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Wednesday, June 16, 2004

...it goes a bit deeper than that.

Int'l conference on anti-Semitism opens in Paris

Experts gathered in Paris on Wednesday to find a common approach to combatting the proliferation of racist, anti-Semitic and xenophobic propaganda on the Internet, believed to be a chief factor in rising numbers of hate crimes.

Officials from more than 60 countries were attending the two-day conference aimed at finding ways to keep racist information off the Web without compromising free speech and freedom of expression.

The dilemma is all the more acute because the Internet is both global and tough to regulate, as shown by the widespread and illegal sharing of music online that has confounded record companies. Terror groups have also used the Internet to plot attacks.

Officials in countries like France, which has experienced a surge in anti-Semitic violence in the past several years, are pushing for tougher regulations to curb online hate speech.

"We are at a particular, 'hinge' moment in our common fight against intolerance," French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said in opening remarks to the conference.

"Our responsibility is to underline that by its own characteristics _ notably, immediacy and anonymity _ the Internet has seduced the networks of intolerance," he said.

France has noted a "clear relationship" between racist, anti-Semitic and xenophobic propaganda and hate crime, he said.

US Assistant Attorney General Dan Bryant acknowledged the American approach differs from that of other countries.

"We believe that government efforts to regulate bias-motivated speech on the Internet are fundamentally mistaken," Bryant said. "At the same time, however, the United States has not stood and will not stand idly by, when individuals cross the line from protected speech to criminal conduct."

Bryant said the United States believes the best way to reduce hate speech was to confront it "head on" by promoting tolerance, understanding and other ideas that run counter to racism...


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