513 lines
24 KiB
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513 lines
24 KiB
Plaintext
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Date: Tue, 3 Jan 1995 16:13:07 -0800
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From: "Digital Media Perspective" <perspective@digmedia.com>
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Subject: Digital Media Perspective 95.01.03
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This publication should be viewed
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with a monospaced typeface
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such as Courier or Monaco
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________________________________________
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DIGITAL MEDIA PERSPECTIVE
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________________________________________
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January 3, 1995
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________________________________________
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Table of Contents
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The Mad Trappers of the High Internet
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I/O: Readers Respond
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Inside the January Issue of
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Digital Media: A Seybold Report
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Who We Are,
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Where to Reach Us
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How To Subscribe to DMP
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and Get Back Issues
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________________________________________
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The Mad Trappers of the High Internet
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by Mitch Ratcliffe
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Back in the 1870s and 1880s, pioneers talked up frontier legends about
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mad trappers who stalked the various mountain ranges, the Sierra, the
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Uintas, and the northern Rockies. These woodsmen had come west when
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there were just bison, beaver and Indians to hunt; but the passing of
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the frontier and their staple prey supposedly had driven them to
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stalking humans. There may have been one or two old mountain men who,
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if they stumbled onto a group separated from their wagon train, would
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skin the whole family, mother, father, grandma and the kids, and hang
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them on his wall like trophies. But for the people who made up the
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fat, Conestoga-borne underbelly of pioneer society, there was little
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reason to actually fear the skinning knife, which made the stories
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about slaughter all the more fun.
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The mad trappers on today's vanishing digital frontier are forging
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their legends themselves. They don't do much actual harm. However,
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they set the tone for debate -- or lack of debate -- about the mores
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of the technosystem by acting without clearly defined rules for good
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conduct on the information frontier. The function they serve, as
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boogie men and bomb throwers on behalf of the digital revolution, is
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important to note.
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The Net has given birth to a species of cranky old-timer who claims
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to battle the insidious forces of corporatism and spamming from their
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mountain hide-outs. The Internet Liberation Front sent email-bombs to
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Josh Quittner, a writer whose repeated exposes on the Legion of Doom
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and Masters of Deception probably invited the attacks, and WIRED,
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which has published several of Quittner's stories. The ILF claim they
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can defeat the minions of corporate America through hacking systems
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and by stealing source code. If this were actually the case,
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nuPrometheus would have had the power to make Macintosh the dominant
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computer platform, and AT&T would be providing long distance phone
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service to the Seychelles and almost nowhere else. Arnt Gulbrandsen,
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who canceled the spamming posts of attorneys Canter and Siegel last
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spring, is now running an anonymous remailer that shields the
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recently notorious Cancelmoose[tm], who erased what he called
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"off-topic" messages in a variety of Usenet newsgroups.
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The rationale for vigilantism is laid down by Alex Boldt, who
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maintains a black list of Internet users he believes should be
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singled out for punishment by the community because of their use of
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the Net for blatantly commercial purposes. "In a nutshell: the
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Internet is probably as close to an anarchy as we can get," Boldt
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writes in a FAQ file about his list. "This is good. Therefore,
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punishing of unwelcome behavior should be done following the same
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grass roots philosophy that governs the rest of the net."
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Frankly, looking back at the attacks launched in recent years by
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defenders of the Internet credo, it seems that the victims often fare
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better than the attackers. The press coverage of Canter and Siegel
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made the couple famous, attracted clients and earned them a book
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contract. When Phiber Optic uploaded John Perry Barlow's credit
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history to a WELL discussion, he helped catapult Barlow into the
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stratosphere of Net notoriety. Brock Meeks, who was a victim of a
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very analog lawsuit based on his Cyberwire Dispatch reporting
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distributed via the Internet, was featured in the Wall Street
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Journal, landed a better job and a regular column a short time later.
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Quittner, it turns out, is leaving Newsday, where he broke into
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cyber-reporting, to join Time Magazine this month. I've got a good
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job already, but I can't help wondering what offers would come in if
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only I could get attacked by the Internet Liberation Front!
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______________
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Absolute rule?
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To find out a little more about the psychology of these much-feared
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arbiters of good taste in electronic society, we queried
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Cancelmoose[tm], who found fame (in the Wall Street Journal, among
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other places) when he initiated a cancelbot that erased messages sent
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by publisher Michael Wolff to a variety of newsgroups. Among the
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Moose's other targets were several advertising messages and a rant
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against the Clinton administration (the Moose did not reveal a party
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affiliation in our email discussion).
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We asked the Moose if he was a revolutionary.
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"Nope," the Moose responded. "This is an old issue, and I'm not the
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first person to do this. I've just been doing a lot of it lately."
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His answer sounds populist, like an evocation of the common man
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called from the masses to do what's necessary, a Gary Cooperesque man
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of action. A populist stand is founded on an understanding of what
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the community wants. In this vein, Cancelmoose[tm], cites several
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rules that guide his cancelbot actions, but told us that he does not
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read the calls for votes that are used to establish the scope of a
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particular newsgroup. In other words, the Moose feels justified in
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judging the content of messages without knowing the specific rules of
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the newsgroup vis-a-vis acceptable content.
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Granted, the Moose is acting on principles accepted by many of the
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Internet old guard when he erases a message. It's not clear the
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newcomers to network communications share these beliefs. Michael
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Wolff's pitch for his latest Internet book consisted of excerpts
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about a target newsgroup and a longish pitch for the book sent to the
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newsgroups about which he wrote. It clogged the newsgroups with a lot
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of needless marketing blather. But anyone encountering his messages
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was only a keystroke from freedom -- it wasn't like Wolff forced
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people to read his postings.
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"Annoying has *NOTHING* to do with it," the Moose wrote to Digital
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Media Perspective. "To cancel messages that are only annoying is
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CENSORSHIP, which I am strongly against. If any message was only
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*crossposted* to 5 groups, and someone canceled it, I would complain
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LOUDLY that this was unfair." After canceling the rant against
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President Clinton's firing of Jocelyn Elders, the Moose contacted the
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author to explain the appropriate way to post messages.
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Taking a closer look at the Moose's criteria for cancelbotting,
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though, one finds that it is a highly relativist stance: "I cancelled
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(sic) those postings because they were spam," the Moose wrote, "See
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below for more information on what that is, and why it damages the
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net.
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"To be clear:
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* The messages were not cancelled (sic) because
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they were ads.
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* The messages were not cancelled (sic) because
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they were off-topic.
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* The messages would have been cancelled (sic) if
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they were free recipes for chocolate-chip cookies.
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* The messages were cancelled (sic) because
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the poster used a method of posting that is very
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damaging to the net, in an attempt to get more readers.
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* The poster knew this, and made a thinly veiled attempt
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to try to hide the messages. They were found anyway."
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"Spam" is a very loosely interpreted word (except by Hormel, which is
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probably less than pleased about its use in this context), but here's
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Cancelmoose[tm] making law of it. I suspect the Moose cannot actually
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see inside the mind of posters; he admits as much when he wrote that
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he contacts some spammers after canceling their messages to help them
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find an appropriate way to post.
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The decision to cancel messages, ultimately, is based on machine
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criteria, not human ones: "Some messages were posted in an
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inappropriate manner, thereby wasting 150 times the storage space
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necessary, on every machine on usenet in the world."
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So, the only relatively firm criterion for the cancelbot treatment
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here is the desire to gain more readers by posting messages to many,
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or all, of the newsgroups on the Net -- it comes down to wasting
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space. But, isn't that one of the saving graces of the Internet, that
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it allows individuals to communicate on a very wide scale? Isn't
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storage all but free these days, selling for less than a dollar a
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megabyte? The difference between cross-posting a 5K message on five
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and 150 newsgroups is just 725K on any given machine, about 75 cents
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worth of storage. Even if a drive allocates a larger block of storage
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than the message requires, I'm still not more than a dollar or two
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off the total cost per posting. Granted, the cost per kilobyte of a
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news feed varies from place to place in the world, so spammings can
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raise the price of participation. The news provider has the choice of
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how much of the news feed they will buy, just like any publisher
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does. Within each newsgroup, though, the impact of spamming on cost
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is very small.
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What were talking about is the cost of free expression, a human
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phenomenon that doesn't conform to the efficiencies of machinery.
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Whether the total cost per message is actually 75 cents or two
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dollars, that's the price of Net citizenship, and it's a good deal.
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Granted, we still have to establish some guidelines for posting
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messages. Likewise, individual countries will have to come to grips
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with the intrusion of foreign posters -- for example the Canter and
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Siegel spam quite blatantly flaunts German law, which prohibits
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lawyers from advertising in any way. These are just natural
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consequences of people coming together. On the frontier, your
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neighbors would have been very concerned about where you dug the hole
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for an outhouse. There's just no escaping the consequences of our
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actions, whether microbiotic or cybernetic.
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The question is, how should neighbors respond to inappropriate
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behavior? The Moose and his colleagues in the cancelbot and mailbomb
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movement say the answer is vigilantism.
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_________________________________
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Public debate, not private action
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I've been involved in several on-going discussions of whether a
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particular person deserved to send messages to email-lists of people
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whom they annoy with constant, excessive and abusive language. These
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discussions are carried on in public, on the lists in question. Even
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"defendants" get their say. Ultimately, the offender is not barred,
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but added to people's bozo filters. Their messages are still stored
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on the server, but eliminated from my mailbox as the day's postings
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are downloaded to my PowerBook.
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Some measure of network storage and transmission capacity is wasted
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by this process, but it ensures that if someone does want to speak
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and another person wants to listen, communication can occur. This is
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an egalitarian approach to network policy. If we can't live with a
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little waste, we're not admitting our humanity. Life is messy and
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inefficient, after all; that's what makes it interesting.
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Contrariwise, Alex Boldt's citation of anarchy as the driving force
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of Internet dynamics is dangerous and misinformed, in my opinion,
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because Boldt's conception of anarchy is founded on the idea that the
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people should act as vigilantes against any form of order; other,
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that is, than the one he insists they protect through blacklist
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action. This is the ugly side of anarchic philosophy, the kind of
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hyperbole that Mikhail Bakunin spouted when he justified murder with
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the riotous quip: "[Revolutionary anarchists] recognize no other
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activity but the work of extermination.... In this struggle
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revolution sanctifies everything."
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Or consider Cancelmoose[tm]'s revolutionary vanguard approach to the
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problem. When challenged by this writer, he responded that he follows
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the postings in newsgroup of news administrators when selecting
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targets for his cancelbots. "Cancelmoose[tm] is enforcing that law,
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and would not do so, without such strong support on the net," the
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Moose wrote.
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It's all a little too 20th Century for me. Weren't we supposed to be
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growing up, getting past the megalomaniacal philosophies that gave us
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a bloody 100 years? Is it a real improvement now that we kill each
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other's ideas and not our actual selves? If destruction and conflict
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are to be the overriding philosophical weapons of the Internet, Boldt
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is doomed to play the role of Stalin or that of Trotsky. He's going
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to wield the axe or find it in his head. Listen to me, Alex, this is
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going to back-fire on you, either way.
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A more humane approach might be to consider what the principles of
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electronic commerce and society will be, now that the era of the
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digital frontier is passing. We should talk more about people and who
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will have an opportunity to thrive in the future, and a lot less
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about machines.
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_____________
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Credo: Youth?
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One wonders how long Cancelmoose[tm] will justify his actions with the
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judgments of a small cadre of net veterans. This method fails to
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acknowledge that the net is ever changing. Thankfully, it is an
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ever-changing dialog that should be able to accommodate discussion of
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its evolving rules of conduct.
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Revolution is a mature person's game. The Net-bred revolutionaries
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are on their way to forging a kind of ill will that results in very
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restricted social environments. The rest of the world is quite sure
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to be arriving on information networks at various levels, whether
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through the use of electronic transactions or as full-fledged
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participants in online dialogs, in the next few years. Rather than
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welcoming them with an attitude of maturity and willingness to
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participate in a reasonable discourse about the future of the virtual
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village, these electronic mountain men who see their wild frontier
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criss-crossed by the fences of capitalism and socially-conservative
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mores are choosing to attack.
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The hijinks of the Internet Liberation Front and cancelbots are
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hardly the great tests the Net vigilantes insist. Big corporations
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and lone users alike will endure mail bombs and even wiped hard discs
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or stolen source code with only a moment's pause. They'll simply
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build better firewalls, change their access method to isolate system
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software from attack or some other relatively trivial answer to the
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pests they find. That's because most people don't think of their
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computers in terms of their lives -- you don't die in cyberspace, you
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just take a few insults and carry on. The stakes in the analog world,
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and at the intersection of the analog and digital worlds, are much
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higher, because it's there that we will decide who can actually earn
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a livelihood in the electronic realm (and how). The more difficult
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vigilantes make life on the net, the higher the barriers to entry to
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a life of digital prosperity.
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What one quickly realizes is, just like the trappers who were pushed
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out of the west by their own absolutists views (they hunted their
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cash crops to extinction, then got upset when others showed up in
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their valleys and mountains to farm and mine), the Net vigilantes are
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fighting a lost battle. They are simply earlier iterations of the
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acquisitive pioneers who follow them. What's needed is not a
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barricade against the forces of change, but a reasonable dialog on
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the meaning of the electronic discourse, commerce and society.
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"Time," wrote Thomas Paine, "makes more converts than reason." Except
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for the vigilantes who believe that the lines of battle must be drawn
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here and now in the most dramatic terms, most participants in the
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settling of cyberspace know that there's all the time in the world
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for fireworks, because it distracts from the more mundane events that
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draw the limits of the future. The longer we waste on vigilantism,
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the more time will be given to the organizations prepared to weather
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the storm in anticipation of their ultimate victory through
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attrition. Paine's position won the day in the Revolutionary Era,
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because he understood that resorting to reason early on lays the
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foundation for deliberate action and victory for all.
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________________________________________
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I/O: Readers Respond
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The editorial in our last issue, "A Red Line in Cyberspace" drew
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considerable comment, including this:
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__________________
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From: Mike Roberts - Vice President, Networking - EDUCOM
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Now that the Internet is really big-time instead of just ordinary
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big-time, as we always knew it would be, our usual apolitical
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instincts may have to give way to an occasional fit of lobbying.... A
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case in point is the "redlining" item concerning Time Warner's plans
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for its full service broadband network. Like a number of recent
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network related developments, this one has been rapidly politicized.
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Two groups of left and right types who richly deserve each other are
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both completely wrong in their views on the matter.
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On the right, we have the New York and Hollywood media barons who see
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nothing but copyrighted content on the network, and have visions of
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sugar plums at $125/month from upper-middle class homes.
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On the left, we have champions of the downtrodden and oppressed who
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rail at the greed of the media and call for the government to step in
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and democratize the net through a variety of subsidies, large and
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small. These are the people behind last year's Inouye bill (S.2195),
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which was going to expropriate 20 percent of all the fiber optic nets
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in the country to the federal government for use by worthy non-profit
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groups.
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The fact of the matter is that it is eminently feasible technically
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and economically for 80 percent of the homes in America to have
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two-way switched broadband (i.e., at least 10 Mbps) network service
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for a sum between $20 and $30 per month within the next decade, and
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to be able to acquire a demuxing and distribution gadget to go inside
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the home for less than $500 in the same time frame. These dollars are
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not additive to the current $10 to $15 per month paid for local
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dialtone, or the $20 to $30 per month paid by 60 percent of homes for
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cable, they are inclusive of at least 75 percent of those dollars. In
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other words, it's damn near free if we play our cards right and have
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aggressive deployment of new technology.
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Assume we are costing the residential bit transport service, using
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best commercial practice broadband technology, scaled and engineered
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for a minimum of fifty million homes in the first five years,
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starting a couple of years out from now.... Then use a three level
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architecture, with the lowest level hub in the home, the next level
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in the "neighborhood" and the third level at the "network" level.
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There is a lot of debate about the switching protocols. Despite the
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warts, the choice is likely to be ATM. Cable people, bless their
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inferior engineering hearts, have embraced it and Grand Alliance
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people assume compatibility between the compressed HDTV video packet
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spec and ATM. As for the second level, or neighborhood hub, the best
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information is in filings that the RBOCs are making for video
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dialtone. PacBell told the California Public Utilities Commission
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they would provide video dialtone for $337 per home, with technology
|
||
|
they can deploy now.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My rule of thumb for turning capital investment into operating costs
|
||
|
is to divide by ten for useful life, and multiply by three to pick up
|
||
|
maintenance, overhead and profit. At $300, that's $8 (rounded) in
|
||
|
operating costs each month. At $500, it's $12 a month. And these are
|
||
|
today's costs, not year 2000 costs, midway into my ten year
|
||
|
deployment window.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the third level, transport costs/prices get dicier to predict
|
||
|
because we don't yet have broadband service competition in a form
|
||
|
usable to the residential customer. But I'm optimistic, based on the
|
||
|
history of narrowband enhanced (i.e. IP) services providers in the
|
||
|
last several years, that there will be a competitive market for
|
||
|
broadband transport that isn't inextricably bundled with content. So,
|
||
|
on the assumption that a competitive market will exist, the question
|
||
|
becomes how fast can the best broadband technology be deployed in the
|
||
|
market?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Adding up the above, we'll take the midpoint of the second level
|
||
|
cost, $10 a month, add it to the $10 to $20 third-level cost to
|
||
|
arrive at a monthly cost $20 to $30 a month for broadband services.
|
||
|
And we haven't had to use any of the overlapped costs from existing
|
||
|
cable or voice. AND, we've leaped a lot of tall buildings at a single
|
||
|
bound. But I think these numbers are close enough to the mark to
|
||
|
demonstrate that the barriers to realizing an economical broadband
|
||
|
network market are largely political and not technological.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I won't badger you with more particulars, but there is a great fraud
|
||
|
being foisted upon the public with these grandiose claims of how
|
||
|
expensive broadband deployment "has to be." The large dollars are in
|
||
|
anticipated returns to CONTENT providers, not to TRANSPORT providers.
|
||
|
It's more an issue of how to get to a socially useful outcome for the
|
||
|
net, rather than an issue of whether we should.
|
||
|
|
||
|
-- Mike Roberts
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
________________________________________
|
||
|
Inside the January Issue
|
||
|
of Digital Media
|
||
|
|
||
|
Part two of "Hollyweb Babylon," where we sort out the spaghetti plate
|
||
|
of alliances, mergers, acquisitions and interests that are Hollywood
|
||
|
and Silicon Valley. This installment looks at the telephone industry
|
||
|
from Hollywood's perspective;
|
||
|
|
||
|
An extended examination of the gender politics in the on-line world,
|
||
|
where women by all measures compose a slim percentage of connected
|
||
|
folks and thus face serious marginality in the information age;
|
||
|
|
||
|
Analysis on the transition from the regulated telecommunications
|
||
|
environment to the open market and who's going to be calling the
|
||
|
shots, federal or state regulatory bodies;
|
||
|
|
||
|
An up-front investigation that we will get flamed but not fired for:
|
||
|
the "adult" title industry and its relationship to high technology
|
||
|
markets;
|
||
|
|
||
|
A first-hand report on Time Warner's Full Service Network launch in
|
||
|
Orlando, which, after a year of delays, looked like the Michael
|
||
|
Huffington of ITV: hyped, ballyhooed, and not really there;
|
||
|
|
||
|
Scrutiny of home gaming systems' hardware and prospects for 95;
|
||
|
|
||
|
A review of Nickelodeon's Director's Lab CD-ROM, a truly interactive
|
||
|
title that lets kids make their own fun;
|
||
|
|
||
|
A futuristic view of an "on-line personality" in the Note from the
|
||
|
Chief;
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Good Stuff: A list of Things Digital Medians Should Know.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Digital Media: A Seybold Report, the monthly paper newsletter that
|
||
|
sponsors Digital Media Perspective, brings its readers the most
|
||
|
provocative analysis of the developing industry for interactive
|
||
|
titles, smart networks and broadband applications. We turn an
|
||
|
eclectic eye to the stories of the day to provide a more informed
|
||
|
perspective with which readers can judge new technologies, new
|
||
|
competitors and the assumptions driving the growth of the electronic
|
||
|
economy. We question everything, and bring back the hard facts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Digital Media: A Seybold Report is available monthly for $395 a year;
|
||
|
individual issues are $40. Call 800.325.3830/610.565.6864 (voice),
|
||
|
610.565.1858 (fax), or send email to info@digmedia.com for
|
||
|
information on how to subscribe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
________________________________________
|
||
|
Who We Are, Where to Reach Us
|
||
|
|
||
|
Digital Media Perspective is a twice-monthly electronic newsletter
|
||
|
produced by Digital Media: A Seybold Report.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Publisher Jonathan Seybold
|
||
|
Editor in Chief Mitch Ratcliffe (godsdog@netcom.com)
|
||
|
Editor Neil McManus (neilm@netcom.com)
|
||
|
Managing Editor Margie Wylie (zeke@digmedia.com)
|
||
|
Senior Editor Stephan Somogyi (somogyi@digmedia.com)
|
||
|
Editorial Assistant Anthony Lazarus (lazarus@digmedia.com)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Editorial Offices 444 De Haro Street, Suite 126
|
||
|
San Francisco, CA 94107
|
||
|
415.575.3775 vox
|
||
|
415.575.3780 fax
|
||
|
info@digmedia.com
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
________________________________________
|
||
|
How To Subscribe to DMP
|
||
|
and Get Back Issues
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you'd like to receive this free electronic newsletter regularly,
|
||
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send us email at perspective-request@digmedia.com and we will put you
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on the list. The subject line of your messages should read "subscribe
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|
||
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You can get back issues of Digital Media Perspective by sending email
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||
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|
||
|
|
||
|
Copyright (c) 1995 Digital Media: A Seybold Report. This electronic
|
||
|
newsletter may be freely duplicated, reproduced or retransmitted, but
|
||
|
only in its entirety. Excerpts used for the purposes of quotation
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||
|
must be attributed explicitly to Digital Media Perspective.
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||
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|
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|
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