752 lines
38 KiB
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752 lines
38 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Wed Mar 31 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 24
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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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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Copy Eidtor: Etaoin Shrdlu, Senior
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CONTENTS, #5.24 (Mar 31 1993)
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File 1--Special Issue on CFP III (introduction)
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File 2--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 1)
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File 3--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 2)
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File 4--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 4)
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File 5--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 5)
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File 6--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 6)
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File 7--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 7)
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File 8--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 1)
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File 9--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 2)
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File 10--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 3)
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File 11--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 4)
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File 12--A Few Final Words about CFP '93
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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available at no cost electronically from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The
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editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302)
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or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
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60115.
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
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LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
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libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
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On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
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on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210;
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in Europe from the ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893;
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ANONYMOUS FTP SITES:
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UNITED STATES: ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/cud
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uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu (141.211.182.53) in /pub/CuD/cud
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halcyon.com( 202.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud
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AUSTRALIA: ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2) in /pub/text/CuD.
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EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud. (Finland)
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud (United Kingdom)
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Back issues also may be obtained through mailservers at:
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mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us or server@blackwlf.mese.com
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and
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they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
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specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
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relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
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preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
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unless absolutely necessary.
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DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
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the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
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responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
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violate copyright protections.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Wed, Mar 31, 1993 11:21:44
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From: CuD Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 1--Special Issue on CFP III (introduction)
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The Third annual Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy was held
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9-12 March, 1993, at the San Francisco Airport Marriott Hotel In
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Burlingame, Calif. A crowd of experts, non-experts, students,
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professionals, and law enforcement and others assembled to discuss
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issues of Electronic Democracy and the impact of computer technology
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in social change. From the various accounts, it appears that the
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conference was more than a success. Formal sessions, BOF ("birds of a
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feather") informal meetings, and lively interaction generated
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enthusiastic discussion on The Well (voice: 415-332-4335; telnet:
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well.sf.ca.us).
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We reproduce a flavor of the conference with the following posts. The
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value and efficacy of bridging the gap between cybernauts and law
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enforcement and intelligence agencies sparked considerable passionate
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debate. CuD shares the view that, while it is never wise to be overly
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optimistic about the potential success of such bridges, they can do no
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harm, and the potential for reform far outweighs and disadvantages
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that we can see. We find Bob Steele's comments in File #9
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convincing.
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Planning for next year's conference has begun, and if it's as strong
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as the '93 conference was reported to be, there will undoubtedly be
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more applicants. Perhaps the organizers could expand the number of
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scholarships to make it possible for those who couldn't otherwise
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afford it to attend.
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, Mar 10, 1993 (03:12)
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From: Eric S Theise <estheise@WELL.SF.CA.US>
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Subject: File 2--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 1)
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Objective reporting this won't be, especially at 3:00 a.m.
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I'm having a great time at the conference. I arrived late for the
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first tutorial session today. It started at 9, and I drifted in
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closer to 9:30. They hadn't got my e-mail registration -- partly
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because of the hard disk business yesterday, partly because they had
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other things to worry about -- but Bruce Koball and Judi Clark told me
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to go on in and pay up later.
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I attended James Love's 'Access to Government Information' tutorial
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which was crowded and very good. He outlined strategies for getting
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information via the Freedom of Information Act and gave examples of
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online systems that are and are not available to the public as well as
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examples of some of the horrible contracts that have been struck
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between government and contractor that have essentially sealed off any
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hope of affordable public access to certain information because of
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lack of vision and understanding on the part of the government. Love
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works on the Taxpayer Assets Project for Ralph Nader.
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I heard good things about Mike Godwin's tutorials on Constitutional
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Law and Civil Liberties and about Mark Graham and Tim Pozar's Internet
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Journeys. They gave away free copies of Krol's book!
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I spent most of my lunch break chatting in the hallway, and grabbed
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and wolfed a quick sandwich just before attending Russell Brand's
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tutorial on Practical Data Inferencing: What We Think We Know About
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You. As someone trained in mathematical models, statistics, and
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artificial intelligence, I was hoping to learn about -- even
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non-technically --some of the tools being run on disparate datasets to
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make inferences about individuals' characteristics. Brand did a fair
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amount of consciousness raising about the information available from
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public records and tricks used to get information out of people. He
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spent altogether too much time giving snippets of data and asking the
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audience to make inferences. Around 4:00 I realized that this was all
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he was going to do, and got disappointed. It was a fun little gossipy
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session, but it was not terribly deep.
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It seemed that New York State Police Investigator Donald Delaney's
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Telecommunication Fraud tutorial was the place to be in the afternoon.
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Apparently he's given the talk before, but it's a must-hear once.
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Then there was the *long* break before the reception (4:30 - 8:00).
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Another hour or so spent chatting in the lobby, then a spontaneous
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Thai dinner in Belmont with five people I barely knew. Good
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conversation about mid-80s Internet politics that I had only a fair
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knowledge of, as well as current trends in acceptable use policies.
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The Pad Thai was okay.
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The reception featured piles of vanilla, chocolate, and strawberry ice
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cream with add-ins; big sugar rush and mucho schmoozing! Spent time
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with Marc Smith and a table of sociologists and others from UCLA.
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Talked with a few of the scholarship recipients who bemoaned the
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provincialism of the Bay Area (aw, they're just jealous, knowing that
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they're going to have to go back to Bowling Green next week 8-) ).
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And had a long chat out in the hallway with Hugh Daniel and some of
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the NYC contingent from the near-EFF chapter that's working with many
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of the same issues as the Bay Area's own This!Group.
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Bay Area Women In Communications had a dinner meeting which I *didn't*
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hear about; maybe someone could report on that?
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I left the hotel at 1:00 and, after giving a jump to a tow truck at my
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local Safeway, I thought I'd log in for a little while tonight. Conf
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starts up again at 9 am.
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What struck me the most was how different this conference was for me
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from the first CFP. At the first CFP I was a relatively naive BITNET
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user who knew *no one*. I didn't yet have an account on the WELL.
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This year I know people everywhere I turn, and there are many delights
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in meeting people face-to-face for the first time. Conferences in the
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field I'm trained in -- operations research -- are pretty damn boring.
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CFP's fun, and tomorrow (today) -- with the arts panel that Anna
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Couey, Mike Godwin, and I put together, as well as sessions on
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Electronic Democracy, Electronic Voting, Censorship and Free Speech on
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the Networks, EFF's Pioneer Awards, and Willis Ware as a dinner
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speaker -- promises to really shift up into a higher gear.
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And the CFP hallmark -- Feds and crackers doing the dialogue --
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continues!
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, Mar 11, 1993 (00:46)
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From: Glenn S. Tenney <tenney@well.sf.ca.us>
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Subject: File 3--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 2)
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The keynote today (Nicholas Johnson) was fantastic! I may not have
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agreed with him 100%, but his talk was just wonderful. Don't ask me
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to repeat it or even paraphrase it, I decided that I was probably
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going to buy a tape of it and didn't take notes.
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The electronic democracy session had, for me, an interesting note:
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Sarah Gray from We The People (ran Jerry Brown's computer stuff) said
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that they were given free accounts on various systems. I asked,
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honestly innocently, how they felt about the fact that such
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contributions were illegal. She basically had no clue that corporate
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contributions are a no-no.
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There were more sessions, but... And there were the EFF pioneer
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awards... Ward Christen's talk was fun -- things haven't changed all
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that much, it now takes about as long to figure out how to hook up a
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hard drive to your PC on some SCSI board as it took him to wire wrap
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and figure out how to build his own 8" floppy controller back then
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(etc. etc.).
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And then there was the after dinner talk... Willis Ware, Rand Corp.,
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gave a nice talk about privacy -- and ssn use and misuse. He had lots
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to say about how California's new requirement of ssn for a driver's
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license or vehicle registration is a major problem. Over the last 55
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years, we've been having our privacy worn down little by little
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--each time the reason was valid and good. Yet the overall effect is
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not. Another part of his talk was that policy is being made by
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private businesses concerned with profits.
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I'm wiped out now since I have to get back there by 08:30 (Who the
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hell starts a conference THAT early!!!!!). WIll try for more detail
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later...
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, Mar 11, 1993 (02:12)
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From: Robert David Steele <steeler@well.sf.ca.us>
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Subject: File 3--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 3)
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It has been great. No video though (although I have SEEN a video
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camera running around, the officially available product seems to be
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audio tapes). Mark Graham and Tim Pozar tutorial on INTERNET was very
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fine, well-paced, with excellent hand-outs ("the" book--thank you Bill
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McDonald for an early copy), good slides, and excellent list of access
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points. Missed afternoon session in order to give a rant at INTERVAL.
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Nicholas Johnson Thomas Jefferson (Barlow gently points out Tom got it
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from Madison) focus on public libraries, education, and cheap postal
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rates for books as foundation for democracy, we are in negotiation
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about his doing a speech on what Gore should be doing to honor these
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founding father visions in the age of cyberspace. Panel on electronic
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democracy, consisting of Jim Warren as chair, Bill Behnk, Richard
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Civille, Mark Graham, Sarah Gray, and James Packard Love, was SUPERB.
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I want to transplant it, without a single change, to my OSS 93. I was
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really taken with each speaker. Mark Graham's vision and
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intelligence, Sarah Gray's self-effacing discussion of reality
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(perhaps the law is irrelevant Glenn--we all use the office telephones
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and tools for personal business), Richard Civille's focus on what Gore
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and tools can do to help the poor bootstrap, and James Packard Love's
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visible, earnest intensity about cost and access to government
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information were MARVELOUS.
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------------------------------
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Date: Fri, Mar 12, 1993 (03:14)
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From: Eric S Theise <estheise@WELL.SF.CA.US>
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Subject: File 4--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 4)
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I caught the Wednesday afternoon sessions: Censorship and Free Speech
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on the Networks and Portrait of the Artist on the Net. The censorship
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session was chaired by Barbara Simons (EFF), and featured Mike Godwin
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(EFF), Carl Kadie (Computer and Academic Freedom News), Virginia
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Rezmierski (U. Michigan), and Jack Rickard (Boardwatch). Most of the
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issues discussed should be familiar to WELLbeings and USENET readers.
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I can't say that I got any deep, new insights, but Godwin and Rickard
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were right on. Rezmierski's positions seemed too conservative and
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indicative of not spending much time on the nets. Some good stories
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were told, and our own bozofilter was held up as an example of noise
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filtering.
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I was a co-organizer of what ended up as the Portrait of the Artist on
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the Net session (with Anna Couey and Mike Godwin). We tried to pick a
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collection of artists spanning a range of media whose work had all
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been influenced by the nets. Joe Green spoke first. Green is a
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writer who (Mike check me if I'm wrong) steered rec.arts.poetry away
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from being a warm fuzzy place to a no holds barred online poetry
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critique and improvement workshop. His presentation *was* a poem, an
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amazing rant against many things wrong with life and society that he'd
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originally posted nothing else, it showed the power of text in the
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hands of a craftsman. I haven't heard writing that powerful since my
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summers at the Naropa Institute. It was presentation by example,
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though it could also be the biggest case against ever having an artist
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speak at CFP again, too.
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Tied in nicely with the censorship session.
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Tim Perkis, currently composer in residence at Mills College, spoke
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next. Perkis is inventor of The Hub, a band and a technology that
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allows for collaborative performance of computer music. Perkis spoke
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against the technological materialism of being a computer musician, of
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the line of thinking that can trap a musician into having to own the
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newest and most expensive equipment with the end result that they have
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to use it all for commercial work to pay it off. Perkis has
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constructed a number of relatively low tech computer/synthesizer
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instruments that he has focused on learning to play expressively,
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forcing himself to stop diddling with the software. I'm not really
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doing justice to his comments here.
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Host of the WELL's new arts conference, Judy Malloy, read from a ream
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of taped together index cards. Some documented online projects she'd
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worked on, others street performance art. Others were observations
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about the nature of her work. Given her directions with hypertext and
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other narrative data structures, it was quite good. And entertaining.
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Robert Edgar spoke for a short while about how his aesthetic as an
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experimental film maker has come together with video and multimedia
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technology. He showed a short video piece that he'd assembled in next
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to no time in celebration of the panel using his own desktop
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multimedia system.
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And Randy Ross, of American Indian Telecommunication, spoke about
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changing currents in this, the year of indigenous peoples. He talked
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about the respect for native cultures that appears to be on the rise,
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and about the use of telecommunication technologies to link together
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schools and reservations, and the links between Indian and American
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culture that telecom can provide.
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There were questions about the distribution of artwork over the nets
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and payment for that work. Vint Cerf asked about the use of networks
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to create art, meaning specifically the use of networked machines to
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create artwork together; unfortunately, the panelists uniformly missed
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the network aspect of the question and couched their answers in terms
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of working at stand-alone machines.
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Still, I couldn't have been happier with the way the arts panel turned
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out, and you should get the audio tape of this one.
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The EFF Pioneer awards were fun, especially the bit with Mitch Kapor
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and John Perry Barlow in matching beltway suits. Glenn didn't mention
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all of the recipients: Vint Cerf, one of the fathers of the ARPANET,
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Dave Hughes the cursor cowboy, Ward Christiansen, inventor of the
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XMODEM protocol, Tom Truscott and Jim Ellis, the initial developers of
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the software that led to today's USENET. And the guy responsible for
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IP (Internet Protocol). I can't remember his name. How embarrassing.
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Around this time the flu kicked in hard, and I spent three hours on a
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couch in the hotel lobby.
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We had an arts birds of a feather session where all of the artists
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demonstrated their work.
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Today I spent most of the day in bed with a side trip to the
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Exploratorium to return some audio-visual equipment of theirs. I
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caught Rosemary Jay's dinner address about the United Kingdom's
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approach to data privacy; quite good. Also lurked at Robert Steele's
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E3I birds of a feather which was interesting, although it seems that
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we spent a lot of time talking about recompense for work distributed
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digitally. Very similar to the arts session in that way. But
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<steeler> managed to assemble an interesting crowd of spooks and
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geeks, and it'll be interesting to see where he takes this stuff.
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Hey, I want to try and make all the sessions tomorrow, so I'm going to
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bed. After I go post an update on Arts Wire.
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------------------------------
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Date: Fri, Mar 12, 1993 (07:51)
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From: Cliff Figallo <fig@well.sf.ca.us>
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Subject: File 5--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 5)
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Actually, Vint Cerf was the co-inventor (with last year's Pioneer
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Award winner Robert Kahn) of TCP/IP. The one you forgot was Paul
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Baran, "inventor" of packet switching and the Telebit modem protocol.
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I say "inventor" because all of these people would be the first to
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tell you that all of this has been collaborative and evolutionary. I
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was privileged to be able to arrange for the recipients to come here
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to accept the awards and they are all very gracious and humble people.
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John Perry Barlow gave the lunch speech Thursday, matching Bruce
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Sterling's second-day-lunch presentation, the mind-blowing event of
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*last* year's CFP in Washington. J.P. did nothing to dim what may
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become the tradition of having the conference peak at this particular
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point in the schedule. Barlow's point, delivered in his
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characteristic blunt, frank, to the point, human-centered style, was
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that our access to the tools that can guarantee us absolute digital
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privacy can be _over-used_ by us, the technical elite. We are already
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more knowledgeable and sophisticated about communications than any
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branch or agency of government and we have the ability to maintain
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that lead. If we decide to escalate a "war" of privacy, it may force
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the government's hand and we may actually end up contributing to a
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constriction of free flow of information and a resulting damage to the
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community-fostering potential of electronic networking. Barlow's
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appeal to us, was to practice moderation and to pay attention to the
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meta-effects.
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He strung together so many provocative statements (I had high-level
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functionaries of both the CIA and FBI in my line of sight as he spoke)
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that many eyebrows were raised and twitching and even I was shaking my
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head in disbelief. I'll get the transcript and post it here as soon
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as possible. Big Fun.
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Aside from that, a lot of action, as usual, was taking place in the
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hallways. The session on Digital Privacy (including Dorothy Denning
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and the issue of the FBI's Digital Telephony scheme) was a good
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high-level discussion which as appreciated by all as giving good
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exposure to the major conflicting points of view. This being by third
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CFP and my eighth year being concerned with these issues, I see all
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the usual suspects discussing the usual issues, making incremental
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progress toward resolution. Some of these issues can only be solved
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when the technology and the people have been in the microwave long
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enough. No major breakthroughs will happen at this conference, but it
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does build the trust that face-to-face often brings.
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------------------------------
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Date: Fri, Mar 12, 1993 (16:11)
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From: Gail Williams <gail@well.sf.ca.us>
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Subject: File 6--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 6)
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Barlow was a knockout yesterday.
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Had people cheering, fuming, and roaring with laughter, and fuming.
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(Ironically enough, I took pretty detailed notes on judic's powerbook,
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and left them at the hotel which is for the most part a splendid
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place, but which charges a nightmarish pile of surcharges for phone
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access).
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He attributed the desire for privacy to the rise of the suburbs, and
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said small town and city people don't have any such privacy. A
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transcript would be fun... I was struck by the choices he made in the
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way he used the word "we", and it was easy to tell some clearly felt
|
||
he was not speaking for them. He was doing Patriarch of the clan, not
|
||
Seer, and 'Dad' got some folks pretty riled.
|
||
|
||
Judi's 'gender' panel this morning was a good surface-scratcher. One
|
||
of the panelists seemed to me to be under-informed, making some
|
||
general and sloppy statements inferring the need for censorship. (I
|
||
wish she'd really though it out, it would have been interesting to
|
||
hear a smart exploration of the 'hate language' model, but she really
|
||
just wasn't far into exploring the concept of controls and norms
|
||
online. The lines at the speaker's mic filled up with people who
|
||
wanted to speak out in favor of the alt.sex newsgroup. Brenda Laurel
|
||
and Mike Godwin were both quite articulate on this point. The
|
||
speaker, and forgive me my literature is not by my side and I can't
|
||
remember her name, backed down, but everyone wanted to have at her.
|
||
My sense is that this kind of consciousness raising is exactly the
|
||
process we all need. Librarians and artists are the ones who've
|
||
walked this path... government subsidy of alt.sex.bondage and NEA
|
||
funding of Mapplethorpe and Serrano are very closely related types of
|
||
issues, for example. And several people made the obvious metaphoric
|
||
point that a *place* where you go to talk about whatever can be
|
||
allowed to be offensive, the offended can go <elsewhere>, and ask that
|
||
such speech not be accepted while in <elsewhere>.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, it's fun to hear various people talk it through, keeping
|
||
honing and allowing others to challenge their arguments!
|
||
|
||
Cliff Stoll was a bundle of energy at lunch today, bouncing all around
|
||
the room, talking about the concept of being a 'public person' online,
|
||
and all kinds of other good stuff he had written as notes in ink on
|
||
his hand, and borrowing somebody's camera to photograph him mid-talk,
|
||
and playing at a fine frenzied pace through his lovely rant about life
|
||
and learning and community. His verbal and physical process while
|
||
giving a speech is like an anthem to creativity and eccentricity, he
|
||
really makes me feel good about myself.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, Mar 13, 1993 (05:49)
|
||
From: Robert David Steele <steeler@well.sf.ca.us>
|
||
Subject: File 7--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 7)
|
||
|
||
Also, FYI, I not only considered this a superb conference, but came
|
||
not only for my own education, but to identify selected individuals
|
||
representing this community who could bring some of these perspective
|
||
to my own conference where at least one third (even two fifths) of the
|
||
audience is from the intelligence community. Paul Wallner is going to
|
||
see about funding a few more intelligence professionals from different
|
||
agencies to attend next year, and commented to me that NSA absence was
|
||
noted. The flip side is to put a few from here on the posium (podium)
|
||
at my place, and as many as are interested in the audience. We talk
|
||
about sources of multi-media open data, tools (including INTERNET and
|
||
WAIS) for handling that data, and LEGAL/CONTRACTUAL issues including
|
||
how rest of government (not old "security" core) can develop open
|
||
intelligence capabilities, and how government and private sector can
|
||
share burden to increase amount of open data going into the public
|
||
domain, or as Lee would say, the information commonwealth. I hope a
|
||
number of you take Barlow's lunch speech seriously enough to be open
|
||
to the idea of coming to Washington in November. I am tentatively
|
||
planning for 33 scholarships, and give my word that--with the advice
|
||
of your existing scholarship director just to verify need--I actively
|
||
seek the most vocal representatives of CFP issues, without prejudice
|
||
as to social or economic status (!).
|
||
|
||
I really enjoyed this event, and thank all of you who took the time to
|
||
talk to me or to participate in our BOF circle.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, Mar 15, 1993 (07:16)
|
||
From: Dave Hughes <dave@well.sf.ca.us>
|
||
Subject: File 8--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 1)
|
||
|
||
What's missing in the 'dialogue' between US government,
|
||
including intelligence, types and that part of the counterculture
|
||
willing to talk to em at conferences like this one, is creative
|
||
thought about what US intelligence agencies - once you admit their
|
||
necessity - *should* be doing. Or how they should be, using the new
|
||
technologies, solving their age old problems.
|
||
|
||
Don't forget that part of their problem is that they don't
|
||
*know* any better ways to do what they are doing. And all the self
|
||
appointed creative types here have to, for a change, put themselves in
|
||
the CIA's shoes and ask "If I had the mission, how would I do it?" Its
|
||
a therapeutic exercise, once one accepts 'responsibility' for giving
|
||
the orders or carrying out the missions.
|
||
|
||
I didn't hear many 'solutions' being offered at the conference
|
||
to the problem of deterring, detecting, or investigating crimes (and
|
||
worse, by foreign agents) done with crypto programs that can't be
|
||
busted. Just endless arguments on why, from a civil liberties
|
||
standpoint, there should be no backdoors required by law. I agree.
|
||
|
||
Now, how do you expect the FBI to solve the problem, Or should
|
||
they just give up, and if billions disappear from your bank accounts -
|
||
c'est la vive?
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, Mar 13, 1993 (14:34)
|
||
From: Robert David Steele <steeler@WELL.SF.CA.US>
|
||
Subject: File 9--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 2)
|
||
|
||
Let me give you a couple of specific examples where the intelligence
|
||
community, the rest of government, and the private sector (corporate,
|
||
academic, and free) could do some work together:
|
||
|
||
1) A national "inventory" of unclassified multi-media, multi-lingual
|
||
unclassified sources of data, and a national dialogue over what "gaps"
|
||
need to be filled to make our nation and all its sub-elements
|
||
competitive in thinking, producing, and providing services.
|
||
|
||
2) Provide Vice-President Gore with budgetary control over the
|
||
billions of dollars spent by various U.S. government agencies on
|
||
inventing incompatible non-interoperable data handling systems, and
|
||
move toward a national generic information handling architecture with
|
||
mandated openness and standards--for instance, a legislative
|
||
proscription, implemented over five years, which ultimately prohibits
|
||
government purchase of ANY information technology which is not fully
|
||
open.
|
||
|
||
3) Establish a "transition plan" in which 1 billion dollars a year,
|
||
beginning in this coming fiscal year which starts this coming 1
|
||
October, is transferred from the intelligence community to NREN/NPN.
|
||
Down-size the intelligence community in the following four ways:
|
||
|
||
a) Eliminate one quarter of its budget (from which comes the funding
|
||
for NREN/NPN)
|
||
|
||
b) Privatize one quarter of its capabilities, both by transitioning
|
||
things like the Foreign Broadcast Information Service into the private
|
||
sector (keeping an eye out for low cost to public), and by not doing
|
||
so many things (like being three days ahead of the news) which are
|
||
not truly vital to ANY definition of national security.
|
||
|
||
c) Distribute most (not all) of the analysts to a far broader
|
||
consumer base, allowing them to apply their methodological skills to
|
||
unclassified information (which has great biases of its own)--stop
|
||
PRODUCING classified intelligence for the sake of elitism, and focus
|
||
on THINKING as well as unclassified production that is disseminable to
|
||
Congress, the press, and the public.
|
||
|
||
d) Put a much-reduced intelligence community back in the business of
|
||
true SECRETS, narrowly focused, with Vice-Presidential participation
|
||
in advising the President what can be done with open sources vice
|
||
classified. Do nothing classified that can be done adequately with
|
||
unclassified.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: Jon <jrc@well.sf.ca.us>
|
||
Date: Sat, Mar 13, 1993 (22:27)
|
||
Subject: File 10--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 3)
|
||
|
||
It's a matter of whether you believe that the next 20 years can be
|
||
better than the last 20, and (if so) whether you as an individual,
|
||
placed where you are and motivated as you are, can do anything to make
|
||
that happen. You have of course no way of knowing whether your beliefs
|
||
are correct; you may not even know whether you are being manipulated.
|
||
|
||
The world sucks and you are not in possession of all the facts. Now
|
||
what?
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
From: MicroTimes <microx@well.sf.ca.us>
|
||
Date: Mon, Mar 15, 1993 (15:06)
|
||
Subject: File 11--Bridging the Gaps w/Law Enforcement (View 4)
|
||
|
||
To me, the most important thing about CFP, essentially, is forcing
|
||
people of all stripes to see that "the enemy" has a human face, and to
|
||
deal with things on those terms. And so, for instance, I like it when
|
||
people who used to demonize Law Enforcement told me how great Don
|
||
Ingraham's panel was.
|
||
|
||
I don't think there are any panaceas. I do think that demonizing
|
||
people and reducing them to cartoons and assuming that All Of Category
|
||
X Behaves Like The Bad Specimen I've Encountered are unlikely to
|
||
produce anything useful.
|
||
|
||
Or make anything better.
|
||
|
||
Mary Eisenhart (editor/MicroTimes)
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sun, 21 Mar 1993 16:18 CDT
|
||
From: Sharon Boehlefeld <BOEHLEFELD@WISCSSC.BITNET>
|
||
Subject: File 12--A Few Final Words about CFP '93
|
||
|
||
With apologies to John Perry Barlow.....
|
||
|
||
I saw him in the halls and lobbies of the conference hotel several
|
||
times during CFP '93, but he was one of the few people I recognized
|
||
that I didn't approach. I kept thinking I would have opened my mouth
|
||
and said something like I used to say to the farmers I grew up with.
|
||
("So, what's the cattle market look like this morning?") And I heard
|
||
he retired from that life. (So did some of those friends of
|
||
mine...when the bottom dropped out of the cattle market in the
|
||
mid-70s.)
|
||
|
||
But he mentioned in his luncheon talk that he likes to rely on
|
||
personal experience before he passes judgement on things. I tend to
|
||
agree.
|
||
|
||
So, anyone reading this will have to remember that this is my
|
||
perspective on the Third Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy.
|
||
Let the reader beware.
|
||
|
||
I wondered what I'd said in my scholarship application that had caught
|
||
the committee's (John McMullen's?) eye, and garnered me one of the 42
|
||
awarded this year. I'm still not sure how I got in, but I'm awfully
|
||
glad that I did. The conference was everything I'd hoped and expected
|
||
it to be. Most of the folks I'd heard of were there. Some of them were
|
||
on the program; some were just wandering around with the same
|
||
innocuous nametags that everyone wore. I had to do double takes dozens
|
||
of times to realize just who I was talking or listening to. (I mean,
|
||
really...there was this guy with a nametag that said "John
|
||
Draper"...and I overheard one attendee asking him, "Are you Captain
|
||
Crunch?" Should he really have needed to ask?)
|
||
|
||
Since the only people I'd seen before were Barlow and Mike Godwin,
|
||
there were plenty of unfamiliar faces waiting to be attached to very
|
||
familiar names. Bruce Sterling, who so recently chronicled CFP's in
|
||
_The Hacker Crackdown_, was one of those previously faceless folks to
|
||
me. But I think he finally decided I was OK to talk to; he even gave
|
||
me a copy of his Agitprop disk. But it's in a Mac format and I haven't
|
||
had a chance to look at it yet. A couple of days into the conference I
|
||
decided the only point of disagreement I had with his book was his
|
||
description of Dorothy Denning. I kept look for this *old* woman.
|
||
(Maybe Bruce is just younger than I thought *he* was.)
|
||
|
||
Cliff Stoll has been photographed just enough that I knew who he was
|
||
when I saw him. So did Rebecca Henderson, a sociology grad student
|
||
from the University of Washington. She smiled as he passed us before
|
||
dinner Wednesday night, and after he walked by we quickly decided to
|
||
ask him to join us if he wandered back our way. He did; we did; and,
|
||
surprisingly, he said yes. After sharing a meal with him, I decided it
|
||
really wasn't so surprising after all. He was funny, and witty, and
|
||
charming...and as down to earth as anyone I've ever known who spends
|
||
much of his time wondering about the stars and the planets. He regaled
|
||
us with the tale of how 'the book' was written, adding some elements
|
||
that must have died at his editor's hands. (See, there's this other
|
||
English word that sounds like 'cuckoo' and that carries a whole
|
||
different set of connotations...but ask him yourself when you see
|
||
him.)
|
||
|
||
Phiber Optik was holding court with the other hackers most of the
|
||
times I saw him. Mostly I just tried to listen. I did have a sense,
|
||
though, that I was just too "straight" to be in that crowd. (Maybe I'm
|
||
just too old.) But he and his crew seemed like most of the other
|
||
hackers I've met. And maybe I'm just a bit perverse, but I still
|
||
haven't met a hacker I didn't like...at least a little. This was the
|
||
only time, though, that I got the impression that I couldn't just walk
|
||
in, sit down, and be included in the conversation. Once I stopped by a
|
||
group that was gathered in a lobby, and when they noticed I had joined
|
||
them, a previously animated conversation ground to a halt. I just
|
||
walked away. Felt like one of those "common people, housewives" with
|
||
the audacity to think I could be hanging around the nets, and the
|
||
el33te who populate them. Oh well...
|
||
|
||
One of the best parts of the conference for me, though, was meeting
|
||
four (count 'em...four) other sociology grad students who are
|
||
interested in cyberstudies. Marc Smith from UCLA, and Lori Kendall and
|
||
Eva Skuratowicz, both from UC-Davis, and Rebecca (I already mentioned
|
||
her), managed to locate each other by Wednesday morning. We decided to
|
||
stay in touch, and Marc's already got the Virtual Center for the Study
|
||
of Virtual Spaces up and running on a UCLA computer. We talked about
|
||
organizing a session for CFP '94 in Chicago, and one for the American
|
||
Sociological Society meetings in '94, too.
|
||
|
||
The only bad part about the conference was the pace. It was daunting.
|
||
A week later I've decided that part of the problem with the pace was
|
||
me. I was so caught up in where I was that I wanted to just absorb
|
||
every element of the conference. And I tried. But there are
|
||
limits...and I didn't get to meet everyone there, or talk to some of
|
||
them for more than five minutes or so. Part of that is due, of course,
|
||
to the fact that I actually attended most of the sessions. From the
|
||
first ones at 8:30 in the morning to the end of the "Birds of a
|
||
Feather" (BOF) sessions at 11 at night. What a grind. (The EFF BOF,
|
||
btw, wasn't the shouting match some folks had predicted in the halls
|
||
earlier in the day. My money was on a generally calm discussion, since
|
||
the reorganization was already a fait accompli.)
|
||
|
||
I finally had to admit defeat, and opted out of parts of a couple of
|
||
sessions on Friday. I was out in the hall, in fact, on Friday when I
|
||
heard what most resembled booing during the last formal session. I
|
||
popped back in a few minutes before it was over, and learned that
|
||
George Trubow had inadvertently offended some of the audience members
|
||
with a remark he'd made. (This was even before his
|
||
"point-counterpoint" session with Barlow.) I can't help but think that
|
||
some of the acrimony could be attributed to the fact that I wasn't the
|
||
only exhausted soul wandering the halls by then. Tolerance, however,
|
||
seems to have prevailed.
|
||
|
||
Another of the fascinating elements of the conference, though, was the
|
||
incredible mix of people. There were "names" of all sorts wandering
|
||
around with the rest of us. And some of the rest of us were pretty
|
||
fascinating folks in our own right. I can't begin to explain how
|
||
interesting it was to meet people from poets to pilots to postmen who
|
||
deal with computers in their daily lives. And all of those people have
|
||
given some thought to the social ramifications of the technology.
|
||
(Given the nature of the conference, that's probably little more than
|
||
a truism. But I also know I wasn't the only one there who voiced the
|
||
notion that "Gee, I'm not the only one who's wondered about (___fill
|
||
in the blank___)." )
|
||
|
||
And that may be the best thing about CFP. Folks have said it before;
|
||
they'll undoubtedly say it again.
|
||
|
||
"There's people in them thar nets."
|
||
|
||
And I like them.
|
||
|
||
But, as does any attempt to translate life into a mediated form, this
|
||
brief review falls far short of covering the experience that was CFP
|
||
'93. Listening to some of the session tapes, reading the comments
|
||
others are sharing in various parts of the nets, will help to round
|
||
out a view of what happened. But, like cyberspace itself, CFP '93 is
|
||
now a "place that isn't a place."
|
||
|
||
I'm glad I was there while it was.
|
||
|
||
Sharon Boehlefeld
|
||
Sociology/University of Wisconsin-Madison
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #5.24
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
|