When the trial began last October, the Department of Justice was ready with some shocking revelations from Stark’s report, which cost upward of $1 million, required a subpoena to pry private data from Google, and took months to complete. Among them: “The number of sexually explicit websites is huge”; “Search results often include sexually explicit material”; and 1.1 percent of the websites indexed by the Google and MSN search engines are sexually explicit.
The government ostensibly wanted the numbers to underscore the need for censorship. But it’s hard to see how this percentage, or any other, is significant, since Internet space is not for practical purposes limited. It says even less about the average kid’s interaction with sleaze, since the Web is rarely experienced as a random sequence of sites. As the ACLU’s Chris Hansen put it in the trial’s closing statement, “Some people find [it] a scary number. Some people find it a reassuring number. What it mostly is, is an irrelevant number.” And an expensive one.