Bennett Haselton
Encyclopedia
Bennett Haselton is the American founder of Circumventor.com and Peacefire.org
Peacefire
Peacefire is a U.S.-based website, with a registered address in Bellevue, Washington, dedicated to "preserving First Amendment rights for Internet users, particularly those younger than 18". It was founded in August 1996 by Bennett Haselton, who still runs it...

, two U.S.-based websites dedicated to combating Internet censorship. Peacefire.org is focused on documenting flaws in commercial Internet blocking programs. Circumventor.com is dedicated to distributing anti-censorship tools to users in countries such as China and Iran, and as of 2011 has over 3 million subscribers through distribution channels including email and Facebook
Facebook
Facebook is a social networking service and website launched in February 2004, operated and privately owned by Facebook, Inc. , Facebook has more than 800 million active users. Users must register before using the site, after which they may create a personal profile, add other users as...

 pages.

At 21 Haselton testified before the US Child Online Protection Commission (COPA Commission), a congressionally appointed panel mandated by the Child Online Protection Act
Child Online Protection Act
The Child Online Protection Act was a law in the United States of America, passed in 1998 with the declared purpose of restricting access by minors to any material defined as harmful to such minors on the Internet...

, where he presented evidence that the error rate in most commercial blocking programs was much higher than commonly believed. In 2007 he testified as an expert witness for the American Civil Liberties Union
American Civil Liberties Union
The American Civil Liberties Union is a U.S. non-profit organization whose stated mission is "to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed to every person in this country by the Constitution and laws of the United States." It works through litigation, legislation, and...

 of Washington, in the ACLU's lawsuit against the North Central Regional Library District, where a filter was enforced on library computers for all patrons including adults. Haselton's tests showed that sites which the library filter had blocked as "pornography" included a church, an immigration rights group, and the Seattle Women's Jazz Orchestra, and overall that about one in four .org sites blocked by the library filter was blocked in error.

Early life and education

Haselton was born in Oklahoma. Haselton's father is a geophysicist and his mother is a piano-teacher. Haselton lived in England and Denmark and graduated from Copenhagen International School. At 15 Haselton became a member of the Danish National Math Team. "You don't have to be Danish," he says.

Haselton's interest in censorship dates from when he was 10 years old and heard swear words for the first time. "I remember my parents and some other adults talking about profanity to some kid," Haselton says. "I just thought, 'Why not declare on midnight, January 1, that all swear words are not swear words anymore? Then there will be no such thing as foul language.'" Haselton also credits growing up in Denmark for his views on censorship. "In Denmark it's totally different," Haselton says. "For example, between the train station and our school, there was a strip club that had pictures of topless dancers, and kids had to walk right by it. Nobody really thought anything about it. It never occurred to me until I came back to the U.S. how something like that could never happen here. The club would have been fined and shut down."

In 1995 Haselton returned to the United States for college. Haselton earned a master's degree in mathematics from Vanderbilt University
Vanderbilt University
Vanderbilt University is a private research university located in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1873, the university is named for shipping and rail magnate "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, who provided Vanderbilt its initial $1 million endowment despite having never been to the...

. After graduation, Haselton worked on Visual Basic at Microsoft
Microsoft
Microsoft Corporation is an American public multinational corporation headquartered in Redmond, Washington, USA that develops, manufactures, licenses, and supports a wide range of products and services predominantly related to computing through its various product divisions...

 for 7 months. The New York Times said on May 15, 2000 that Haselton was fired from Microsoft however Haselton says that he resigned in good standing and "showed the NYT editors a copy of my personnel file from Microsoft which has "Term. type: Voluntary" and "Term reason: Resignation" printed on it, but the paper has still not corrected the article."

PeaceFire

Haselton started PeaceFire in August 1996 to educate young people about the 1996 Online Communications Decency Act, which made it illegal to send indecent material to minors over the Internet. "Many people online still remember that as the first big Internet censorship law, and it sort of drew everybody together to unite against it," Haselton says. The Supreme Court struck down the law in 1997.

Haselton thinks that minors should have the same first amendment rights as adults. "I think intellectual development is one of the fundamental human rights, and it's also a right that people under 18 have," says Haselton. "It's totally arbitrary what words are considered swear words and what body parts are considered pornographic," says Haselton. "I sometimes feel like I'm involved in some huge conspiracy, an experiment to see how long it takes to drive me crazy. People are so conditioned about censorship in this country that it begins to look like I'm arguing against people who believe two plus three equals four," said Haselton. "To me, though, it is no less ridiculous to say the word 'fuck' is going to harm someone than it would be to say two plus three equals four."

Peacefire first received national attention in December 1996 when CYBERsitter added PeaceFire to their list of "pornographic" Web sites. CYBERsitter also sent a letter to PeaceFire's ISP threatening to block all of their hosted sites if they continued to host PeaceFire. Two years later in October 1998 PeaceFire started posting information about how to disable blocking programs. "I was amazed that these filters had existed without anybody taking a good look at what material was being lost," says Haselton.

Haselton has come under criticism for starting PeaceFire. "When he started Peacefire, he was a kid himself," says Marc Kanter, marketing director for a software company that makes the filtering program CYBERsitter. "Basically he was enticing minors into his beliefs and activities, which was to undermine parents' rights. As an adult now, he should know better than that." Haselton opposes such blocking software. "This is something that practically nobody else is working on, and only a couple of people in the world actually know as much about the blocking software issue as I've found out," said Haselton .

The New York Times reported on June 19, 2006 that reporters from the Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
The Los Angeles Times is a daily newspaper published in Los Angeles, California, since 1881. It was the second-largest metropolitan newspaper in circulation in the United States in 2008 and the fourth most widely distributed newspaper in the country....

 were blocked from accessing PeaceFire from their office. "It just seemed odd that the class of people that we rely on for our information have less Internet freedom than a citizen in China," said Haselton. "We rely on reporters for our information of what's going on in society, and they can't necessarily do their job if a third party is deciding what they can see."

Haselton has appeared on CNN
CNN
Cable News Network is a U.S. cable news channel founded in 1980 by Ted Turner. Upon its launch, CNN was the first channel to provide 24-hour television news coverage, and the first all-news television channel in the United States...

 and The Montel Williams Show
The Montel Williams Show
The Montel Williams Show is a syndicated talk show hosted by Montel Williams. On January 30, 2008 it was announced that The Montel Williams Show would stop production on new episodes at the end of the 2007-2008 television season after seventeen years...

 to discuss first amendment issues and been quoted in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Seattle Times, and the Village Voice.

Other Internet activities

Haselton's other activities include "bug hunter, spam litigant, censorware buster, [and] circumvention software provider."

Internet security

Haselton has become well known for finding security bugs in Internet software. Haselton found a security hole in Netscape that allowed web sites to gather details from visitors' computers, including bookmarks and cache information. "We think this may be one of the most powerful Netscape Communicator exploits ever," said Haselton. The exploit allowed a web site to introduce JavaScript through a cookie allowing access to a user's hard drive. "Getting 'read' access to the user's hard drive is the second most powerful exploit you can possibly launch," Haselton said. "If I run the exploit on a specific person, I can determine what other sites they have visited." Haselton earned a $15,000 bounty from Netscape in 2001 for uncovering holes in the company's browser software.

Anti-spam activities

Haselton has won 10 small-claims cases and thousands of dollars in judgments against senders of unwanted e-mail. Haselton has become one of the most well known spammer-suers in the United States. "What he's doing definitely has an effect. It raises awareness of the laws that are available," says Dan Birchall, executive director of the anti-spam SpamCon Foundation.

Blacklists

In 2003, Haselton found out that the PeaceFire.org domain had been placed on a blacklist by the Mail Abuse Prevention System
Mail Abuse Prevention System
The Mail Abuse Prevention System ' is an organisation that provides anti-spam support by maintaining a DNSBL. They provide five black lists, categorising why an address or an IP block is listed:...

(MAPS) list because of complaints that his ISP, Media3 Technologies, refused to cut off service to companies suspected of doing business with spammers. Blacklists, also called "block lists" or "blackhole lists," are lists of Internet addresses associated with known spammers that are used to block all incoming e-mail from those addresses. It took Haselton over a year to get off the MAPS list. "The biggest problem I have, by far, with any of it, is that [administrators who use blacklists] hide the fact that any of it's going on so that their users won't know and therefore won't complain," Haselton said.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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