Google Yanks Anti-Church Sites
Wired News
http://wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,51233,00.html
WASHINGTON -- The Church of Scientology has managed to yank references to
anti-Scientology websites from the Google search engine.
Citing the controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Scientology
lawyers are claiming that Google may no longer include anti-Scientology
sites that allegedly infringe upon the church's intellectual property.
A letter from Google to the
http://www.Xenu.net/ Scientology-protest site says: "We
removed certain specific URLs in response to a notification.... Had we not
removed these URLs, we would be subject to a claim for copyright
infringement, regardless of its merits."
So far, the DMCA has come under fire because it bans most attempts to
bypass or disable copy-protection technology. But Scientology is relying
on another section of the 1998 law , which says a "service provider shall
not be liable" for copyright infringements -- if it moves with dispatch to
delete any "reference or link to material or activity claimed to be
infringing."
Until this week, anyone typing in "Scientology" on the wildly popular
search engine found references to the
http://www.Xenu.net/site in the first page of results.
Now
http://www.Xenu.net and
http://www.clambake.org
have virtually disappeared from Google's database.
When using the DMCA as a legal club to thwap critics, Scientology must
claim that its copyrighted material has been unlawfully expropriated.
Among the ostensibly infringing sites: Excerpts from an internal report on
a Scientology member who died under mysterious circumstances after
allegedly being held against her will, and photographs of Scientology
founder L. Ron Hubbard and others juxtaposed with Adolf Hitler.
This isn't the first time Scientology has used copyright threats to stifle
criticism.
As far back as August 1995, Scientology sued one of its former members for
posting anti-church information to the Internet and persuaded a federal
judge to permit the seizure of his computer. The church then sued The
Washington Post for reporting on the computer seizure and quoting from
public court records.
Last November, Scientology used the DMCA to pressure a U.S. Internet
provider to remove the church's secret scriptures from the
scientology-kills.org site. DMCA threats from the church seem to be
becoming so common that Dave Touretzsky, a scientist at Carnegie Mellon,
has even drafted a form letter that can be sent in reply.
Since Xenu.net and its companion sites are in Norway, Scientology can't
use U.S. law to remove the pages directly. But in getting Google to delete
them from its mammoth database, the church hopes to remove one of the most
obvious ways that Internet users can stumble across the sites.
Xenu.net does have the option to reply to Google and try to make its way
back into the database by refuting Scientology's claims. The DMCA offers
that way out -- but Xenu.net's publisher would have to agree to the
jurisdiction of a U.S. court.
One Internet executive in the Netherlands reported this week that
Scientology "harassed" him and his upstream providers for years because he
hosted an anti-Scientology site.
Hubbard's secret scriptures teach that 75 million years ago, an evil
galactic overlord named Xenu solved the galaxy's overpopulation problem by
freezing excess people and transporting the bodies to Teegeeack, now
called Earth. After the hapless travelers were defrosted, they were
chained to volcanoes that were blown up by hydrogen bombs -- and their
disembodied spirits continue to haunt mankind today.
By Declan McCullagh
March 21, 2002 PST
The name "Scientology"® is trademarked to the "Church" of Scientology. Neither this web page, nor this web site, nor any of the individuals mentioned herein assisting to educate the public about the Scientology organization's Fair Game policy are members of or representitives of the Scientology organization.
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E-Mail Fredric L. Rice / The Skeptic Tank