Remarks by the President at Event on the E-Chip for the Internet


THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary

For Immediate Release July 16, 1997



REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
AT EVENT ON THE E-CHIP FOR THE INTERNET


The East Room


12:45 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much, Lois Jean, and thank you, Steve Case. Thank you, Mr. Vice President, for all the work you've done on this issue. And to Secretary Daley, Commissioner Varney, Deputy Attorney General Waxman, and the members of Congress who had to go for a vote. I thank all of you for your interest. And thank you, all of you, who come here from the various companies who were part of the Vice President's meeting this morning and from other interested groups.

I think it's fair to say that history will evaluate the Internet as having sparked a revolution in information perhaps every bit as profound as the printing press. For today, at the click of a mouse, children can tap into the resources of the Library of Congress, to a great museum, communicate with classrooms around the world.

I am particularly proud to point out that the Internet allows us now to join beyond the Earth. Just since July 4, NASA's Mars Pathfinder Web site has received more than 27 million visits. And we are very proud of that, and proud of NASA.

But we all know and we've heard the horror stories about the inappropriate material for children that can be found on the Internet. We know children can be victimized over the Internet. After the Supreme Court struck down the portion of the Communications Decency Act last month affecting this as an abridgement of free speech, we brought together industry leaders and groups representing teachers, parents, librarians to discuss where to go next.

This morning there was a discussion that I believe can fairly be said to have reached a consensus about how to pave the way to a family-friendly Internet without paving over the constitutional guarantees of free speech and free expression. The plan has three components -- new technologies, enforcement of existing laws, more active participation of parents.

As you have heard already with regard to technology, the computer industry is developing a whole toolbox full of technologies that can do for the Internet what the V-chip will do for television. Some of the tools are already widely in use, as Steve said. They give parents the power to unlock -- or and to lock the digital doors to objectionable content.

Now we have to make these tools more readily available to all parents and all teachers in America, and as new tools come on line, we have to distribute them quickly and we have to make sure that parents are trained to use them.

In an extremely adroit use of language in our meeting earlier, one of the leaders said, well, Mr. President, you've talked about how technologically inept you are; perhaps you would be our guinea pig as each new thing comes along -- (laughter) -- and then we

could certainly certify that, if you can figure out how to use it, anybody can. (Laughter.) And so I sort of volunteered. Having been damned with faint praise, I enjoyed that. (Laughter.)

But I think it is important, it is important to know not only that things exist but that they are being used and that they can be used. So we had a little laugh about what is a very serious element of this whole endeavor.

Today several industry leaders are taking major steps in this direction. I'm pleased to announce first that Netscape Communications has committed to add family-friendly controls to the next release of its popular Internet browser. Parents who use the Netscape browser to explore the Internet will be able to tell the browser precisely what types of materials they do not wish their children to see. Microsoft, which also offers a popular Internet browser, has already incorporated this technology.

Therefore, with Netscape's pledge today, we now have assurance that 90 percent of all software used to explore the Internet will have family-friendly controls built right in. It's also important to note that all of the major companies that offer Internet service now provide some form of family-friendly controls. And I commend all of them for that.

For these controls to work to their full potential, we also need to encourage every Internet site, whether or not it has material harmful for young people, to label its own content as the Vice President described just a few moments ago. To help to speed the labeling process along, several Internet search engines -- the Yellow Pages of cyberspace, if you will -- will begin to ask that all Web sites label content when applying for a spot in their directories.

I want to thank Yahoo, Excite and Lycos for this important commitment. You're helping greatly to assure that self-labeling will become the standard practice. And that must be our objective.

Beyond technology, we must have strict enforcement of existing laws -- the anti-stalking, child pornography and obscenity laws as they apply to cyberspace. In the past three months alone, the FBI has expanded by 50 percent the staff committed to investigating computer-related exploitation of minors, and established a task force to target computer child pornography and solicitation. In the past six months, the Department of Justice has increased the number of lawyers working in its Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section by 50 percent. We simply must not allow pornographers and pedophiles to exploit a wonderful medium to abuse our children.

And, finally, we must recognize that in the end, the responsibility for our children's safety will rest largely with their parents. Cutting-edge technology and criminal prosecutions cannot substitute for responsible mothers and fathers. Parents must make the commitment to sit down with their children and learn together about the benefits and challenges of the Internet. And parents, now that the tools are available, will have to take upon themselves the responsibility of figuring out how to use them.

I think it's fair to say that all parents will likely lag behind their children in facility on the Internet, but at least if we understand the tools that are available, it will be possible to do the responsible and correct thing.

Thanks to the talents, to the creativity, to the commitments of so many of you assembled today, we have now, therefore, a road map toward constructive steps for a family-friendly

Internet. There is still a lot to do. Parent groups and educators must work to help hone our labeling systems so that they will actually screen out materials we don't want our children to see and, as others have said today, with equal energy help to highlight the materials that serve our children best. That is very, very important.

The Internet community must work to make these labels as common as food safety labels are today, to continue to expand access to family-friendly tools, including software to protect children's privacy from unscrupulous vendors.

With a combination of technology, law enforcement and parental responsibilities, we have the best chance to ensure that the Internet will be both safe for our children and the greatest educational resource we have ever known. And that is our common commitment, and for that, I thank you all very much. (Applause.)


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