http://news.com.com/2100-1023-959236.html
Net archive silences Scientology critic
Buckling under pressure from the Church of Scientology, the Internet
Archive has removed a church critic's Web site from its system.
The Internet Archive, a site that preserves snapshots of old Web pages
and bills itself as "a library of Internet sites and other cultural
artifacts in digital form," no longer contains links to archival pages
of
http://www.Xenu.net. Instead, surfers are pointed to a page telling them the
site was taken down "per the request of the site owner."
However,
http://www.Xenu.netoperator Andreas Heldal-Lund said he never made any
such request. Heldal-Lund, a Norwegian businessman and longtime church
critic, said he's eager for people to read archived pages of his site.
"I'm the author, and I never asked that it be removed," he said. "I
believe what's happening in this case is important history."
A representative of the Internet Archive said the organization, which
is run mostly by volunteers, took the pages down after lawyers for the
Church of Scientology "asserted ownership of materials visible
through" the site. He said the group replaced the links with a generic
error message about blocked sites.
However, the organization removed not only
http://www.Xenu.netpages containing
excerpts from Church of Scientology documents, but also the entire
http://www.Xenu.netsite, which contains pages crafted entirely by Heldal-Lund.
A representative for the Church of Scientology could not immediately
be reached for comment.
Under certain provisions of U.S. copyright law, site operators can
fight such requests if they think legitimate material is being
blocked. However, Heldal-Lund said he wouldn't challenge the decision
because the action would put him under U.S. jurisdiction.
Scientologists have taken a notoriously heavy-handed approach to
squelching critical Web sites, pressuring site operators, ISPs
(Internet service providers), and even Internet heavyweights such as
Google into removing links to Web pages.
Most often, Scientology lawyers claim copyrights on materials
excerpted from their site, material they are fiercely protective of
because members must pay to access it. Many site operators who receive
such threatening letters immediately remove the material without
questioning whether the pages actually violate copyrights.
In 1999, Amazon.com removed, but later restored, links to a book
critical of Scientology.
Most recently, Google responded to threatening letters from
Scientology lawyers earlier this year by taking down links to the Xenu
site. However, the company reinstated links to the site's front page
under pressure from free-speech advocates. The incident prompted
Google to revisit its takedown policy. Now it sends copies of such
letters to the ChillingEffects.org site, a site run by civil liberties
groups designed to educate people about their free-speech rights. "
By Lisa M. Bowman
Staff Writer CNET News.com
September 24, 2002, 1:05 PM PT
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