http://www.yawningbread.org/arch_2001/yax-244.htmGunning for email and SMS next
Worse may yet come. So far, the issue has been that of websites and the bulletin boards they host. What about email?
Ever since the SBA was set up, they have said that email is considered private communication, and outside their regulatory ambit. But now the government is concerned that mass-mailing and SMS messaging may mobilise voters in ways unhelpful to them. So another bit of wise forbearance is likely to be thrown out of the window too.
Straits Times, 15 August 2001 [excerpt from a longer story]:
Mr Lee [Yock Suan, Minister for Information and the Arts] had said in Parliament that while such e-mail messages would be allowed if the sender did not belong to a political party, there was a possibility that the messages may be sent by an individual on behalf of a political party. Or a non-political site might do this for the same reason.
This loophole which can enable some to bypass the rules is also being looked into.
We are sliding deeper and deeper into an abyss. What draconian checks are going to be needed to determine if an individual sending email messages is doing so on behalf of a political party? And if one cannot determine the sender’s intent precisely, what are we going to do? Make the presumption that if someone sends email in support of an opposition party, he must be doing so on its behalf unless proven otherwise? In other words, guilty until proven innocent?
Or, more likely, leave the regulations vague, so that people are too scared to tell their friends that they endorse such and such a party?