Monday 10th April 2000 13:00 PRESS RELEASE AUTHOR: Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet in Britain For immediate release. ANTI-CENSORSHIP WEB SITE CENSORED Civil liberties web site the "Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet in Britain" (CACIB) was itself censored by its Internet Service Provider today. The site was deleted from the ISP's web servers in response to a complaint from Laurence Godfrey, serial litigant, about reporting of censorship in the UK. Laurence Godfrey had settled an unrelated defamation action against Demon Internet last week. Commentators consider that law suit to have shown that ISPs are legally liable for their customers'actions. "We greatly regret having to take this action but our solicitors advise that the costs of defending a potential libel action would be prohibitive, even though a defence is most likely to be successful in this case. We are only a small company and cannot afford the risk." said Lee Maguire, spokesman for the Internet Service Provider Instant Web Ltd. The censored civil liberties campaign was outraged. "This shows that ISPs desparately need legal immunity from the actions of their customers. We stand behind our comments, but the ISP is naturally neither willing nor able to get involved. The result is that we are presumed guilty, and censored, because our ISP does not want to pay the legal fees to defend us. This shows that ISPs desparately need legal immunity from the actions of their customers." said Malcolm Hutty, director of CACIB. "We weren't even criticising Mr Godfrey personnally: we were simply commenting on the adverse consequences of the outcome of Godfrey vs Demon Internet." CACIB had run a story about yet another site that had been closed down, where the ISP had cited "the current legal environment" as a reason for not being able to resist the complaint. CACIB had described this outcome as being "Godfrey's first victim" - a reference to the outcome of the libel suit Godfrey launched against Demon Internet; Laurence Godfrey coinsiders connecting the two cases to be defamatory. Perhaps the biggest irony is that Mr Hutty, as well as being a director of CACIB, is also a founder and employee of Instant Web. "On a personal level it breaks my heart that the company I started is forced into censorship." he said. "I don't blame my colleagues, they're terrified. But I got into the Internet because I believed in the promise of freedom for all; I never imagined it would be the most easily censored medium there is." The CACIB web site is now hosted in the USA. -------------------ENDS---------------------------------------- Notes to Editors: [1] For further information contact: Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet in Britain Malcolm Hutty 020 7225 5418 (work) 07970 736 976 (mobile) Instant-Web Silash Ruparell 0207 589 4500 [2] The CACIB web site is located at http://www.liberty.org.uk/cacib/ This is now based on computer servers phyically located in the USA. [3] Malcolm Hutty is a minority share-holder and director of Instant Web. The decision to delete the CACIB web site was taken by his co-director, with Mr Hutty excusing himself from participation on the grounds of conflict of interest. [4] The legal advice referred to by Lee Maguire was given by Ince & Co, a major city law firm. ___ If you do not wish to be on this mailing list, please reply with the word "unsubscribe" in the subject. This email was sent to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Anti-Censorship Web Site Censored
Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet in Britain Mon, 10 Apr 2000 08:23:41 -0700