Skip to main content
ad info

 
CNN.com technology > computing
CNN.com EUROPE:
Editions|myCNN|Video|Audio|News Brief|Free E-mail|Feedback  
 

Search


Search tips
TECHNOLOGY
TOP STORIES

PC not dead, Gates tells Davos

Napster to charge a fee for MP3s

Ericsson pulls phone plug

Mir cargo vessel abandoned

(MORE)

TOP STORIES

Indian PM criticises slow quake aid

Judge reorders Pinochet arrest

Gates urges new war against AIDS

Alpine tunnel tops summit agenda

(MORE)

 MARKETS    1613 GMT, 12/28
5217.4
-25.00
5160.1
+42.97
4624.58
+33.42

 
SPORTS

(MORE)

 All Scoreboards
WEATHER
European Forecast

 Or choose another Region:
EUROPE

WORLD

ENTERTAINMENT

  IN OTHER NEWS

U.S.

HEALTH

TRAVEL



(MORE HEADLINES)
*
EDITIONS:
CNN.com U.S.:

LOCAL LANGUAGES:


MULTIMEDIA:

CNN WEB SITES:

CNN NETWORKS:
CNN International

TIME INC. SITES:

SITE INFO:

WEB SERVICES:

Judge to rule on French access to Nazi items

Yahoo

PARIS, France -- A judge is due to rule on whether the American-based Internet site Yahoo! can sell Nazi memorabilia to French Internet shoppers.

Yahoo! has argued during the landmark legal case that its U.S.-based site should not be required to comply with the French law that prohibits the sale or display of items that promote racism.

Its French-based site already complies with the law.

The outcome of the case could determine how national jurisdiction applies to the Internet.

The case began when two groups, angry that French people have access to more than 1,000 objects of Nazi memorabilia on the site, sued Yahoo! for breaking French law.

The French-language portal www.yahoo.fr does not carry the Nazi auctions, but French users can click onto the U.S. sister site and find Nazi and neo-Nazi material up for auction, which is allowed by the U.S. freedom-of-speech law.

A Paris judge ordered Yahoo! to pay fines to the Union of Jewish Students and the Licra anti-racism organisation, and then asked three experts to search for ways to filter French users from the site and all other sites deemed racist.

The three experts -- a Frenchman, an American and a Briton -- said it would be possible to detect 70 percent of Web surfers who use an easily identifiable French Internet service provider to access the auction site.

But it would be more difficult to detect the remaining 30 percent who use an international provider.

The experts said that attempting to block every racist site from French users would clearly be impossible.



RELATED STORIES:
Nazi web site gag 'impossible'
November 6, 2000
Court delays ruling over Yahoo! Nazi memorabilia sales
August 11, 2000
Yahoo wins court reprieve in Nazi sales case
July 26, 2000

RELATED SITES:
Yahoo!
LICRA

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

 Search   

Back to the top  © 2001 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.