Jan. 13, 2010 - Issue #743: Broken Embraces
Zeit Geist
Truth and lies
Was shutting down the Yes Men based on a lie?
Last month, the Canadian delegation at the Climate Change Conference in
Copenhagen found itself targeted by the Yes Men in a widely publicized hoax.
The well-known activists satirized the Canadian government's position on the
environment by launching a pair of phony websites that looked official but
promoted different policies.
The hoax attracted considerable media attention, prompting Prime Minister's
Office spokesman Dimitri Soudas to label it a childish prank. Soon after,
Canadian officials quietly set out to shut down the two websites.
What followed creates a cause for concern, because Environment Canada appears
to have misrepresented the harms posed by the sites in an effort to force
them offline without a court order.
Internet providers are frequently asked to remove content, yet most reputable
firms only do so with court oversight or a clear statutory mandate. One
exception to this general rule involves cases of phishing, which is the
criminally fraudulent process of attempting to acquire personal information
such as usernames, passwords and credit card details by masquerading as a
trustworthy entity. This occurs when fraudsters create websites that looks
much like a popular bank or online auction site in the hope of prying
personal data from visitors tricked into thinking they are dealing with a
legitimate site.
Phishing operators move quickly, seeking to grab as much data as they can
before authorities move to shut them down. The practice raises serious
identity theft concerns, leading host ISPs to shut down alleged sites without
waiting for a court order. While this helps limit potential harm, the
Canadian government has become the poster child for how the system can be
abused.
Within days of the Yes Men incident, both Environment Canada and the Canadian
Cyber Incident Response Centre, which is part of Public Safety Canada, wrote
to the hosting ISP to ask that it shut down the fake websites. While
officials understandably pointed to trademark and copyright concerns (the
sites were designed to look confusingly similar to actual government
websites), those claims alone would not have been enough for most Internet
providers to act.
Instead, officials used both the persuasive power of an official government
request combined with inaccurate claims that the sites were engaged in
phishing to escalate the issue. One email to the hosting company noted the
request was sent on behalf of the Minister of the Environment to demand
prompt deletion and removal of the hosted sites. The same email claimed the
sites were involved in phishing, leading the German-based Internet provider
to promptly shut them down.
In fact, in the rush to shut down the Yes Men sites, the Internet provider
simultaneously shut down an additional 4500 websites hosted at the same IP
address. Those sites have since been restored.
In the aftermath of the case, the web administrator who shut down the sites
expressed regret, arguing he acted under duress. Yet the real concern arises
from the inflammatory government claims.
While the sites were obviously an embarrassment, there were several avenues
to address the issue. Officials could have filed a complaint with the
Canadian Internet Registration Authority, which manages the dot-ca domain
(both sites used dot-ca addresses). Alternatively, they could have turned to
the courts for an order to either shut down the sites or suspend the domain
name registrations. Instead, the phishing claim effectively substituted one
hoax for another and in the process undermined the trust in a global system
designed to guard against identity theft. V
Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce
Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can be reached at
mgeist@uottawa.ca or online at michaelgeist.ca.
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