German Hate Law: No Denying It

Published: 17 December 2000 y., Sunday
The court, called the Bundesgerichtshof, issued a ruling on Tuesday that overturned a lower court ruling, and found that German law applies even to foreigners who post content on the Web in other countries -- so long as that content can be accessed by people inside of Germany. Specifically, the court found Australian Holocaust-denier Frederick Tuben guilty of spreading "Auschwitz lies." Tuben, who was born in Germany, uses the website of his Australian-based Adelaide Institute to encourage people in the belief that the Holocaust has no historical basis. International reaction to the ruling differed wildly. Andy Mueller-Maguhn, a leader of Berlin's famed Chaos Computer Club hacker collective and a new Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) board member, was blunt in questioning the legitimacy of the ruling. "This German court wants to judge over the whole world in effect," he said. "No one knows what it means. We could easily agree that it seems likely to be a decision made by a judge who does not understand very much." Mueller-Maguhn, something of a celebrity in Germany as a technology visionary, plans to take immediate action. He said he will contact Germany's highest court on Monday morning and invite someone from the court for a debate before Germany's legislature on the ruling - and how it should be applied in the future.
Šaltinis: Wired News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Mobile networks today and tomorrow

Complete solutions portfolio for GSM, GPRS and UMTS by Siemens more »

Associated Press Web site hacked

Incident follows other high-profile break-ins more »

Internet as an important decision-making tool

CeBIT 2001, which will take place in Hannover from March 22 - 28, documents more than anything else the rapid pace of development in e-commerce. more »

CeBIT Trend: Microsoft’s dot.net strategy

The long and winding road to ".net" more »

Wired and Wireless Satisfaction in Europe

According to a recent survey from Qualiope done in conjunction with Ipsos-Reid France, 92% of landline telephone users and 79% of mobile/cellphone users in Western Europe are either "very" or "fairly" satisfied with the sound quality of connection more »

Disappearing e-mail

Hundreds of thousands of messages from Earthlink users to AOL gets lost due to anti-spam effort more »

Germany Denies Microsoft Ban

Microsoft still produces the operating systems of choice to Germany's Defense Ministry, despite a report in a leading magazine saying security concerns would lead it to seek an alternative. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

New Rule Book for Web Shopping with Electronic Checks

With the goal of encouraging Web merchants and shoppers to use personal checks for e-tail sales, the Electronic Payments Association instituted new rules Friday for how electronic checks are processed. more »

The hacking hobbyist

Jeff Baker hacks into corporate computer networks for fun - period. more »