CDT Policy Post 11.05: Appeals Court Agrees to Reconsider Ruling About French Censorship of U.S. Speech



CDT POLICY POST Volume 11, Number 4, February 16, 2005

A Briefing On Public Policy Issues Affecting Civil Liberties Online
from
The Center For Democracy and Technology

(1) Appeals Court Agrees to Reconsider Ruling About French Censorship
of U.S. Speech
(2) Yahoo Case Tests Global Reach of National Courts
(3) Chronology of the Yahoo Case
(4) Next Steps

------------------------------
(1)Appeals Court Agrees to Reconsider Ruling About French Censorship
of U.S. Speech

Last week the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals agreed to reconsider
an earlier decision that restricted Yahoo's efforts to protect its
lawful U.S. publications from censorship under French law. The ruling
is a small but welcome development in a case with broad implications
for free speech by Internet speakers around the world.

A large panel of judges from the Appeals Court will now hear oral
arguments in the case next month in California. A complete set of
resources about the case, Yahoo! Inc. v. LICRA, is available at
http://www.cdt.org/jurisdiction/

The case in California stems from a late-2000 French court decision
ordering Yahoo in the U.S. to block French users from accessing a broad
array of World War II and Nazi memorabilia published on Yahoo's U.S.
web sites. The French decision, requiring Yahoo to censor its
U.S.-based content or face massive fines, has broad implications for
free speech and commerce online. A rule of law holding any Web
publisher, blogger, or Internet speaker liable as in this case--simply
because his or her content can be viewed somewhere in the world where
it might be unlawful--would have a disastrous chilling effect on speech
around the globe.

After the French decision, Yahoo brought suit in U.S. District Court in
San Francisco. That court agreed with Yahoo, and declared that under
the First Amendment, the French court order could not be enforced in
the United States. On appeal by the French parties, a three-judge panel
ruled on a narrow technical ground and held that the lower court did
not have jurisdiction over the French parties. Under the ruling, Yahoo
cannot raise its First Amendment claims until the French parties tried
to enforce the French order in a U.S. court.

As CDT and a broad group of public interest organizations, Internet
industry associations, and publishing industry representatives
explained in a "friend-of-the-court" brief, the ruling that Yahoo must
wait puts Yahoo and similar speakers in an untenable situation. The
fines imposed by the French court are mounting on a daily basis,
putting great pressure on Yahoo to give up its First Amendment rights
to reduce the risk that it might have to pay an enormous fine. In
support of Yahoo's motion for "reconsideration," CDT and others argued
that the case was of such importance that the full court of appeals
should revisit the issues. The court has now agreed to do just that.

------------------------------
(2) Case Tests Global Reach Of National Courts

The French court's order against Yahoo is but one example of the sort
of judgment that may arise with increasing frequency as Internet use
expands globally. Given the borderless character of the Internet,
speech that is perfectly legal in one country may be forbidden by laws
somewhere else. A critical question is whether foreign courts will be
able to pressure speakers located in the United States into removing
web site content that is clearly lawful in the U.S. and protected by
the First Amendment. The same question applies around the world: can
Internet publishers in Country A be forced by Country B to remove
lawful material, simply because the material can be accessed from
Country B.

In the U.S., a fundamental tenet of the Constitution is that diverse
and sometimes controversial speech should be protected. Given that
commitment to free expression, there will be an increasing number of
instances where a U.S. speaker runs afoul of more restrictive foreign
laws. For example, some countries have laws against speech that
questions the government, or is critical of a state religion. If
foreign courts can block such speech in the U.S. and other countries
where it is perfectly legal, open debate and discussion in the United
States and around the world will suffer.

More globally the rule of law put forward by the French courts is
untenable in a democratic international communications medium. How is a
blogger or small website publisher in Japan, France, or any other
country supposed to screen their content to obey the rules of every
country and town where their publication might be viewed? And, for
example, would the U.K. or France, themselves enforce an order from a
Chinese or Iranian court against a dissident publishing allegedly
seditious speech online? The human rights implications of these
possible restrictions are magnified if a country can issue criminal
judgments against the speech of human rights advocates who live and
speak in a different country (where their speech is lawful).

Importantly, finding the French court ruling unenforceable in the US
still leaves the French people with ways to enforce their values within
France. As CDT has argued in this case, the kind of speech that the
French ruling seeks to restrict in the US could still be illegal in
France. The French government could still seek to prosecute those in
France who produce it or access it. Alternatively, the French
government could provide French citizens with filtering technology that
allows the citizens to block access to the content. The French
government could even force ISPs to attempt to block access to the
content (as China, Saudia Arabia, and other repressive regimes do) - a
troubling approach from a free expression perspective, but one that is
far better than forcing publishers everywhere to remove content that
might be offensive anywhere in the world.

------------------------------
(3) Background: Chronology Of The Yahoo Case

The French Yahoo case has had a long and somewhat complicated trip
through the courts. Here is a short chronology:  - Nov 2000 - A French
court ruled that Yahoo, by allowing its US-based Web site to be
accessed from France, violated France's law criminalizing the
exhibition or sale of racist materials. The French court ordered Yahoo
to re-engineer its servers to identify French IP addresses and block
their access to Nazi material. It also required Yahoo to ask users with
"ambiguous" IP addresses to declare their nationality when they arrive
at Yahoo's home page or when they initiate a search using the word
"Nazi."

  - Dec 2000 - Yahoo filed a lawsuit in the US federal court in its home
   district in California asking for a declaratory judgment that the
   foreign verdict was unenforceable in the US. Yahoo argued that the US
   courts should refuse to enforce the French judgment because it
   contravened fundamental US policy, namely, the strong protection of
   free speech offered by the First Amendment.

  - June 2001 - The federal court in California denied a motion by the
   French defendants to dismiss the case.

  - Oct 2001 - Back in France, criminal charges were brought against
   Yahoo and its former CEO, Tim Koogle, alleging that they engaged in
   "crimes against humanity" because Nazi material was available on the
   U.S.-based Yahoo service.

  - Nov 2001 - In a victory for Yahoo, the U.S. district court ruled that
   the French court's decision is unenforceable in this country because it
   requires a US company to censor material that is constitutionally
   protected.

  - Dec 2001 - The private French groups that had initiated the case in
   France appealed to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, claiming that
   the US district court lacked jurisdiction to determine whether the
   French court judgment is enforceable. In other words, after asserting
   broad jurisdiction of French courts over a US company operating in the
   US, the complainants asserted that US courts had no jurisdiction to
   determine whether the foreign order is enforceable in the US.

  - May 2002 - CDT, ACLU and others file a brief in the Ninth Circuit
   Court of Appeals supporting Yahoo right to promptly vindicate its
   rights in U.S. courts. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other leading
   Internet industry groups file a similar brief opposing the French
   court's ruling.

  - Feb 2003 - A court in Paris dismissed criminal charges against Yahoo
   and its former CEO, Tim Koogle, in a criminal prosecution involving the
   auction of Nazi memorabilia on Yahoo's auction site. The French
   criminal court dismissed all charges, holding that Yahoo never tried to
   "justify war crimes [or] crimes against humanity."

  - Aug 2004 - A three-judge panel of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
   decided that the lower court (which had ruled in favor of Yahoo) should
   not have considered Yahoo's First Amendment claims because the court
   did not have sufficient jurisdiction over the French parties.
   Essentially, the appeals panel concluded that the French parties would
   not be subject to U.S. law unless and until they affirmatively as the
   U.S. courts to enforce the French judgment.

  - Sep 2004 - CDT and a broad range of business and public interest
   organizations file a brief with the Ninth Circuit in support of Yahoo's
   request that the full court reconsider and review the decision of the
   three-judge panel. The brief argued that the three-judge panel's
   decision leaves free speech in the United States at the mercy of
   foreign courts, with no ability for U.S. speakers to obtain a prompt
   determination of their rights under the U.S. constitution.

  - Feb 2005 - The Ninth Circuit agreed to reconsider is earlier
   decision.

More details and a comprehensive set of filings in the cases are
available online at CDT's site, http://www.cdt.org/jurisdiction/

------------------------------
(4) Next Steps

The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals has instructed the parties in the
case to present "oral argument" to a large panel of judges on March 24,
2004. Following that argument, the court would then issue a new
decision addressing the issues raised. No time is set for that
decision; it could take anywhere from a few months to more than a year.
After that, it is possible that the case would be appealed to the U.S.
Supreme Court.


------------------------------
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found at http://www.cdt.org/.

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Policy Post 11.05 Copyright 2005 Center for Democracy and Technology

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