What Do Court-Ordered Internet Bans Really Mean? 453
tcd004 writes "Chris Lamprecht, a.k.a. Minor Threat, was the first person to be banned from the internet back in 1995. Since then, the practice has gained popularity worldwide. In the last year, courts in Australia, Britain, Canada, and the United States have all banned people from the Internet. A British court recently banned a convicted pedophile specifically from entering chatrooms for 10 years. But how effective are the bans? Minor Threat contends that the rules governing his internet ban use were toothless. How much harder is it to keep people off the internet in an age when everything--from parking meters to refrigerators--comes with an IP address." (Note: the Globe and Mail story requires registration.)
I'm banned (Score:5, Funny)
No different from other court orders (Score:5, Insightful)
Court orders that ban people from driving very seldom actually stop people from driving.
Court orders that ban people from going near someone they were harrassing/assualting/stalking seldom work.
Re:No different from other court orders (Score:5, Interesting)
The internet is a lot more than "that thar web thingy", and it is becoming more so with each passing year.
There is something "magic" about the internet that makes it different - it is not an end-infrastructure in itself - it's an enabling infrastructure that other infrastructures are built on top of, and more and more necessary infrastructures of society are moving onto it.
Eventually "you can't use the internet" will be like "You can't use electricity."
Re:No different from other court orders (Score:3, Insightful)
Utter nonsense.
No matter how pervasive the internet becomes, walking into a store, picking up an item, walking to the paydesk and paying for the item will not involve the customer using the internet.
Sure, the back-end may be entirly network based, but the CUSTOMER is not using that backend.
Oh, and if your shop does have all its backend processing handled via the internet
Re:No different from other court orders (Score:3, Insightful)
You make the assumption that physical stores themselves won't go the way of the dodo.
Now, I don't think that will happen "within a few years", but it seems like a very real trend. Perhaps within a few decades, the only brick-and-mortar stores around will have hideous prices and only exist to cater to wealthy retro-luddit
Re:I'm banned (Score:2)
Same as they do if you have your car licence taken from you.
A judge says "Dont go on the internet" and if you get caught again for a similar crime, you get serious pound-the-in-the-ass prison time.
There's no need for elaborate IP tracking or anything.
Dumbasses tend to re-offend anyhow.....
Re:I'm banned (Score:5, Informative)
fFor a time, this was enforced by him being under house arrest and a parole officer stopped by every now and then to check on things. at this point, his parole officer still comes by, by the inspections are much less stringent.
the answer to the topic here is: the courts dont really check so much. to wit, my example-person has perfectly good internet access on his mobile phone. his wife discreetly got an AOL account and logs in now and then. and of course he can swing by any public lab or internet cafe'.
now, officially, if the courts were asked fFor their stance on pedantry like the parking meter example, they would surely come out on the side of reason, stating the convicted may use anything without interactive connections to other users, or something delicately worded.
officially, of course, the "no internet" sentencing means just that: none. nadda. just as "no drug use" includes poppy seeds and sometimes caffeine.
Same as always (Score:3, Insightful)
With computers, there are difficulties getting people to respect parole and probation.
But we seem to have dealt with the problem so far, so why can't we deal with it nowadays?
Re:Same as always (Score:2)
We *can* predict what will come next? I don't think I can ...
Re:Same as always (Score:2)
Internet Ban (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Internet Ban (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Internet Ban (Score:2)
Right. He's been caught for hacking (or whatever), so now he'll add fuel to the fire by launching a devastating attack from a police station phone. Assuming he can actually reach the number (some places restrict calls to local numbers only).
In order to have maximum deniability and guarantee the launch, th
Re:Internet Ban (Score:4, Interesting)
But the same could easily be said for kidnappers, yet they still get their one phone-call.
Besides, Mitnick wasn't charged with murder, and facing a lifetime in jail, so it's pretty absurd to jump to the conclusion that he would even desire to launch a nuclear attack...
There's more risk someone would call in a hit on a judge/witness/prosecuter, yet criminals still get their one phone call.
Re:Internet Ban (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Internet Ban (Score:4, Interesting)
That is exactly the sort of thing he did, repeatedly.
Outlaws have always attracted support from the gullible who want to romanticize their behaviors. The fact is that Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid were both brutal murderers, same for Bonnie and Clyde. Mitnick didn't kill people but he did his best to make life very unpleasant for a lot of people.
The point is that a person arrested for making harassing telephone calls does not get to use their telephone call to call their victim. There is no right to a telephone call, only to have someone contacted which can be on your behalf if the police choose.
Re:Internet Ban (Score:5, Interesting)
Nor do they have any way of varifying that my one phone call wont do the exact same, nor yours, nor anyone elses. We have the presumption of innocence in this country, and it's one of those troublesome rights given to us by our misguided founders. Of course, I'd like to make a phone call in that same situation, I'm sure you would too, but it's ok to forget about due process if it's someone else, right? I dont care if they thought the guy was Hitler reincarnate, he was an american citizen and deserved the same fair treatment as you or I.
Re:Internet Ban (Score:4, Insightful)
Not trying to be an arse, but I would have thought that the point is to allow the prisoner to contact the outside world, *not* to give them a phone call. For instance, what of a mute? Do they have no right to contact, because they can't use a phone?
Re:Internet Ban (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Internet Ban (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The presumption of innocence (Score:5, Interesting)
That's bizzare. Here in Britain we have not historically had any constitutionally guaranteed rights, however a prisoner on remand retains all their rights other than those necessarily removed from them by the fact of their incarceration or specifically removed by legislation. I would have assumed that in the Land of the Free protections of the innocent would be even greater...
Re:Internet Ban (Score:3, Insightful)
You've never been picked up for anything, even for anything as simple as a speeding ticket, have you?
While the law says you are innocent until proven guilty, the reality is, you suffer the consequences until proven innocent.
For example, in my state, if you get a speeding ticket, you are expected to pay the fine unless you show up in court and defend yourself. Therefore, guilty until
Banned from the Internet? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Banned from the Internet? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Banned from the Internet? (Score:2)
Re:Banned from the Internet? (Score:5, Funny)
"It's not the internet... it's AOL!"
Re:Banned from the Internet? (Score:2)
Re:Banned from the Internet? (Score:2)
Terms (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Terms (Score:2, Informative)
Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:5, Interesting)
It shouldn't be there either, because it opens the door to pure arbitrariness.
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:2)
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:5, Informative)
Contempt of court (in the American System) has two forms of occurence and two forms of punishment. There are Direct (telling the judge to go fuck himself) and Indirect (disobeying a court ordered moratorium on proceedings) forms. The punishment can be either Criminal (jail time) or Civil (removal from the courtroom). Civil punishment ceases once compliance with the judge's orders are met, and Criminal punishment requires a trial, with proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
I really don't see too much room for "pure arbitrariness", because Judges who act improperly can be censured, and federal judges can be impeached. Local judges are typically elected officials, so they have the same responsibilities to the public as say the sheriff, who has far more power.
I am sorry that you seem to think that it opens the door to "pure arbitrariness", but doesn't giving any position of power do the same? I would hope that we have enough faith in the judicial system that this small bit of power isn't so abused as to be to a net deficit?
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:3, Insightful)
If judges don't have the ability to find people in contempt, then court orders become voluntary, which is kind of the opposite of the point.
And contempt charges are especially easy to appeal, and they're routinely overturned.
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:2)
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:2)
Sure you are. Just what continent do you think Canada is on?
Re:Specific to anglo-american law system (Score:2)
Zero Cool (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd say that the aforementioned pedophile's example was quite a bit different. He has a rule like "no chat rooms for 10 years." I'd say a chat room is fairly easy to define, and a much clearer cut case.
Also, the "toothless" threat of this is just like the "toothless" threat that is given to people on parole or probation for drug offenses. You can't be around anyone who is using drugs as part of the deal. Can they really enforce that too effectively? Its supposed to be a point. Something you're supposed to regulate yourself on, because, on the off chance they do find out, you're in a whole world of trouble.
right- it's exactly about terms (Score:3, Interesting)
that's exactly the question- what is using the internet, and, how reasonable is such a punishment as internet usage becomes even more common than it is now?
10, or even 5 years ago, you could get by without an email address... you could have a normal family life, and an almost normal job, and never think about email... but no
idiocy (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to make sure pedophiles stay away from children you ban them from contact with children, not from contact with an electronic information service. Banning someone from the internet amounts to thought control (which is, in actuality, the goal here - to take them away from others who support the notion maybe pedophilia isn't
Re:Zero Cool (Score:2)
Re:Zero Cool (Score:2)
Working globeandmail.com login (Score:5, Informative)
Login: CowboyNeal
Password: CowboyNeal
Re:Working globeandmail.com login (Score:2)
what I think it means is (Score:3, Informative)
Re:what I think it means is (Score:3, Funny)
Are you being a smart ass or are you really that stupid?
AOL (Score:5, Funny)
Re:AOL (Score:5, Funny)
The "unusual" provision, at least, is clear: providing that persons will not be subjected to arbitrary, humiliating, or carpricious punishment outside the normal course of the law
Re:AOL (Score:2)
Re:AOL (Score:3, Funny)
Did you know? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Did you know? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Did you know? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Did you know? (Score:4, Interesting)
"make a phone call without intent to communicate".
That describes every telemarketing call I've ever heard.
Re:Did you know? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Did you know? (Score:3, Interesting)
Tantamount (Score:5, Funny)
Me too... (Score:2)
Re:Tantamount (Score:2)
Re:Tantamount (Score:2, Insightful)
Punative jeopardy (Score:3, Interesting)
Job Requirements (Score:5, Insightful)
This would be difficult (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This would be difficult (Score:4, Insightful)
No it isn't. It is more like banning drunk drivers from driving.
Re:This would be difficult (Score:2)
Get caught drunk driving, and it should be "no driving". Period. No excuses, no 'to and from work'. Figure out a different way to get there. If you can't, well...you shouldn't have driven drunk.
Re:This would be difficult (Score:2)
Slippery slope? (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, I recall (possibly incorrectly) that the journalist who was just given house arrest for not revealing his sources is banned from the net.
How long before smoking pot bans you from the net? Or protesting?
With the Internet as the primary communications method for the world (or at least the backbone for the various protocols), how long before repressive governments use this to suppress those who's opinions they don't like?
Would it be so clear-cut if you, convicted of a non-technical crime, were banned from sending snail-mail or using the telephone for a year?
What about a device worn... (Score:2)
Re:What about a device worn... (Score:2)
Re:What about a device worn... (Score:2)
Re:What about a device worn... (Score:4, Interesting)
If you think the idea is insane, remember we're talking about a pedophile. Wander over to NANAE sometime, and check out the posts with suggestions for dealing with spammers, an obviously lesser crime than child molestation. In particular the thinly veiled threat to firebomb the same NOC that houses my servers. There were some spammers leasing rack space in the NOC, not connected in any way to myself, and the problems had been dealth with by the hosting provider.
Come on now, think about it. I didnt mean a "knee knocking" jolt, just a tingle. But there are other variations that could be done such as sending a signal to the police, similar to the tracking ankle bracelets worn now by some home confined felons.
Maybe I'll look into patents, you never know.
This is easy to fix (Score:4, Funny)
2) Give the websites a list of the people who have been banned.
3) If a banned person signs up for a website, shoot them!
I'll be solving world hunger next week.
Only means something to the tech-ignorant (Score:3, Insightful)
The only way to effectively ban someone from something as ubiquitous as the internet would be to either put him in a (faraday) prison, or track him every second of the day with police state measures.
Re:Only means something to the tech-ignorant (Score:2)
Re:Only means something to the tech-ignorant (Score:2)
There's more than one way to stop crime - just because shops don't all have armed security guards doesn't mean criminalizing robbery is futile.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't robbery illegal gfor everybody? Banning only applies to the banned.
Re:Only means something to the tech-ignorant (Score:3, Insightful)
Are you arguing against the idea of convict-specific punishment, or against the idea of criminal deterrence? If you're against convict-specific punishment, as it appears you are from your post, then I suppose you also oppose such things as house arrests, prison sentences, and parole. Each of those bans convicts from doing things most normal people are allowed.
I oppose convict specific bans that extend past the end of the prison sentence. Banning an ex-con from a common, otherwise legal activity is overly
Re:Only means something to the tech-ignorant (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps lazy judiciaries and prosecutors? (Score:5, Insightful)
If a person is convicted of pedophile behaviour with a child he/she met in the shopping mall, do they the judges ban them from shopping malls? If they met them at a McDonalds, do they get banned from fast food restaraunts? Not that I am aware of.
If someone "knocks over" a convenience store or a bank, do they get banned from entering convenience stores or banks? Again, not that I know of. With possibly one or two rare exceptions I don't know of any offline crime where the convicted is banned from all locations similar to the crime scene.
So why do we suddenly think that banning pedophiles and crackers from the Internet, or phones, or other communicative technology is useful or effective? In my opinion the idea that the Internet is somehow different and that you can be banned from using it by committing a crime on it (or using it to get information to commit a crime) is dangerous to freedom of speech and information. Indeed, may even serve to perpetuate crime.
In today's society it is becoming more and more commonplace to carry out one's business, education, and entertainment online. From online banking and bill pay to online shopping, getting one's degree or a job. Even the local job service and unemployment offices are online.
As the value of the Internet in our daily lives increases such a sentence -if enforcable and enforced- is a damming one in that it begins to perpetuate a class of have-nots with regard to such cost savings and opportunities. Increasingly with government going online the government itself would then be creating a class of citizen that is effectively banned from many government services.
Ultimately it will be impossible to monitor one's access to the Internet, chatrooms, etc. w/o constant supervision. This will naturally lead to a lack of respect for such actions/penalties causing a further drop in respect for law in general. As this increases additional crimes will be committed. Not unlike when as a child if you got "sentenced" to being house restriction but mom and dad were not around to enforce it you began to realize it was toothless and didn't care about it.
Only by treating "cracking" the same as we would such an act in the offline world (breaking and entering, theft, fraud, etc.) can we expect our laws and punishments to be anything near rational and respectable. Banning pedophiles from the place they met their victims doesn't change the pedophile's behaviour.
Just like (IMO) it is wrong to be able to patent something you can do online that you can't get a patent for doing in a "brick and mortar" store, it is wrong to view crime online as different than crime offline. Theft is theft, fraud is fraud, and pedophilia is pedophilia. The Internet doesn't change that.
Re:Perhaps lazy judiciaries and prosecutors? (Score:2, Insightful)
A court is able to ban people from certain places, using the pedophile example the courts might order that the person not go within x metres of a school for example (in Australia at least, I imagine the same applies elsewhere).
I agree with your point that with
Re:Perhaps lazy judiciaries and prosecutors? (Score:2)
Re:Perhaps lazy judiciaries and prosecutors? (Score:4, Informative)
I hope you don't live in Texas.
There, anyone, even you, could be a sex offender, and not even know it. [chron.com]
When the corruption of the system is so flagrant, I wonder if your personal choice holds any weight at all.
You're Screwed Anyway (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:You're Screwed Anyway (Score:2)
In Lake County, Illinois (and a lot of other places, I suppose), when you are ticketed by a police officer, it constitutes an arrest. You are released on your agreement to either (1) admit guilt and accept the court's sentence, (2) pay a fine which results in the criminal charge being expunged (but not you driving record being cleared, obviously), or (3) appear before the court to answer the charge.
Even if you appear before the court and
Re:You're Screwed Anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
The majority of speed limits are set low only so police can collect money and harass people daily. After all, harrassing folks is what many cops get off on.
Re:You're Screwed Anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
The kind of person that realises that limiting people to 55mph on a freeway (go NY!) is obviously ridiculous to anybody with a brain. There is no sane reason that you could up with to justify that speed limit.
I'm not really sure... (Score:5, Interesting)
On the one hand, people are quite often prohibited from normally-legal activity (such as leaving the state) during a probation or parole period. However, it would seem to me that, with the Internet taking over more and more everyday functions (VoIP, the wide use of email, IM, and videoconferencing in business, Web-based applications coming into wider use by corporations, in some companies, including the one I work for, you have to log into an online server just to punch in), this could effectively amount to a prohibition from holding any but the most menial jobs during your probation/parole period. I think that, looked at that way, that would certainly seem to be cruel, excessive punishment.
The arguments that "they can bust the hacker if he's caught again" seem somewhat specious to me. They can already bust him for committing the same crime again, and they can already punish a second offense more harshly than a first. They don't need some "violation of an internet ban" to do either.
In balance, while I can understand the reasoning behind this line of thought, I don't think it's an acceptable punishment. I can see why it might've been thought so in 1995, but this is not 1995 and it no longer is.
Re:I'm not really sure... (Score:3, Insightful)
Isn't restricting free speech unconstitutional? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Isn't restricting free speech unconstitutional? (Score:2)
Speech is already restricted in many ways. Yelling "Fire!" for instance.
How about (Score:2, Insightful)
2. Make no serious effort to enforce this ban
3. Wait for criminal to commit another crime
4. In gathering evidence determine criminal was engaged in the use of the Internet in violation of the ruling of the courts.
5. Throw on extra charges that are easy to prove and thus gain a position of power in plea agreements or sentencing.
6. Go about throwing other criminals into prison.
banned from communicating with anybody? (Score:2, Funny)
Or write sql-injection instructions longhand using my daffy-duck pencil to be carried out on the internet by others?
Or read paper hard-copy versions of web pages?
I can still use SMS though, right?
Banned from the net (Score:4, Interesting)
Strange how I was allowed to work at a media company there, that contained the word "Networks" in it, without hassle.
Of course all good things must come to an end, and the Feds raided my office and had me fired the next day.
What irritates me is the irrational fear that keeping a "bad person" off the information highway is going to rehabilitate him. After all the net is a mixture of both public and private services, and tightly integrated into the common everyday activities that normal people use.
I suppose the Judge felt he was revoking my "privilege" to use the Net, but it was more of a first amendment ban if anything.
The question becomes, should people be qualified and licensed to use the Internet, since judges feel that it an earned privilege, not a God-given right?
Internet Ban (Score:5, Interesting)
But, from the experience I have (a few law classes, and plenty of time on both sides with lawyers), a ban such as this, while to encourage the person not to do something, is more inclined to give a harsher penalty if they should do it again.
For example, if you get a DUI, you'll very likely lose your license. You may also be prohibited from drinking. It varies by the state and circumstances. Now say you go to a bar and drink. You probably won't get caught. But if you go to a bar and are involved in a bar fight, now you'll be dragged off for VOP. Judges don't generally like it when you do something directly against what they just told you, and will probably drop you in the nearest jail for the full term of your probation, or longer, depending on his mood.
I've heard judges let things go lightly, because they know it was a subtle offense. Like, the VoIP, and IP enabled appliances that I see referenced in the comments. If you were chatting up underaged girls and the judge said to stay off the Internet, but then you were caught talking to your mom on a Vonage phone, he'd probably let it go. But if you were on a PC in a Internet Cafe, trolling for underage girls, sure as hell you'd be spending time in jail.
Consider the incident with Richard Ricci in the Elizabeth Smart case (kidnapping in Utah). Ricci was told by the judge not to drink. They raided his house because they suspected he might be involved (and then it was later proven he wasn't), but arrested him for drinking a beer. If he didn't have the beer, they would have needed real evidence to arrest him. Since he had violated that prior ruling, he was screwed, even though that's the only thing he had done wrong. If they hadn't suspected him of kidnapping and murder, they would have probably let him go with a warning.
And I'm even ... (Score:3, Interesting)
And I'm even a slashdot user [slashdot.org], since just about the time my ban ended ;)
-chrisRe:hard to verify (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Edmonton man jailed for luring teen on-line (te (Score:4, Insightful)
chat rooms are "extremely dangerous"
Now, this is a sad story, and I can only hope that this guy has a *really* bad time in prison, but how has the idea that the internet is an evil entity with malevolent intent managed to flourish? Chat rooms are as dangerous as warm fluffy socks. If he chatted her up in the local park no-one would have suggested the park was to blame. I'm off to register theinternetisnotababysitter.com
Re:Edmonton man jailed for luring teen on-line (te (Score:3)
The article describes him as a "tradesman" (Score:2)