According to a new report, the Internet police are coming... and they're not wearing badges. Instead, governments are devolving enforcement powers on the 'Net to ISPs.
Here at Ars Technica, we regularly report on the uneasy relationship between Internet Service Providers and the national legal systems under which they operate. This tension surfaces most obviously when it comes to suing individual consumers for illegal file sharing.
Plaintiff lawyers want maximum cooperation from ISPs in tracking down subscribers to be subpoenaed, while providers like Time Warner Cable insist they can only process so many requests at a time. Denounced as permissive on piracy, ISPs and content industry lawyers collide in the courts.
But a new report suggests that nations are slowly turning ISPs into the off-duty information cops of the world. Eager to placate politicians in order to achieve their own goals (like the selective throttling of data), networks are cooperating with governments looking for easy, informal solutions to difficult problems like copyright infringement, dangerous speech, online vice, and child pornography.
Network and content providers are ostensibly engaging in "self-regulation," but that's a deceptive phrase, warns the European Digital Rights group. "It is not regulation—it is policing—and it is not 'self-' because it is their consumers and not themselves that are being policed," EDR says.
The report, titled "The Slide From 'Self-Regulation' to Corporate Censorship," cites many situations and examples to make the case for an emerging "censorship ecosystem" driven by ISPs. Here are two:
Webpage blocking
EDR sees the United Kingdom's Internet Watch Foundation as a primary concern. Established following a London police official's open letter to UK ISPs, insisting that they take "necessary action" against newsgroups containing illegal content, Internet Watch has become an executor of extra-legal rulings "on what is illegal and what is not," EDR charges.