|
Watchdog group urges Yahoo to end racist auctions
Yahoo
is under fire again for permitting the sale of Nazi paraphernalia
on its auction site. BiasHelp of Long Island, a Huntington,
N.Y., organization that monitors hate crimes, sent a letter
last Tuesday to Yahoos chief executive asking the portal
giant to ban the sale of Nazi - and Ku Klux Klan - related
merchandise.
Saying that it found nearly 2,000 auctions featuring those
items, BiasHelp called on Yahoo to be sensitive to those who
have been victims of hate crimes and to the needs of the auction
areas diverse audience. While we are sensitive
to free speech considerations, those interested in purchasing
music, toys or antiques via your site should not have to wade
through hundreds of Nazi or Klan postings, the group
said in its letter to chief executive Tim Koogle. Furthermore,
curious young people surfing your site should not have access
to materials that can be used to terrorize their communities,
nor should they be left with the impression that Adolph Hitler
or the Klan is worthy of memorializing through a merchandise
line.
BiasHelp representatives said they faxed the letter to Yahoo,
but a representative for the California-based company said
she did not know if Yahoo received the letter. Although the
sale of Nazi and Ku Klux Klan items does not violate the companys
current rules, Yahoo would be receptive to the letter, the
representative said.
BiasHelp regularly monitors eBay, Yahoo and other auction
sites for racist merchandise, said Jeffrey Reynolds, the organizations
chief operating officer. The group sent the letter to Koogle
after noticing an increase in the number of Nazi and Ku Klux
Klan items, especially knives and other weapons. Yahoo Auctions
terms of service ban the listing of any item which,
in Yahoos sole discretion, is inflammatory, offensive...racially
or ethnically objectionable, or otherwise inconsistent with
the spirit of Yahoo Auctions.
But Yahoo Auctions producer Brian Fitzgerald declined to say
whether Klan or Nazi-related merchandize in general or items
such as Klan pocket knives in specific violate those guidelines.
Anything you see on the site is representative of what
is currently allowed on the site as far as guidelines go,
Fitzgerald said. Something that is in violation of terms
of service, then we can take it down.
Unlike eBay or Amazon, Yahoo does not actively monitor its
auction site, instead relying on its members to notify it
of items that go against its guidelines. Yahoo will cancel
auctions only after a committee within it determines that
the auction is in clear violation of its rules; Fitzgerald
said he is not part of that committee. The letter comes as
Yahoo is embroiled in a related court case in France.
A French anti-racism group sued the company in April over
the sale of Nazi items on its auction site, which are illegal
under French law. A French judge ordered Yahoo to block the
sale of the items to French citizens but later temporarily
stayed the order. Yahoo is not the only Internet company to
be singed by racist merchandise.
Earlier this year, BiasHelp sent a letter to eBay asking it
to ban Ku Klux Klan-related merchandise. eBay responded to
that request and to a similar one from the Simon Wiesenthal
Center a group that fights against bigotry and anti-Semitism
by limiting the sale of items that promote hate groups
such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Aryan Nation.
Meanwhile, online booksellers Amazon.com and Barnes&Noble.com
have drawn criticism for selling racist and anti-Semitic books
such as The Turner Diaries and Adolph Hitlers Mein Kampf
in Canada and Germany. A search for nazi on Yahoo
Auctions last Wednesday yielded 1,839 items, including a new
Nazi battle flag, a bayonet with engraved swastikas and a
postcard of Hitler with German children.
Meanwhile, a search for KKK turned up 84 items,
including a Ku Klux Klan hood and robe. A search for kkk
knife turned up some 15 auctions of pocket knives with
the Ku Klux Klan logo on them. Among the 13 auctions of Nazi
knives is a replica of a trench knife. Items that can
be used as weapons, they can be used in the commission of
crimes, Reynolds said. My hope is Yahoo will look
at this issue, look at the high number of hate crimes, and
realize that its just not worth it to be in this business.
Other
Stories...
How
MS played cat and mouse
Intel
moves up date for Pentium 4 to be primary chip
Beatles
play to young crowd with Web siter
|