Those questions are going to loom large in the near future. The ease with which Internet users can communicate anonymously and avoid detection and expanding concerns, increasingly prevalent in the post-9/11 environment, about criminal activity over the Internet are likely to spark conflict. Courts will almost certainly have to jump into the fray.
The government, too, is moving in this area. Word leaked out in late November that the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency -- the folks who brought you the Internet back in the 1960s and, more recently, the highly controversial proposal for a Total Information Awareness database-mining program -- has been considering (though it has rejected it, for now) a surveillance technique it calls eDNA that would tag all Internet data with unique markers to make impossible the anonymous use of parts of the Internet. The proposal envisions a divided Internet with secure "public network highways," where identification would be required, and "private network alleyways," which wouldn't require identification.
When the forces of commerce and government are lined up, things usually happen. If there's to be any push-back here, it will come from the courts in the guise of expanded First Amendment protection for keeping one's identity shielded from scrutiny, or from an angry citizenry. Does the right to free speech encompass a right to speak without fear of retribution? We shall soon find out.
David Post is a Temple University law professor and senior fellow at the National Center for Technology and Law at the George Mason University School of Law. Reach him at postd@erols.com. Bradford C. Brown is chairman of the National Center for Technology and Law at the George Mason University School of Law. Reach him at bbrown2@gmu.edu.
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