulsive. The burgeoning network should be the forefront
- of liberalization as it is so difficult to exercise control over, and well-
- meaning but in my humble opinion overzealous would-be censor like yourself
- should be reviled.
-
- If I seem a bit aggressive or excessively personal in my remarks about this
- subject, it is because I feel very strongly about this subject. I am sure
- everyone is tired of this issue, but whenever someone threatens to censor or
- control what I read or watch I will leap up to defend my belief that I have the
- right to free speech whether it is legal in this country or not.
-
- If you want to defend women, then ask yourself why we buy oil and sell sheep to
- a country like Saudi Arabia where women are regularly abused, mutilated, and
- murdered by their fathers for simple offenses like driving a car, stoned to
- death for committing adultery. If you want to do some good for women, get a
- perspective on reality ! Needless to say there is not much free speech in Saudi.
-
- Merry Christmas.
-
- david
-
-
-