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The mills of Xenu grind exceeding(ly) slow (Scientology)
the inquirer ^ | 9-12-03 | Wendy M. Grossman

Posted on 09/21/2003 12:39:16 PM PDT by TomB

IT WAS WITH some astonishment that I read this week that a Dutch court ruled on September 4 that writer Karin Spaink could keep the Scientology materials on her Web site. The original case, in which this is the third ruling, began in the Pleistocene era in Internet terms – nine years ago. I had no idea it was still doing the Jarndyce vs. Jarndyce thing.

I spent much of 1994 – when the Web was Usenet, the king was CompuServe, and the browsers were all Mosaic – reading the newsgroup alt.religion.scientology, which I spotted while wandering around Usenet looking for things to write about. I figured the then-prevailing demographic of Netheads – sf fans, iconoclasts, science students – would have an, er, interesting time arguing with Scientologists. The details of the "flame war with real bullets" were published in Wired.

Spaink's particular part of Scientology versus the Net was fairly typical of the time. Budding Scientologists pay for each level of enlightenment they achieve. Eventually, as they reach the highest level, the materials they study are secret -- it is said that the contents could damage or even kill the insufficiently prepared. One of the key skeletons of contention between Scientology and the Net, therefore, was the fact that members of the newsgroup began posting some of these documents, effectively putting the contents in the public domain. Some interesting technology was developed in the quest to keep the documents available online: a specialized search engine that would find them, wherever they were on any given day as they moved from host to host. In any event, the CoS began issuing cease-and-desist letters and suing anyone who posted these documents openly. Many, of course, used the pioneering Finnish anonymous mailserver, anon.penet.f.

But the fact is that these documents were already available openly through at least one source: a court in California where a disaffected Scientologist, Lawrence Fishman, had read them into the record of his 1993 case. The Fishman affidavit, as it's known, was public record for two years, until the Church of Scientology succeeded in getting it sealed on the grounds that it contained "trade secrets" – that is, the secret documents. Spaink has links to both the affidavit and a summary of and quotes from other secret documents known as OT-II and OT-III (OT stands for "Operating Thetan"). Three Dutch courts in nine years have now ruled that it is legal for Spaink to post these materials on her site and that neither she nor her ISPs are guilty of copyright infringement. Scientology is required to pay her legal costs.

"The courts damned Scientology for the secrecy surrounding OT2 and OT3." Spaink posted to alt.religion.scientology shortly after the September 4 ruling, "and says that Scientology – which they call an 'organisation', not a 'church' – uses that secrecy to wield power over its members, and furthermore states that Scientology is attempting to overthrow democratic values."

Because most of what's being written now about copyright and the Net focuses on music and the RIAA's prosecution of 12-year-old girls (to be followed in another year or two by the same stories about TV shows and movies) it's easy to forget that Scientology was the first to litigate in this particular area.

It was Scientology that first went after ISPs to demand they control the materials their subscribers posted, and Scientology that first attacked online anonymity by obtaining a court order requiring the Finnish anon.penet.fi server to uncloak the real identity of one of its users. Julf Helsingius, who was later given an EFF Pioneer Award for his efforts, closed the server after that, on the grounds that if he could not guarantee anonymity it was worthless.

Ironically, as Spaink writes on her Web site, the Dutch court's ruling was based on testimony given in a similar case in Sweden, the prosecution of Zenon Panoussis, who tried to argue that the secret documents were open to everyone under the Swedish Constitution because he had filed copies with the courts and the Swedish Parliament. Ironic, because Panoussis lost that case in 2001.

The question raised by these cases, and of Keith Henson, Grady Ward, and others, is where you draw the line between freedom of speech and what the CoS likes to call "copyright anarchists". Spaink is pretty clearly motivated by her belief in freedom of speech as an inalienable right; she also hosts anti-abortion The Nuremberg Files that was ordered offline despite being pro-choice herself. Some of the other Net critics seem to be driven more by a belief that exposing the inner workings of the CoS is in the public interest and, perhaps, simply liking a good fight. The CoS's own view of these folks as "anti-religious extremists" is clear.

Judges have not always agreed – Judges Kane and Brinkema in Colorado and Virginia respectively, have ruled that the documents' availability from multiple sources outside the CoS mean they are not trade secrets, even though they are protected by copyright. This is, of course, part of what the Net critics were trying to achieve: ready accessibility to information about what Scientologists are ultimately taught so prospective members can make an informed choice. Copyright terrorists or public-spirited citizens? You decide. µ


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: cult; operatingthetans; scam; scientology; xenu
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To: Oztrich Boy
In the interim, Mrs Hubbard #1, neé Mary Louise "Polly" Grubb, had divorced Habbard, so his third marriage, unlike his second, was actually legal.

Legal? Hubbard did something legal?

Well, even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then.

21 posted on 09/21/2003 6:49:20 PM PDT by TomB
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To: TomB; P-Marlowe; RnMomof7; CARepubGal

Hey! This is nothing......


Just post some secret sacredTM LDS temple ritual stuff here on FR and just SEE how long IT lasts!

22 posted on 09/21/2003 8:35:16 PM PDT by Elsie (Don't believe every prophecy you hear: especially *** ones........)
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To: TomB
"The courts damned Scientology for the secrecy surrounding OT2 and OT3." Spaink posted to alt.religion.scientology shortly after the September 4 ruling, "and says that Scientology – which they call an 'organisation', not a 'church' – uses that secrecy to wield power over its members, and furthermore states that Scientology is attempting to overthrow democratic values."

This reminds me of the ongoing battle between the Watchtower (the legal corporation that controls Jehovah's Witnesses) and former Jehovah's Witnesses who have posted Watchtower secret documents on line.

Kent Steinhaug, a former Jehovah's Witness in Norway, frequently posts documents embarrassing to the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society on his Watchtower Observer Web site ( Note: Article removed - URL retained for reference).

His posting of such files as an alleged copy of the Watchtower's Branch Office policy manual, as well as a letter in which the Society allegedly tells the Czechoslovakian government that they do not forbid members from obtaining blood transfusions or performing civil service, has been ignored by the Brooklyn headquarters and thus their authenticity cannot be verified (Steinhaug refused to comment on the documents).

His posting in 1996 of the copyrighted Pay Attention to Yourselves and to All the Flock, however, quickly prompted an angry response from the Society that resembles the Church of Scientology's earlier reaction to the posting of secret documents on the Internet.

Steinhaug's website seems to be offline currently, but the embarrassing documents have been posted in other mirror sites.
23 posted on 09/22/2003 8:42:09 AM PDT by george wythe
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To: Elsie
Just post some secret LDS temple ritual stuff here on FR and just SEE how long IT lasts!

I noticed that also. There are quite a few Mormon Freepers, but not that many Scientologist Freepers ;-)

It's a matter of not upsetting the apple cart, I guess.

24 posted on 09/22/2003 8:45:31 AM PDT by george wythe
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator


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