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To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (74964)8/20/1999 10:48:00 PM
From: Bill Harmond  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 164684
 
It was in Advertising age. Ranked by women, either 18-49, or 25-54.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (74964)8/20/1999 10:51:00 PM
From: Glenn D. Rudolph  Respond to of 164684
 
Newsbreak | Press Releases | Clippings | Op-Ed Articles

GERMANY: FOCUS - BERTELSMANN ADDRESSING GERMAN HATE BOOK SALES

By Deborah Cole
August 10,1999

BERLIN, (Reuters) -- German media giant Bertelsmann said on Tuesday it would advise its
online bookselling partner Barnesandnoble.com to stop selling Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf"
and other hate literature banned in Germany.

The company was reacting to a complaint sent by the Los Angeles-based Simon
Wiesenthal Center to the German Justice Ministry accusing Barnesandnoble.com and
rival Amazon.com of violating German law by selling such books to German consumers
online.

"Bertelsmann will suggest that Barnesandnoble.com's management create a list of books
that will no longer be sold in Germany," Bertelsmann Chief Executive Thomas Middelhoff
told Reuters in a telephone interview.

"My impression is that the Barnesandnoble.com management is willing to cooperate with
us on this," he said.

Middelhoff added that Bertelsmann might use a list of hate literature from the Wiesenthal
Center as a basis for what books it would suggest banning from its German selection.

Bertelsmann and U.S. book store chain Barnes and Noble each own 40 percent of the
Barnesandnoble.com with the remaining 20 percent on the New York Stock Exchange.
Amazon.com was not immediately available for comment.

Middelhoff added that it aimed to block the distribution of "Mein Kampf" and other hate
literature to Germany immediately. But he noted that because Barnesandnoble.com was
an independent company, its management had the right to determine a policy.

The Wiesenthal Center had said on Monday that its Internet researchers in Germany
had ordered and received copies of "Mein Kampf" and "The Protocols of the Elders of
Zion," a fraudulent early 20th century document that claimed an international Jewish
conspiracy, from the two Internet companies.

The German Justice Ministry said that it was reviewing the accusations against the two
retailers and noted that companies can be held legally responsible for distributing hate
literature in Germany even if they are based in the United States.

"The law in Germany is clear," a ministry spokesman said. "Offering material that incites
racial hatred with the intention of distributing it in Germany is illegal."


He added that he was not aware of any official investigation of Amazon.com or
Barnesandnoble.com by German prosecutors.

Owning books with anti-Semitic or racist content is not necessarily illegal in Germany. But
those found guilty of distributing hate literature or possessing such material with intent to
distribute can be sentenced to up to three years in prison and fined.

Middelhoff said that such cases illustrated the new legal minefield created by the Internet.

"There are cultural differences at work here. This is a clear case illustrating the global
nature of the Internet, as a mass medium that doesn't recognise any boundaries,"
Middelhoff said. "We need to find a way of dealing with this phenomenon."

He added that executives from the telecommunications and media industries planned to
present proposals for Internet regulation to government officials and trade body
representatives at a Global Business Dialogue summit in Paris in September.

¸ Reuter Limited 1999