291 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
291 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
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Der Weltanschauung (The WorldView) Origin: HOUSTON, TEXAS USA
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August 10, 1992 Volume 2, Issue 7 FTP: ftp.eff.org pub/cud/wview
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-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
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Published and Distributed By Fennec Information Systems And Consulting
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Material Written By Computer And Telecommunications Hobbyists World Wide
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Promoting the publication of Features, Editorials, etc...
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To submit material, or to subscribe to the magazine contact this address:
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request@fennec.sccsi.com
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"Let us arise, let us arise against the oppressors of humanity; all kings,
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emperors, presidents of republics, priests of all religions are the true
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enemies of the people; let us destroy along with them all juridical,
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political, civil and religious institutions."
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-Manifesto of anarchists in the Romagna, 1878
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The World View Staff: InterNet Address:
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The Desert Fox [Editor] root@fennec.sccsi.com
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Cyndre The Grey [CoEditor] root@ashpool.sccsi.com
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Subscription Requests request@fennec.sccsi.com
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WORLD VIEW NEWSGROUP: wv@taronga.com
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FTP SITE: ftp.eff.org /pub/cud/wview
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It is the policy of The World View to review any material that is
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received by us for the purpose of distribution. We respect the rights of all
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authors/contributors under the Constitution of the United States, and we
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will honor all requests for anonymity. Any inquiries regarding the
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questionable content of an article written by someone other than the editors
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of this publication should be directed to the author. A return E-mail
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address will be provided if applicable. Reprinting of material from
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this magazine is highly encouraged. Please site the source of the material,
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and gain permission from the author when refering to submitted articles.
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Editor's Note: Due to a terrible error in the distribution/mailing of
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the last issue, some of the more important articles from that issue will
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be reprinted in this issue. The errors were not the fault of the writers.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1) Current Texas Organizational Events................Bryan O' Blivion
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2) Bringing New Users Into The Net....................Bryan O' Blivion
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3) Network User Fees..................................Patricio Mason
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Current Texas Organizational Cyberevents
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By Bryan O' Blivion (blivion@taronga.com)
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Next month will be a year since the organizational meeting of the EFF -
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Austin chapter, the first local chapter of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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in the USA. At the organization's first annual general membership meeting in
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Austin in May 1992, over 60 members and interested persons appeared.
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Coalescing around the leadership and support of local cyber-celebrities
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Steve Jackson, John Quarterman, and the notorious Bruce Sterling
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(whose book Hacker Crackdown is due out soon), the group has set up active
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newsgroups and mailing lists (eff-a@tic.com) on the Net for discussion and
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organization around our common concerns.
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Solid achievements of the Austin EFF include the formal organization
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of the chapter, with adoption of bylaws and election and monthly meetings
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of a Board of Directors. A successful annual meeting and several other
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meetings, formal and informal, enhanced our mutual contacts; sort of an
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Elks Club for cyberspace frontiersmen socializing, after building our
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rude 386 cabins.
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Booths and appearances at cons and national conferences by
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distinguished Austin EFF members gave the movement good publicity,
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as did Bruce Sterling during his own work and travels. The flag and
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T-shirts are also real zippy.
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In Houston, the cyber-liberties scene remains loosely organized
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around the regular publications like WordView and NIA magazines, which
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continue to publish regularly. NIA magazine may even have its latest
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issue out soon. SummerCon in St Louis is the place to be in June for
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national exposure, but local 'snerds', cyberlunches' and 'cyberdawgs'
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(apparently the Austin version of such an event) as well as a series
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of continuing, highly educational private Saturday night parties
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provide the backbone of our networking strength. The setup of a Coherent
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unix (ashpool.sccsi.com) and a uucp'd dos-based node, (fennec.sccsi.com)
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by Cyndre the Grey and Desert Fox respectively have effectively merged
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our local nodes into the Net, which we count as a significant achievement.
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Taronga continues to provide its excellent support with access and our
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own wv@taronga.com newsgroup.
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But as John Quarterman put it, "It's easy to exchange warm fuzzies..."
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and basically get self-congratulatory about our common ideals, ignoring
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individual differences of opinion, but the real world brings a different
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set of problems.
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Communication between EFF National (Cambridge) and EFF Austin has
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suffered of late. After a meeting of the Austin EFF Board decided to
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incorporate, Mitch Kapor seemed to back off his support for that, indicating
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that incorporation may not be appropriate for a local chapter. This puzzled
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the EFF-BOD as well as all onlookers. Mitch recently responded to an inquiry
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from WorldView staff about a Houston chapter of EFF by saying that we were
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basically on our own, as no one had been tasked yet by National to deal with
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local chapter relations, and that all present National staff are running at
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125% of capacity. Inexperience in major convention planning have caused
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the indefinite postponement of this event -- too bad!
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It appears to this writer that the event planning was too ambitious
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in scope, trying to involve everyone in the world. The WorldView heartily
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supports any such project, but it must be reasonable in scope at first,
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then allowed to grow naturally. Perhaps more informal gatherings, not as
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tightly organized and planned as a major con, can become something on the
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scale originally planned. In any case, thanks for trying and for all the
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work. Readers of the CyberTex mailing list know that it drew major interest
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from users all over the world, the WELL, etc.
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So here we are, in the second year of our fragile joint existence as
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a tenuous cloud, a web of potential connections. Our strength is in our
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networking, and I call for more informal get-togethers under any name,
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in Houston or in Austin. Networking, cooperation rather than competition,
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is our strength. Rather than planning the world's greatest virtual festival,
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let's just start by having a good time and learning from each other. We will
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continue to publish, the Austin chapter will proceed under its excellent
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Board of Directors, and we'll have a few parties.....
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@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@-==-@
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BRINGING NEW USERS INTO THE NET
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By Bryan O' Blivion (blivion@taronga.com)
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InterNet-connected global wide area networks are still new enough
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that most users come from the 3 classic ARPANET communities:
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defense/government contractors' corporate sites, university
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researchers/students, and .gov sites.
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Folks who do not have such a job have historically had little or
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no access to common network services such as news feeds, email, and
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file/message posting and transfer, and little opportunity to learn
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how to use them.
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Several years ago, various private UNIX host systems began to
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make net access available to users in a few areas nationwide. DOS-based
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BBS activity simultaneously soared as modems became cheaply available.
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But these two areas of online activity shared little, and the user
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communities rarely interacted.
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The purpose of this article is to relate how some private computer
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enthusiasts in Houston, Texas, originally experienced as DOS and BBS users
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and sysops, obtained participation in UNIX-based WAN network communications
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and access to the InterNet.
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Congregating on several BBS's (there are hundreds in the Houston
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Metro area), our informal users group became a .sig for anyone who wanted
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to learn about networked computing. Dissatisfied with even FidoNet and the
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extensive 2000-user chat systems available in Houston, we longed for,
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studied for the freedom of the InterNet. UNIX command sheets were copied,
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manuals studied. We even tried to learn the vi editor. But we lacked that
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all-important account on a REAL system, one that gave us a $ prompt..
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Public Unix came to the rescue.
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The widely advertised NixPub systems in Houston are three: NuChat,
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Taronga Park, and Sugarland UNIX. NuChat began by kindly offering a few of us
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accounts that had email. It seemed like magic to send email from a home PC and
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have it appear in a far system. Mailing to Austin took only 2 hours. Then
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Stephanie and Peter da Silva, the good-hearted and long-suffering sysops of
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Taronga Park, opened free shell accounts for such of us as had gotten a little
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command of Unix.
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For the first time I as a private citizen had access to
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Internet-borne email, newsfeeds, a UNIX operating system account....
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and thru the Taronga system, had referrals to private TCP/IP capable
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sites, i.e. TELNET and FTP capability. It was a whole new world; with a
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cheap modem I had suddenly expanded my computer reach from one hard disk
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into the vast cloud of the Matrix.
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For this article, I asked the sysops of taronga.com, Stephanie
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and Peter Da Silva, some basic questions about her system and the guiding
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philosophy of this type of Net access. Since any editing of their replies
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would be superfluous, here are peter and arielle@taronga.com. The original
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messages were exchanged through the Coherent sys of a mutual friend
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whose sys was recently enabled as a local InterNet uucp email node
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(ashpool.sccsi.com).
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NETWORK USER FEES
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By Patricio Mason <pmason@CHASQUI.MIC.CL>
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A while ago, several members of the list debated the issue of user fees for
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access to computer networks such as the Internet. Most were rightly
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adamant that charging for use would have an incalculably detrimental
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effect. I thought you might like to know that here in Chile this scenario
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has suddenly become reality.
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Our Internet hookup is run by CONICYT, (National Council on Science and
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Technology) a government body. Recently, all users of the Internet,
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including universities, were notified that starting July 1st, there will be
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a minimum monthly rate plus a charge per megabyte of international traffic,
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with 18% sales tax on top. This is a reversal of an earlier decision
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whereby only a flat rate was charged, regardless of traffic. Both the
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minimum rate and the charge per megabyte are measured in units roughly
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equivalent to CDN$31.00 each, i.e., 10 MB of traffic equals CDN$310.00,
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plus the minimum rate, plus tax. The minimum monthly wage in this country
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is 38,000 pesos, roughly CDN$134.00.
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Although the CONICYT decision was sanctioned by Chile's Council of Rectors
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(university and college presidents), the academic community and other users
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such as NGOs, non-profit groups and private individuals are stunned and
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outraged. Needless to say, most university presidents are not users and
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simply chose from a limited set of options presented to them by
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administrators and CONICYT functionaries.
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This may very well mean that university professors will have to obtain
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clearance from department heads before replying to colleagues abroad or
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accepting mail from them. Since every byte will cost universities a pretty
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penny, it may also mean that students will be prevented from sending or
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receiving international messages. Few will be allowed to do FTP or Telnet.
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For outside e-mail users such as private individuals and non-profit
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groups, the high cost will probably entail reducing or eliminating use
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altogether.
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Access to the Internet is slightly wider here. High rates mean that only
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those who can afford them, i.e., government and corporate users, will have
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the run of the system. Although one of the consequences of the worldwide
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computer revolution has been to empower the individual as a counterbalance
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to the unbridled power of governments and corporations, the CONICYT
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decision in Chile means that those outside the circles of political or
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financial power will be left out.
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There is no Internet affiliate that I know of which charges on the basis of
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traffic volume. Universities are reeling from the implications: just
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figuring out who is to be billed for what, plus the processing and billing
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aspects, will most certainly prove an administrative nightmare. A whole
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new bureaucracy will have to be created at CONICYT and elsewhere to handle
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this.
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There is an international write-in campaign on to try to get CONICYT to
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reverse this decision and discard the notion of charging per amount of
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traffic. Along with members of the academic community within Chile, the
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members of CHILE-L --Chilean academics, students and others scattered
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throughout the world-- are leading this campaign.
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As a (albeit silent) member of CANADA-L and Internet user, I thought I'd
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tell you of this and try to enlist your support. If this type of mentality
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is allowed to prevail, it will certainly set a precedent. If you would
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like to help, please write a respectful note to CONICYT, the National
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Council on Science and Technology of Chile, stating your views on this
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issue. Notes should be sent to Mr. Alberto Cabezas and/or Mr. Florencio
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Utreras at
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acabezas@uchdciux.seci.uchile.cl
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futreras@uchdciux.seci.uchile.cl
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CONICYT may also be reached at:
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Canada 308
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2o Piso
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Providencia
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Santiago, Chile
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Tel.: (562) 274-4537, 204-7541, 204-7542, 204-7566
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I will be glad to provide further information to anyone interested. And of
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course, feel free to cross-post. Thanks in advance.
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Patricio Mason
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(Carleton/U of T)
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Santiago, Chile
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pmason@chasqui.mic.cl
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