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Computer underground Digest Sun July 5, 1998 Volume 10 : Issue 37
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #10.37 (Sun, July 5, 1998)
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File 1--Islands of the Net (Italy) Restituted! (fwd)
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File 2--Folklore- "Spammers Will Hurt You if You Challenge Them"
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File 3--Next: Pigs That Fly? (NETFUTURE #72 Reprint)
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File 4--The (long) NIGHT OF THE LIVING (brain) DEAD (pt 1)
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File 5--Imaginary Gardens. The Eyes of a Child. June 26, 1998
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File 6--REVIEW: "net.wars", Wendy W. Grossman
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File 7--Couple of announcements from DC-ISOC
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File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 25 Apr, 1998)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ApPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Fri, 3 Jul 1998 19:46:25 -0700 (PDT)
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From: Arturo Di Corinto <arturo@Psych.Stanford.EDU>
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Subject: File 1--Islands of the Net (Italy) Restituted! (fwd)
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Good news! The server of Islands in the Net has been unseized!
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It`s not on line yet, but so far We have:
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-28 Mirrors
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--1 Protesta(k)tion Kit
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--4 Interrogations to the Parliament
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--1 new machine
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--1 declaration from the Federations of the Italian Press in favour of InR
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--several press release indignant at the judge and the police
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--HUNDREDS NEW FRIENDS :)
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WHAT THE POLICE WANT
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--log-files of the so-called defamatory message (silly)
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WHAT The Judge Wants
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--understand how to "seize" a messagge without seizing the server :)))
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(stupid)
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WHAT WE WANT
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--TO BUILD a CROSSBORDER COOPERATION WITH SUBJECTS "LIKE" US
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(hopefully)
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Thanks to everyone who supported us!
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For more info, please go to: http://ecn.nodo50.org
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----------------------------------------------------------
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July 1, 1998
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An Isole nella Rete (INR) representative and his lawyer filed a claim for
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the restitution of INR server to the Vicenza Prosecutor office this
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morning.
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Prosecutor Paolo Pecori said he had already ruled accordingly yesterday
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afternoon.
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The INR server will be delivered back to the Bologna provider office by
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the Postal Police tomorrow.
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This result is due to the strong and prompt reaction of the
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Internet community, both on the local and global level.
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Particularly active were the INR members and the hundreds of
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people and other associations which had been involved with the INR
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activities over the last two years. This worldwidespread network
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proved able to strongly voice and implement a high level of
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solidarity and cooperation which, in a matter of hours after the
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server seizure, led to the digital community spontaneaously
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organizing to firmly defend its rights against any legal abuse.
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by Bernardo Parrella
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------------------------------
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Date: Sat, 4 Jul 1998 18:38:25 -0400 (EDT)
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From: editor@TELECOM-DIGEST.ORG
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Subject: File 2--Folklore- "Spammers Will Hurt You if You Challenge Them"
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: For those not familiar with Pat Townson's
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TELECOM DIGEST, it's an exceptional resource. From the header
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of TcD:
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"TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but
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not exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is
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circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to various
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telecom forums on a variety of public service systems and
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networks including Compuserve and America On Line. It is also
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gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. Subscriptions are available to
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qualified organizations and individual readers. Write and tell
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us how you qualify:
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* ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu * ======" ))
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==================
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Source - TELECOM Digest Sat, 4 Jul 98 Volume 18 : Issue 105
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From- Michael A. Covington <covington@mindspring.com>
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Subject- Folklore- "Spammers Will Hurt You if You Challenge Them"
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Date- Fri, 3 Jul 1998 11:05:44 -0400
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Recently I was warned by a well-meaning netizen that I should not
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challenge spammers because if challenged, they'll do all kinds of
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things like mail-bomb me, steal my credit card numbers (how?), turn me
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in to the police on false charges, etc. etc.
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Balderdash. That sounds like a rumor started by a spammer. In three
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years as computer security chairman at the University of Georgia, I've
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never encountered a spammer with any detectable amount of courage. If
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anybody actually tried to do those things, we'd gleefully catch and
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prosecute them.
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One *sure* way to turn a neighborhood over to criminals -- either in
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physical space or in cyberspace -- is to get everybody afraid of
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*imaginary* crimes that haven't happened and haven't even been
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threatened. Criminals love it when that happens. Let's not let it
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happen to the Net.
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Michael A. Covington / AI Center / The University of Georgia
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http://www.ai.uga.edu/~mc http://www.mindspring.com/~covington <><
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[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Bravo! Amen! In the case of real
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neighborhoods and real people (as opposed to the net) those stories
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are often spread by the police; they do not like citizens trying to
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horn in on their 'law and order' monopoly. Consider how the police
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always like to give you the BS about 'if someone tries to rob you or
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hold you up (at place of business for example), never resist, always
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give them whatever they want; why, they might try to hurt you or they
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might have a gun, etc.' ... to which I always tell the cop he is full
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of it. If someone tries to hold me up or assualt me, my response is to
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try and kill them; yours should be too. Certainly I value my own life,
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but I am the sort of stubborn person that if some person wants to rob
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me of five or ten dollars, I'd just as soon see them -- if they get
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caught -- be tried on murder charges as well. You might try living
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your life in the manner Johann Sebastian Bach lived his; he was not
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afraid of death, in fact he welcomed it. His attitude was 'take me
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anytime, Lord ...'. I am neither afraid of death, nor do I 'welcome'
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it; but if I cannot live my life in peace and quiet and harmony with
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others then damned if I am going to let my assilant do it either.
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*Never* submit to a crime against yourself with at least making the
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assailant wish he had left you alone. Blind him, maim him, cripple
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him, whatever. That way the police can have something real to complain
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about instead of their all-to-frequent nonsensical belly aching.
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Now regards the same principle and the net: When you have some form
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of practical and effecient recourse against a spammer, **use it**.
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Stay within the law -- even in a physical assualt you should try to
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do only what is necessary to stop the act -- but definitly make the
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spammer come to grips with the realities of the net ... make certain
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he goes away realizing his spamming was not a smart thing to do.
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We often times have tell-free numbers for them; use those numbers in
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a way to make sure the spammer understands the vast readership on
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the net and how so many millions of people saw his message. <grin>.
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If he has a *valid* email address, I suggest punishing his ISP if
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the ISP otherwise won't assist. Make sure they feel the wrath. Make
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certain they go away wishing they had never even gotten an internet
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access account.
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As Mr. Covington points out, most of them are cowards. And if they
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want to steal your credit card numbers or use your address for their
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email, I say **good** -- great in fact. Cause now you really have
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a good beef with them, and a way to force the issue and see them in
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jail. Why settle for erasing spam all day and complaining about it
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when maybe you can induce one of the goofs to act out against you
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so you can *really* kick his ass good? <grin> PAT]
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------------------------------
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From: Stephen Talbott <stevet@MERLIN.ALBANY.NET>
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Date: Tue, 2 Jun 1998 13:55:36 -0400
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Subject: File 3--Next: Pigs That Fly? (NETFUTURE #72 Reprint)
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: It's no secret that technology, science,
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and information aren't neutral. But, it never hurts to
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remind those who think otherwise)
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Source: NETFUTURE (Technology & Human Responsibility) #72
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Editor: Stephen L. Talbott (stevet@oreilly.com)
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On the Web: http://www.oreilly.com/~stevet/netfuture/
|
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|
You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Next: Pigs That Fly?
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--------------------
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Andrew Kimbrell, founder of the International Center for Technology
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Assessment in Washington, D.C., describes one of the "classic" experiments
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in genetic engineering this way:
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Dr. Vernon Pursel inserted the human growth gene in a pig. Pursel
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hoped to create giant pigs that would be major meat producers. The
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problem was that though the human growth gene was in every cell of the
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pig's body it did not act in the manner the scientists expected.
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Instead of making the pig larger it made it squat, cross-eyed, bow-
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legged, smaller than an average pig, with huge bone mass, a truly
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wretched product of science without ethics. Pursel tried to find a
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silver lining in his experiment gone wrong by claiming that the pig was
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leaner. Pursel's argument was that people are worried about
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cholesterol, so maybe we can sell this as lean pig. Did he really
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think the public was ready for pork chops with human genes?
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That pig strikes me as a good metaphor for the constructions of the
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Information Age. The prevailing notion is that we have this massive
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collection of information -- exemplified by several hundred thousand
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snippets of human genetic code -- which we can merrily pass from one
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database to another, inserting this piece here and that piece there.
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But there is no such thing as an "objective piece of information". Like a
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word in a sentence, a bit of information *means* a particular thing only
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within a given context. Pursel's pig symbolizes the kind of result you
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get when you ignore context and try to build things from the bottom up --
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that is, when you start with the reduced products of your sophisticated
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analyses, forgetting what it was you were analyzing in the first place.
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Context in the present case means, to begin with, the pig itself. Pursel
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was willing to see fragments of DNA -- and even lean pork chops -- but did
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not care to see the pig. Such is the technological mindset we now trust
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to re-engineer the human being.
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Exactly the same trust is at work wherever information is glorified as the
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decisive form of capital, the basis for problem-solving, and the
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fundamental ingredient of all knowledge.
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(Kimbrell's remark, incidentally, occurs in a remarkable new book from the
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Sierra Club, called *Turning Away from Technology*, edited by Stephanie
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Mills. I hope to review it in the near future.)
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|
==================
|
||
|
|
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|
NETFUTURE is a newsletter and forwarding service dealing with technology
|
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|
and human responsibility. It is hosted by the UDT Core Programme of the
|
||
|
International Federation of Library Associations. Postings occur roughly
|
||
|
once every week or two. The editor is Steve Talbott, author of "The
|
||
|
Future Does Not Compute: Transcending the Machines in Our Midst".
|
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|
|
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|
You may redistribute this newsletter for noncommercial purposes. You may
|
||
|
also redistribute individual articles in their entirety, provided the
|
||
|
NETFUTURE url and this paragraph are attached.
|
||
|
|
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|
Current and past issues of NETFUTURE are available on the Web:
|
||
|
|
||
|
http://www.oreilly.com/~stevet/netfuture/
|
||
|
http://www.ifla.org/udt/netfuture/ (mirror site)
|
||
|
http://ifla.inist.fr/VI/5/nf/ (mirror site)
|
||
|
|
||
|
To subscribe to NETFUTURE, send an email message like this:
|
||
|
To: listserv@infoserv.nlc-bnc.ca
|
||
|
subscribe netfuture yourfirstname yourlastname
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
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Date: Tue, 09 Jun 1998 23:46:17 -0400
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|
From: Tom Truex <sleddog@k-line.org>
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Subject: File 4--The (long) NIGHT OF THE LIVING (brain) DEAD (pt 1)
|
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|
|
||
|
SOURCE: oNline Christian eMagazine
|
||
|
1. Request to be put on the subscription list by sending email to
|
||
|
sleddog@k-line.org with the Subject, "SUBSCRIBE EMAG"
|
||
|
2. BBS, Davie, FL, USA: 954-792-8355
|
||
|
3. World Wide Web: http://www.k-line.org
|
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|
4. FidoNet (1:369/155), FREQ, using the magic word, "EMAG."
|
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|
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================================================================
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EDITORIAL: THE (long) NIGHT OF THE LIVING (brain) DEAD, part 1
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================================================================
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It is true that a picture paints a thousand words. Sometimes
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though, the words are--like the chalkboard in Bart Simpson's
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classroom--the same words written over and over and over.
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Moreover, upon close inspection, the thousand words may be "I am
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stupid", repeated three hundred thirty three times{1}.
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The term "GUI" (graphical user interface) is seldomly used.
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Because it is almost always assumed. There still are text based
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programs. Even brand new, off the shelf{2}, Windows 95 text based
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programs. For example, I run a computer bulletin board system
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|
(BBS) that is largely text based. The supporting programs and
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|
miscellaneous cyber-glue hacks that hold it together are largely
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text based. But my case is an exception to a rule that is as wide
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|
and deep as the Grand Canyon. New software--especially consumer
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|
oriented software--is almost exclusively graphical in nature.
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That is, lots of pretty pictures and cute icons. Which is a
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|
shame, because the GUI is largely responsible for what I view as
|
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|
the failure of the utility of personal computing to keep pace with
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|
the technological advances in personal computing.
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|
In former times, personal computers came in big boxes that
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|
said "IBM PC" on the outside.{3} You got a CPU with an 8088
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|
processor, dual 5 1/4 inch floppy disk drives, and a monitor with
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pixels almost the size of green marbles. No hard drive. No sound
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card (what's a sound card?). No CD-ROM. It did however, have ROM
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that started PC-BASIC when you flipped up the ON switch.
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|
If you remember those early PC's--or if you have heard such
|
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|
tales from your grandpa, or some other cyber-codger--then you
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|
recall, or have heard of, the absolute awe with which we viewed
|
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|
the power of those machines. Awe because of the frame of
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|
reference. Early PC's from my perspective, were compared to
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|
typewriters. The ability to edit, copy and "word process"
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|
compared to a top of the line typewriter was breathtaking.
|
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|
Database management and spreadsheets were veritable miracles. The
|
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|
man-hour{4} savings were worth a fortune to offices like mine. Of
|
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|
course we no longer frame our comparisons in terms of
|
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|
typewriters. Indeed, most people never use a typewriter. Most
|
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|
kids have never seen one. Surely, typical business applications
|
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|
have come a long way since the first PC. But the majority of the
|
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|
increased hardware and software technology has been misspent on
|
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|
pretty pictures and cute icons. Is there any sane reason why a
|
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|
word processing program used to fit on one 360k floppy disk; but
|
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|
now requires 60 or 80 Megabytes. That's a lot of 360k floppies!
|
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|
Hey, I like the spell check and grammar check. The fonts can be
|
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|
useful on occasion. It's even nice to be able to print in
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|
colors. Those features hog a few bytes. But not two hundred
|
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|
times as many bytes.
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|
The CD-ROM points to another vast intellectual wasteland.
|
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|
Surely the CD-ROM was about the most exciting thing that I can
|
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|
recall about computing. I had visions of the whole public library
|
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|
packed into a plastic disk that I could slip into my shirt
|
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|
pocket.{5} Alas, there have been some noble efforts. I have a
|
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|
nice personal library on CD-ROMs. Of course, I didn't just
|
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|
stumble into the local computer store and make my selections out
|
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|
of the discount bin. But to be fair, my tastes in reading
|
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|
material are not always mainline. IMHO, the CD-ROM should have
|
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|
been a huge reservoir in which to store accumulated human
|
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|
knowledge, information and data. Instead, the CD-ROM is reduced
|
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|
to the launching pad for bloated programs and lots and lots and
|
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|
lots of pretty pictures. And sound clips and video clips.
|
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|
I do not care if the hordes of consumer buyers want easy to
|
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|
use, out of the box, plug and play products. It certainly doesn't
|
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|
bother me that such products are used and enjoyed. If there's a
|
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|
market some day for computers with pink shag carpet glued to the
|
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|
side, that's fine with me. If people want them, then
|
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|
manufacturers should make them and vendors should sell them. My
|
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|
complaint is that the price of superfluous products is the lost
|
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|
opportunity to have really good, useful applications. If the
|
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|
computer industry is catering to the lowest common denominator,
|
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|
then it is not catering to what I perceive as good and useful.
|
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|
Namely the perfection of products that will improve my
|
||
|
productivity and my mind; not just catch the attention of my eyes
|
||
|
and ears. As consumer computer products continue to converge with
|
||
|
consumer entertainment products, the result will be not unlike an
|
||
|
intellectual train wreck.
|
||
|
I had to chuckle when I picked up a computer magazine the
|
||
|
other day. There was a article about some of the electronic
|
||
|
magazines to which I subscribe. Beside the short blurb about
|
||
|
Computer Underground Digest (CuD){6} was a picture of the CuD web
|
||
|
page. To tell you the truth, I was a reader of CuD for quite a
|
||
|
while before I even knew that they had a web page. CuD is all
|
||
|
text. When you get it via email or their newsgroup, you either
|
||
|
view it on your computer monitor, or you print it out on your
|
||
|
printer. No pretty pictures. Just text. Though the picture on
|
||
|
the CuD web page has nothing to do with the publication, the
|
||
|
computer magazine felt compelled to offer up a little graphical
|
||
|
reinforcement. I suppose that if I understood real magazines I
|
||
|
wouldn't question the fact that pictures are what sell magazines.
|
||
|
As of right now, no pictures are scheduled for my publication,
|
||
|
oNline Christian eMagazine.{7}
|
||
|
A few weeks ago, I visited a little horror show at my
|
||
|
daughters' elementary school that the educators titled "technology
|
||
|
night." I suppose that I should sleep easier with
|
||
|
the knowledge that the County School Board has mandated the use
|
||
|
of sophisticated blocking software and "firewalls" (those terms
|
||
|
can be used interchangeably, in case you didn't know{8}) to
|
||
|
prevent my kids from seeing any evil sights/sites. Also to be
|
||
|
blocked{9} are "any entertainment sites"; with the Disney web
|
||
|
page named as an example{10}. This IS education, after all.
|
||
|
But, again I digress. The real heart stopping, spine jolting,
|
||
|
slap in my slackjawed, unshaven face with a cold giant squid
|
||
|
(figuratively speaking, of course), was tucked in the back room
|
||
|
of the "technology center." (Remember when they used to call
|
||
|
that place a "library"?) In the aforesaid back room was
|
||
|
percolating my worst case scenario of the abuse of the GUI. The
|
||
|
computer program on display, we soon learned, was designed for
|
||
|
Kindergarten students. The simultaneous "oohs" and "ahhs" of
|
||
|
the other parents sufficiently covered my quiet gasp of blind,
|
||
|
stark terror. The software being exhibited looked like a cheap
|
||
|
Saturday morning cartoon{11}. The animation and sound really
|
||
|
rivaled what you see on television. Except that the assorted
|
||
|
barnyard cartoon figures invited the kid at the mouse to click
|
||
|
on various images to get a favorable response.{12} Complete with
|
||
|
the annoying sort of sound clips that used to intoxicate kids
|
||
|
into feeding more coins into the machines at the video arcade.
|
||
|
My daughters tell me that such programs make the learning
|
||
|
process more interesting.{13} But I see such programs as the
|
||
|
training grounds for future generations of computer users.
|
||
|
Future consumers with an insatiable appetite for an ever more
|
||
|
sophisticated parade of sound and sights gushing from their
|
||
|
computers. Content? Well, only if necessary to either enhance
|
||
|
the show, or to justify it's use in schools. My generation grew
|
||
|
up watching mindless trash spewing out of the family
|
||
|
television. Now we neither expect nor demand anything better
|
||
|
from television. I fear that future generations will neither
|
||
|
expect nor demand anything better from personal computers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
FOOTNOTES
|
||
|
{1}For the mathematicians, add the word "done" at the end.
|
||
|
{2}Not the "shelf" of retail computer superstores of course. I
|
||
|
mean off the shelf of shareware or mail order specialty software
|
||
|
vendors.
|
||
|
{3}I still have such a box in my attic. It's crammed full of
|
||
|
Christmas ornaments.
|
||
|
{4}Or woman-hours, in most cases.
|
||
|
{5}Copyrights and royalties you ask??? Oh yeah--guess it might
|
||
|
not have worked after all.
|
||
|
{6}One of my personal favorite publications.
|
||
|
{7}Except of course for the picture of my late pet chicken,
|
||
|
Betty, on my web page.
|
||
|
{8}Note for the humor impaired-> ;-)
|
||
|
{9}Or "firewalled". See previous note.
|
||
|
{10}I can think of a lot of good reasons to block the Disney web
|
||
|
page. The fact that it contains "entertainment" isn't one of
|
||
|
those reasons.
|
||
|
{11}The mouths usually move when the characters are talking, but
|
||
|
the background scenery doesn't move too much.
|
||
|
{12}The keyboard wasn't used.
|
||
|
{13}See Angie's article printed elsewhere in this issue of
|
||
|
oNline Christian eMagazine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Fri, 26 Jun 1998 09:47:15 -0500
|
||
|
From: Richard Thieme <rthieme@thiemeworks.com>
|
||
|
Subject: File 5--Imaginary Gardens. The Eyes of a Child. June 26, 1998
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Eyes of a Child
|
||
|
by Richard Thieme
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
I used to be amused when I was an Episcopal priest that people thought of
|
||
|
ministry as detached from "real life." The truth is, one hears just about
|
||
|
everything, from the biting stings of an overly scrupulous conscience to
|
||
|
obvious denial that enables people who commit murder to sleep peacefully as
|
||
|
if they have done nothing more than swat a few flies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And yet =85 the perspective of the years sometimes vanishes and one hears
|
||
|
with clarity the still small voice of the child inside.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This morning it is Microsoft - again - on the front page of the Wall Street
|
||
|
Journal, doing its best to destroy a bankrupt entrepreneur whose daughter
|
||
|
has leukemia. Their brigade of lawyers - trained to delay justice and
|
||
|
slaughter the innocent - claim that "Internet Explorer" is a generic term
|
||
|
(you know, like windows) and that nobody can own it. Their disingenuous
|
||
|
arguments remind me of tobacco company executives, solid citizens dressed
|
||
|
in thousand dollar suits, lying to Congress about human beings they
|
||
|
knowingly killed and cover-ups that testify to the depth of the river of
|
||
|
blood through which they waded eye-deep in hell to a pusher's profits.=20
|
||
|
|
||
|
So this is the question: when those folks in the front seats at dinners in
|
||
|
their honor tell those bold-faced lies, does that child's voice ever reach
|
||
|
their ears? Do they even know they are lying or have they convinced
|
||
|
themselves that the appearance of integrity is just another card to play in
|
||
|
a crooked game?=20
|
||
|
|
||
|
Jane Wagner said, I am getting more and more cynical all the time and I
|
||
|
still can't keep up. But cynicism is the pain of disillusioned idealists
|
||
|
who - once in a while - see with the eyes of a child, hear that child's
|
||
|
voice, and remember the kind of world we dreamed it could be.=20
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
********************************************************************
|
||
|
|
||
|
Imaginary Gardens is a daily reflection on techno/spirituality --
|
||
|
the interaction between ourselves, computer technology, and the
|
||
|
ultimate concerns of our lives.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To subscribe to Imaginary Gardens, send email to
|
||
|
rthieme@thiemeworks.com with "subscribe gardens" in the body of
|
||
|
the message. To unsubscribe, send an email to
|
||
|
rthieme@thiemeworks.com with the word "unsubscribe gardens" in the body
|
||
|
of the message.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Imaginary Gardens and the weekly column, Islands in the
|
||
|
Clickstream, are archived at the ThiemeWorks web site at
|
||
|
http://www.thiemeworks.com.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Copyright 1998 Richard Thieme. All rights reserved.=20
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Fri, 3 Jul 1998 10:32:26 -0800
|
||
|
From: "Rob Slade, doting grandpa of Ryan and Trevor" <rslade@sprint.ca>
|
||
|
Subject: File 6--REVIEW: "net.wars", Wendy W. Grossman
|
||
|
|
||
|
BKNETWRS.RVW 980329
|
||
|
|
||
|
"net.wars", Wendy W. Grossman, 1997, 0-8147-3103-1, U$21.95
|
||
|
%A Wendy W. Grossman wendyg@skeptic.demon.co.uk
|
||
|
%C 70 Washington Square South, New York, NY 10012-1091
|
||
|
%D 1997
|
||
|
%G 0-8147-3103-1
|
||
|
%I New York University Press
|
||
|
%O U$21.95 800-996-6987 fax 212-995-3833 feedback@nyupress.nyu.edu
|
||
|
%P 236 p.
|
||
|
%T "net.wars"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I'm still not quite sure about this title. Wars there are, but mostly
|
||
|
either fairly genteel or heavily one-sided. Most of the descriptions
|
||
|
seem to be more about the warring camps than the wars themselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like a great many Internet books, this one starts with a history. But
|
||
|
it is history with a difference. The writing is both personal *and*
|
||
|
relevant, a combination almost impossible to achieve. Grossman has
|
||
|
already admitted, in the introduction, that objectivity is futile, and
|
||
|
further notes that each person comes to the net from a different
|
||
|
perspective, and therefore experiences a different net. Yet the story
|
||
|
of The Great Renaming and The Year September Never Ended are of much
|
||
|
greater moment to current Internet users than DARPA's distant
|
||
|
wonderings about nuclear war hardened communications systems. The war
|
||
|
dealt with in chapter one is, of course, that between netizen and
|
||
|
newbie. One important social point is not made: this battle is not
|
||
|
new, and has been fought every year between the "occupying" forces on
|
||
|
the net, and the equal number of newcomers (an automatic consequence
|
||
|
of the net's doubling of size in every year since about 1980.) The
|
||
|
material may occasionally jar those with the most esoteric technical
|
||
|
understanding (Gilmore's censorship aphorism does also refer to the
|
||
|
technical difficulty of impeding the net), but these isolated
|
||
|
instances only serve to point out that the author is otherwise well
|
||
|
familiar with the net and its myriad uses. Chapter two looks to the
|
||
|
fight between commercial and non-commercial forces, and in particular
|
||
|
the emergence of spam in various forms. It's America OnLine (AOL)
|
||
|
versus the net in chapter three's thoroughly researched and documented
|
||
|
piece. The aol.com domain was the system Internauts loved to hate for
|
||
|
a while, although that position is rapidly being assumed by
|
||
|
hotmail.com nowadays.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chapter four looks at the issue of encryption, and there are enough
|
||
|
fights there for anyone. Again, the finer technical points of
|
||
|
cryptography are questionable, but the general discussion is good. I
|
||
|
have written before (cf BKOPGPUG.RVW) about the ironies attendant upon
|
||
|
PGP (Pretty Good Privacy); in view of the recent change in ownership
|
||
|
of PGP Inc. Grossman's comments about Zimmermann as the most trusted
|
||
|
cryptographer on the net are yet one more iron in the file. The
|
||
|
discussion continues in chapter five with more emphasis on the issue
|
||
|
of key escrow and export controls.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For those who know something of it, but are not themselves
|
||
|
Scientologists, the shenanigans surrounding that group are completely
|
||
|
mystifying. Grossman's account of the battles royal surrounding
|
||
|
alt.religion.scientology, in chapter six, is fascinating, but even
|
||
|
more intriguing are the fairly glaring holes in the story. (The
|
||
|
material that *is* included provides a fairly obvious explanation for
|
||
|
what is not.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Chapter seven looks at the issue of censorship and the various
|
||
|
government measures in relation to it. As one who lives outside the
|
||
|
confines of the United States I very much appreciated the fact that
|
||
|
Grossman has lived abroad and therefore knows that 1) the First
|
||
|
Amendment does not, strictly speaking, hold outside the US and 2)
|
||
|
nobody outside the US really cares all that much about the First or
|
||
|
the Constitution it amends. The moral dilemmas of censorship, its
|
||
|
technical infeasibilty, and the contraindicated side effects are
|
||
|
mostly dealt with quite well. I found it a bit of a pity that Rimm's
|
||
|
purported "study" and the other ill-advised reactions were not
|
||
|
discussed in more detail. This omission is fully rectified in chapter
|
||
|
nine, although it's hard to understand why the pieces are not only
|
||
|
separate but separated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Grossman's take on the issue of women in cyberspace makes for a very
|
||
|
informative and useful chapter eight. Eminently fair and reasonable,
|
||
|
the material dismisses trivialities to deal with real, and much
|
||
|
larger, concerns. The same is true of chapter ten's view of hackers--
|
||
|
if you read it all together. There is a lovely irony in one
|
||
|
individual`s comment on women that really captures the social ethic of
|
||
|
the whole milieu.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While Grossman is obviously, and openly, biased in favour of the net,
|
||
|
she is also clearsighted about its shortcomings. One such is the fact
|
||
|
that even in the world's least regimented society there are misfits,
|
||
|
and a number are documented in chapter eleven. Chapter twelve is a
|
||
|
solid overview of the difficulty of defining the net, and its
|
||
|
demographics. (Just for the record, Netscape started using cookies in
|
||
|
1995, and MS's Internet Explorer uses a directory with multiple files
|
||
|
in place of the more compact COOKIE.TXT.) The question of the net
|
||
|
contribution to democracy is briefly reviewed in chapter thirteen.
|
||
|
Chapter fourteen looks at the unkillable question about whether the
|
||
|
net is dead, dying, or can die. Most of chapter fifteen appears to
|
||
|
deal with electronic commerce. Chapter sixteen rounds off the book
|
||
|
but I'm not sure in which direction: part of it seems to look at the
|
||
|
actions the Internet can take in regard to politics, and part seems to
|
||
|
examine what kind of politics might develop on the net.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In choosing to present the various, sundry, and possibly warring
|
||
|
groups involved with the Internet Grossman has done what Rheingold
|
||
|
didn't quite accomplish in "The Virtual Community" (cf. BKVRTCOM.RVW).
|
||
|
net.wars provides the non-netted reader with a real feel for the real
|
||
|
Internet. For all of the author's protestations that each person
|
||
|
approaches the net distinctly, she has certainly been able to isolate
|
||
|
the common ground of the long time Internaut. Those who know the net
|
||
|
will find the content familiar and enjoyable, and those who don't will
|
||
|
definitely learn something. Would that this could be made required
|
||
|
reading for everyone buying a new account. Or does that just make me
|
||
|
one of the grumpy old guard from chapter one ...
|
||
|
|
||
|
copyright Robert M. Slade, 1998 BKNETWRS.RVW 980329
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Wed, 01 Jul 1998 15:00:23 -0400
|
||
|
From: Russ Haynal <russ@NAVIGATORS.COM>
|
||
|
Subject: File 7--Couple of announcements from DC-ISOC
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hello DC-ISOC . . . Just a couple of quick announcements that
|
||
|
might be of Interest to members in the Washington DC Metro Area.
|
||
|
(A couple of DC-ISOC meetings will be planned for the fall months)
|
||
|
- Russ Haynal
|
||
|
|
||
|
E-Gov VOLUNTEERS
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Internet Society is looking for volunteers to help staff their
|
||
|
booth during the Next Week's E-Gov 9298.
|
||
|
|
||
|
July 7 - 10 * E-GOV '98 * The National Electronic Government
|
||
|
Conference and Exposition. Washington Convention Center,
|
||
|
Washington, D. C., 150 nationally known experts will help you
|
||
|
understand the transformation to Electronic Government. More than
|
||
|
200 leading companies will show you
|
||
|
new technology enabling faster, better government services. The
|
||
|
year's biggest event devoted exclusively to Electronic
|
||
|
Government. More information is available at http://www.e-gov.com
|
||
|
|
||
|
Anyone Interested in volunteering, should contact The Internet
|
||
|
Society Headquarters:
|
||
|
Mary Burger
|
||
|
mburger@isoc.org
|
||
|
703-648-9888
|
||
|
|
||
|
Martin Burack (Executive Director of ISOC) would like to know if ther
|
||
|
e are any ISOC members in the D.C. area who speak Spanish and
|
||
|
might be available July 16th for a live TV broadcast (and maybe
|
||
|
call-in questions) to Latin America. One person is already lined
|
||
|
up to participate, but ISOC would like to have a back-up.
|
||
|
Please contact martin at ISOC headquarters: 703 648 9888 or
|
||
|
burack@isoc.org
|
||
|
|
||
|
from Gabe Goldberg...
|
||
|
|
||
|
DC computer/network users are welcome at international user group
|
||
|
meeting in Washington in August.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the oldest computer user groups in the world, SHARE, will
|
||
|
meet in Washington this summer, August 16-21. Historically focused
|
||
|
on IBM mainframe/enterprise computing, SHARE also covers network,
|
||
|
Internet/intranet, workstation, server, and many other current
|
||
|
topics. SHARE's "big tent" allows one-stop shopping for
|
||
|
information and resources critical to large and complex
|
||
|
information technology organizations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
As a long-time SHARE participant, I'm enthusiastic about attending
|
||
|
one of the rare (three times in 20 years) SHARE meetings in
|
||
|
Washington. And I'm pleased that SHARE has agreed to let local
|
||
|
user group members attend at the discounted SHARE member
|
||
|
registration rate and save more than $200. I'm helping SHARE
|
||
|
communicate with local user groups, and hope to help user group
|
||
|
members understand what SHARE offers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Briefly quoting SHARE literature:
|
||
|
|
||
|
For more than 40 years, SHARE has brought together top industry
|
||
|
representatives for learning, networking, and advocacy purposes.
|
||
|
SHARE's vision of the future includes providing technology,
|
||
|
connections, and results for its members.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Technology: SHARE provides comprehensive technical educational
|
||
|
programs using the practical, hands-on knowledge of its members
|
||
|
and leading developers and innovaters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Connections: SHARE provides peer networking to thousands of IT
|
||
|
professionals across the country and allows members to connect
|
||
|
with IBM and top information technology organizations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Results: The end result of the technical education and industry
|
||
|
connections SHARE provides is the implementation of new
|
||
|
solutions within member organizations.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-- More than 40 years old, one of the first computer user groups
|
||
|
founded
|
||
|
-- Offers cost-effective training, hands-on class/lab experience
|
||
|
-- Meets twice yearly around United States
|
||
|
-- Average week-long meeting attendance over 2000 people
|
||
|
-- Next meets in Washington, DC, August 16-21, 1998
|
||
|
(third visit to DC in 20 years)
|
||
|
-- Includes 800+ technical sessions in several themed program tracks
|
||
|
including Internet/intranets, and full-day tutorials (e.g., All You
|
||
|
Wanted to Know About the World Wide Web and TCP/IP, But Were Afraid
|
||
|
to Ask; Jump Start to Java Programming; Year 2000 Technologies,
|
||
|
Methodologies, and Tools)
|
||
|
-- Participation allows networking with colleagues. influencing vendors
|
||
|
-- Volunteering builds organizational, presentation, management skills
|
||
|
-- Resources enhance business solutions, technical skills,
|
||
|
preventive maintenance, career development
|
||
|
-- Technology exchange allows dialogue with vendors (e.g., IBM,
|
||
|
Computer Associates, Microsoft)
|
||
|
-- SHARE is courting/collaborating with Washington-area user groups,
|
||
|
raffling free day registrations
|
||
|
For more Information: Gabe Goldberg, gabe@acm.org, or <http://www.sha
|
||
|
re.org>
|
||
|
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Date: Thu, 25 Apr 1998 22:51:01 CST
|
||
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
||
|
Subject: File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 25 Apr, 1998)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
||
|
available at no cost electronically.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
|
||
|
|
||
|
Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line:
|
||
|
|
||
|
SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
|
||
|
Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
|
||
|
|
||
|
DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6436), fax (815-753-6302)
|
||
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
||
|
60115, USA.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
|
||
|
Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
|
||
|
(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
|
||
|
|
||
|
CuD is readily accessible from the Net:
|
||
|
UNITED STATES: ftp.etext.org (206.252.8.100) in /pub/CuD/CuD
|
||
|
Web-accessible from: http://www.etext.org/CuD/CuD/
|
||
|
ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
|
||
|
aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
|
||
|
world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
|
||
|
wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
|
||
|
EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/CuD/CuD/ (Finland)
|
||
|
ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
|
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Cu Digest WWW site at:
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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End of Computer Underground Digest #10.02
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