Words like “hot” and “young adult” fire up spam filters
The author of the “Biographer’s Craft” writes in a column on WashingtonPost.com that spam filters have been blocking his noncontroversial online monthly newsletter because of some of the words he uses — words like “young adult” and “hot.”
The author, James McGrath Morris, suggests that “some efforts to block unwanted e-messages are threatening free speech on the Internet.” He writes:
“Last month, before sending out the new issue, I ran the copy through some spam-checking software. Surprisingly, my score came back so high that many subscribers might never receive the issue.
“I contacted the company that distributes my newsletter, and a staff member explained that three sets of words among the issue’s many articles could derail my e-mail: a reference to “young adult,” a common classification for books intended for adolescent readers; a sentence in my editorial — “Speaking of legal matters, it’s getting nasty out there” — referring to the growing number of lawsuits; and a distinguished biographer’s discussion of writing a book for children that included the following comment: “At my public library I queried the children’s division librarian — what works, what does not, who is ‘hot.’ “
Later, Morris, offers:
“Granted, it wouldn’t be the end of my newsletter if I had to replace “hot,” “nasty,” and “young adult” with other words. But if I surrender those words now, what might I be asked to give up next month? If a newsletter writer should mention, say, the “beastly behavior” of the Bush administration, if a literary publication uses the book title “Lolita” or if an investment consultant says the “rising number of low-priced stocks is swelling the ranks of investors” will they be among the next victims of this censorship?”


Steve Parker is the deputy managing editor for news, and oversees the Post-Dispatch's front page. STLtoday's online news editors are on his newsroom team. Parker has been at the paper since September 1980.
Does anyone else find it odd that the PD Editors would post a complaint about censorship? Isn’t this the same paper that supports the “Fairness” Doctrine?
I find it odd that the Fairness Doctrine keeps coming up when it essentially died in ‘87, no legislation has been proposed to reinstate it,and President-elect Obama is not in favor of it’s return.