The impossibility of policing the web


By Sonia Randawa, The  Nut Graph

The endless distractions on Facebook are the bane of my working life. As a freelance consultant, I need discipline and a strict schedule to meet tight deadlines. But then a friend from university announces his baby is having problems feeding, and so I stop my work to suggest strategies for feeding babies. Or to respond to a Burmese activist’s call for action. Or to look at photos of a cute puppy.

So perhaps licensing the internet under the Printing Presses and Publications Act (PPPA), including social networking sites, might improve our country’s productivity. No more tweets or status updates — just hard work and mugs of teh tarik, like the good old days.

But if this were to happen, what would it mean in practice?

Ridiculously impractical

Under the PPPA, you need a license to publish. Presumably, Facebook would need a licence too, since they are the ones who do the actual publishing. They own the pages, choose the font, layout and privacy settings.

But Facebook is not local. The pages are published in the United States and on various other servers across the world, and then “reprinted” on computers across the world. So the licence to publish is beyond Malaysia’s jurisdiction.

It then becomes a matter of a printing license. Under the PPPA, you need a licence to own and operate a printing press. The equivalent in cyberspace is to own and operate a computer. But how realistic would it be to licence every single computer? It might make matters marginally simpler by licensing modems rather than computers.

Either way, this is going to involve an investment larger than the RM67 billion announced under the Economic Transformation Plan. The number of computers or even just connections in Malaysia today is staggering. Think of just how many computers bureaucrats would be busy regulating as each plane lands or as each bus crosses the border. In the house I’m in right now, there’s one modem and four computers, of which at least two have internal modems. There are at least four internet-capable mobile phones. That’s a minimum of seven licenses right there. On top of that, we have people visiting from abroad. With an iPad and at least one internet-capable mobile phone. Would they need licenses as well?

Then there’s the issue of what counts as a “publication”. Would one licence per computer suffice, or would you need one for each site you published? Or would you only need one license to publish on a regular basis, like magazines and newspapers?

Over-stretching the law

Clearly, practicality seems to be far from the minds of those suggesting that the PPPA include the internet. Not only would each internet connection need a license, possibly each “author” using an online publishing tool would need a license, too.

Twitter jailbird

This would require remarkable re-interpretations of the law. Would a Facebook page, a Twitter account, or a blog count as regular publication, akin to newspapers or magazines? Will the license specify regularity of publication, language used, and geographic area in which it can be circulated? What happens if the terms are violated? Say my tweet is illegally read by someone in Perak, when I only have a license to operate in KL? Who will monitor these violations?

And getting a license under the PPPA is not a simple matter. Under the current Act, it can take six months to six years (or more!) for just a single license. Presumably, for an online version, the process might be less bureaucratic…but by how much? If the process is made lenient to the degree that implementing the proposed amendments would not require a hefty investment, then why would the government bother?

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