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12.01.2008 3:50 pm

Words like “hot” and “young adult” fire up spam filters

St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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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?”

2 comments

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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?

— Think|
5:48 pm December 1st, 2008

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.

— slamfist
8:26 pm December 1st, 2008