ISP Reveals Scientology
2:15 p.m. 8.Jun.99.PDT
In response to a subpoena,
AT&T on Monday released the
identity of a WorldNet
subscriber to Bridge
Publications, a corporate
arm of the Church of
Scientology.
The subscriber, known as
"Safe," had posted portions
of the church's doctrine to
a newsgroup critical of
Scientology. The church
claims that these postings
violate its copyright, and
under the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act
obtained a subpoena to
induce AT&T to reveal
Safe's personal
information.
Ava Paquette, the attorney
who filed the subpoena,
said that Safe had made
"unauthorized, verbatim
postings," from the group's
copyrighted doctrines. Safe
contends that his postings
were not verbatim.
Paquette did not return
calls for comment.
"She got a questionably
legal subpoena to violate
my privacy under these
false pretenses," Safe
said. "I guess it won't
surprise anybody that
because AT&T has put my
life at risk to this
harassment organization, I
will be switching both
Internet service providers
and my long-distance
service from AT&T to MCI."
"There has been a history
of them aggressively
pursuing people who
allegedly misuse their
information," said David
Sobel, general counsel of
the Electronic Privacy
Information Center. "Those
people have historically
tended to be critics. This
is not a new phenomenon."
Sobel added that the
Digital Millennium
Copyright Act opens the
door for privacy
violations.
"This case arises in the
context of the whole
controversy surrounding
online anonymity," he said.
"The problem is that before
there's even a real
determination whether
[there's an infringement],
the legal information is
identified. There needs to
be better protection and
some safeguards before the
identity is disclosed."
Dan Leipold, an attorney
who was advising Safe, said
that AT&T had not given him
reasonable time to respond
to the subpoena while still
protecting Safe's identity.
"AT&T didn't seem too
enthusiastic to file
objections or to stall this
for even a couple of days,"
Leipold said. "If I had two
weeks to deal with this I
could have gotten
everything done nicely."
AT&T was issued the
subpoena by Bridge
Publications on 28 May. The
company was instructed to
comply by 2 June. Leipold
said that the issuance of
the subpoena over Memorial
Day weekend was strategic.
Safe said that he is
worried that once in
possession of his
information, the Church of
Scientology will engage in
a campaign of discrediting
and harassing him.
Safe said that not only was
he not given enough time to
argue against the subpoena,
but the attorney for Bridge
who filed it perjures
herself in her statement.
Keith Henson, another
critic of Scientology who
was sued for alleged
copyright infringement,
said that Safe does have
something to fear from the
church. He said he suffered
a stream of harassment at
the hands of
Scientologists, abuse that
continues today.
"They put up posters in my
neighborhood saying I was a
child molester, picketed my
house, showed up at all the
places where I worked,"
Henson said. "That's the
kind of thing he can expect
to see right away."
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