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Court Must Vacate Kentucky Court's Baseless Domain Name Seizure |
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Friday, November 14, 2008, 10:22 am |
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The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT), and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) urged a Kentucky Court of Appeals Wednesday to vacate a lower court's order authorizing the seizure of more than 100 Internet domain names associated with websites operating around the globe. The seizure, and the lower court's exercise of jurisdiction over global domain names, threatens free speech across the Internet. In a move to combat what it viewed as illegal online gambling, the Commonwealth of Kentucky convinced a state court to "seize" 141 domain names because the names allegedly constituted "gambling devices" that are banned under Kentucky law -- even though the sites were owned and operated by individuals outside of the state, and in many cases even outside of the country. Unless the sites screened out Kentucky users, the court held, the seizure order was proper.
To read the Amicus brief click here: global_domain_name_amicus_brief 14/11/2008,08:59
In its amicus brief filed with the Court of Appeals on Wednesday in
support of a writ vacating the judge's order, EFF, CDT, and the ACLU
argue that the First Amendment, the Commerce Clause, and the Due
Process Clause of the Constitution prohibit state courts from
interfering with Internet domain names that were registered and
maintained outside the state. The brief argues that the seizure order
was invalid because it threatened to impede access to a broad range of
materials protected by the First Amendment.
"The court's theory -- that a state court can order the seizure of
Internet domain names regardless of where the site was registered -- is
not only wrong but dangerous," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Matt
Zimmerman. "If the mere ability to access a website gives every court
on the planet the authority to seize a domain name if a site's content
is in some way inconsistent with local law, the laws of the most
world's most repressive regimes will effectively control cyberspace."
As part of his ruling, the judge in Kentucky held that the domain names
could be seized if they refused to implement "geographic blocks" to
prevent Kentucky users from accessing the material. However, no such
reliable filters exist, and even poor ones cost thousands of dollars.
Any order requiring their use would unconstitutionally burden First
Amendment rights.
"If the Kentucky order is upheld, no speech that conflicts with any
law, anywhere in the world, would be safe from censorship," said John
Morris, general counsel for CDT. "Just as Kentucky is trying to take
down sites located around the world, any government seeking to stifle
free expression could try to interfere with lawful speech hosted in the
United States."
"A key free speech principle that has emerged from Internet litigation
is this: Governments may not prohibit all access to websites as a
remedy for unlawful behavior," said David Friedman, ACLU of Kentucky
General Counsel.
To read the Amicus brief click here: global_domain_name_amicus_brief 14/11/2008,08:59
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