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986 lines
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Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Sun Aug 8 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 59
|
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ISSN 1004-042X
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|
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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
|
||
Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
|
||
Ian Dickinson
|
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Coop Eitidor: Etaoin Shrdlu, Senior
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|
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CONTENTS, #5.59 (Aug 8 1993)
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File 1-- Unfair Newspaper Article on BBS Network & Replies
|
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File 2-- NIRVANAnet BBSes and the Media (CuD Commentary)
|
||
|
||
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
||
available at no cost electronically from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The
|
||
editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302)
|
||
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
||
60115.
|
||
|
||
Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
|
||
news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
|
||
LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
|
||
libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
|
||
the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
|
||
On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
|
||
on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and on: Rune Stone BBS (IIRG
|
||
WHQ) (203) 832-8441 NUP:Conspiracy; RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020
|
||
CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from 1:11/70; unlisted
|
||
nodes and points welcome.
|
||
EUROPE: from the ComNet in LUXEMBOURG BBS (++352) 466893;
|
||
In ITALY: Bits against the Empire BBS: +39-461-980493
|
||
|
||
ANONYMOUS FTP SITES:
|
||
UNITED STATES: ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/cud
|
||
uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu (141.211.182.53) in /pub/CuD/cud
|
||
halcyon.com( 202.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud
|
||
aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud
|
||
AUSTRALIA: ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2) in /pub/text/CuD.
|
||
EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud. (Finland)
|
||
ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud (United Kingdom)
|
||
|
||
COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
|
||
information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
||
diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
|
||
as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
|
||
they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
|
||
non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
|
||
specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
|
||
relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
|
||
preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
|
||
unless absolutely necessary.
|
||
|
||
DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
||
the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
|
||
responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
||
violate copyright protections.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Fri, 30 Jul 93 13:31:21 PDT
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From: royb@NETCOM.COM
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Subject: File 1--Unfair Newspaper Article on BBS Network & Replies
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: The Contra Costa Times printed a page one story on
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NIRVANAnet, a network of a half-dozen BBSes in California's Bay Area.
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The story focused on the potential "criminal activity" of the boards,
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using the general collection of ASCII "anarchist" and "phreak/hack"
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files as the basis. Below is the story that triggered the controversy
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and some of the letters that were sent in response)).
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++++
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Here is the original story, again, with all the replies and reactions
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we have collected. Many of these have already been submitted to the
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newspaper (Contra Costa Times).
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Date--1993-07-28,12:11
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From--DEMENTED PIMIENTO
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To--ALL
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Subject--NIRVANAnet(tm) a "rogue n
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MODEM OPERANDI: Tips on crime go on-line
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by: Michael Liedtke
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staff writer for the Contra Costa Times
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Wednesday, July 28, 1993 (p. 1)
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Tips on how to commit fraud, murder and other mayhem are just a phone
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call away in the Bay Area, courtesy of rabble-rousing electronic
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bulletin boards that turn the personal computer into a clearinghouse
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for crime.
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|
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Using the First Amendment as a legal shield, a group of electronic
|
||
bulletin boards in the Bay Area has created an information network
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||
providing criminal insights to anyone with a phone, personal computer
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and modem.
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Essentially, these computer forums, known as bulletin board services,
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||
are electronic libraries. While some computer bulletin boards are
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||
limited to paying subscribers, the rebel network distributing criminal
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expertise is open to everyone, free of charge.
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Most of the bulletin board files can be fetched over phone lines and
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brought into the caller's home. In turn, callers to the bulletin
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boards are encouraged to send in files, so the systems can accumulate
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advice from experts and novices.
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More than 45,000 computer users have called an underground Bay Area
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bulletin board, known as "Lied Unlimited," that offers a roguish
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||
gallery of information. File titles include:
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o "How to Make Your Own Valid American Express Card"
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o "How to Rob a Bank"
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o "How to Break Into Houses"
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o "Stealing Toyotas and What to Do With Them"
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o "Simple Way to Make a Car Go BOOM!"
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o "Twenty-two Ways to Kill"
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|
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The bulletin boards also have other categories offering
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more-mainstream advice and entertainment, but they appear to be
|
||
primarily interested in promoting disorder.
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|
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In a self-description appearing on a bulletin board review, Lied
|
||
Unlimited said it tries to focus "on political realities. The point
|
||
being that this reality is created by consensus, and the only way to
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change the reality is to change the consensus."
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|
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Lies Unlimited plans to shut down today and reopen next month after
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the system operator, listed a Mick Freen, moves from South San
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Francisco, to Salt Lake City. Mischievous information similar to Lies
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Unlimited's archives remains available on several other Bay Area
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||
bulletin boards, including a Walnut Creek-based system known as "And
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the Temple of the Screaming Electron."
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|
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Based on computer files retrieved by the Times, other contributors in
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this unorthodox network include "My Dog Bit Jesus" in Berkeley,
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"realitycheck," in Albany, "Burn This Flag" in San Jose and "The New
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Dork Sublime" in San Francisco.
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Among them, the bulletin boards offer hundreds of files providing
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instructions on credit card fraud, money laundering, mail fraud,
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counterfeiting, drug smuggling, cable-tv theft, bomb- making and
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murder.
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|
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The Time left electronic messages on several of those bulletin boards
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seeking interviews with the system operators. None of the operators
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responded by late Tuesday.
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Virtually anyone who understands how to use a computer and modem can
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tap into the rogue bulletin boards, if they have the phone numbers.
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The boards allow callers to create their own logons and passwords,
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||
opening the door for kids to get into the system. Based on their
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||
content, the bulletin boards appear to be particularly popular among
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teen-agers.
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"This shows why people need to be much more aware of what kids are
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doing with their computers," said Hans Von Braun, a computer security
|
||
expert who works for San Francisco-based Comsec.
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||
|
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One bulletin board, Burn This Flag, requires callers to fill out an
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application before gaining access to an adults-only section that
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contains files describing "bizarre sexual behavior." But in a written
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||
message, Burn This Flag's system operator, known as "Zardoz,"
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||
acknowledges there is no foolproof way to ensure all users of the
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adult section are at least 18.
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||
|
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The Time isn't publishing the phone numbers of the rebel bulletin
|
||
boards as a children's safeguard.
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The bulletin boards remain open by straddling a fine line between the
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legal definitions of free speech and criminal behavior.
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||
|
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Under First Amendment rights guaranteeing free speech, the law allows
|
||
the bulletin boards to serve as criminal primers, as long a the advice
|
||
is limited to generic instructions. Essentially, it's legal for
|
||
individuals to discuss how to commit a crime as long as they don't
|
||
solicit or encourage the commission of a crime.
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||
|
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"We're aware of these types of bulletin boards," said Rick Smith, an
|
||
FBI spokesman in San Francisco. "But to shut them down, you have to
|
||
make a link between the discussion of a crime and the commission of a
|
||
crime."
|
||
|
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Law enforcement officials and security experts said they snoop through
|
||
rogue bulletin boards to stay abreast of advice available to
|
||
prospective criminals. These periodic checks might spot possible
|
||
weaknesses in security systems and help authorities take precautions.
|
||
|
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Pacific Bell can't refuse phone access to the underground bulletin
|
||
boards, eve though the forums often contain advice on how to commit
|
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phone fraud. For instance, one file on the "realitycheck" board is
|
||
titled "basic telephone sabotage."
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|
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Typed by Demented Pimiento - 7/27/93---
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* Origin: &TOTSE --> What in HELL is this echo FOR? <-- 510/935-5845 (9:900/2)
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|
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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>>> USERS REPLY <<<
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||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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|
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Date--1993-07-28,18:13
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From--JEFF HUNTER
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To: ALL
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||
Subject--Contra Costa Times
|
||
Flags:
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||
|
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Jeff's Letter to the Editor of the Contra Costa Times
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|
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July 28, 1993
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To Whom It May Concern:
|
||
|
||
As the System Operator of & the Temple of the Screaming Electron and
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the network co-ordinator for NIRVANAnet(tm) I wanted to thank your
|
||
paper for the extra publicity that Michael Liedtke's sensationalistic
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article "MODEM OPERANDI: Tips On Crime Go On-line" has provided for our
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BBS network.
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I helped to start NIRVANAnet(tm) four years ago because I wanted to
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create a computer network where ideas, any ideas, could be freely
|
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exchanged between people. I wanted to create a network that was open,
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||
free, and easily accessable.
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||
|
||
When you exchange messages with people on NIRVANAnet(tm), you do not
|
||
know the age, gender, race, religious affiliation, political party,
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||
hair length, mode of dress, or sexual orientation of the person you are
|
||
talking to. Because of this, people cannot be pigeon-holed into neat
|
||
little categories and you end up learning an amazing amount about the
|
||
thoughts, feelings, and beliefs of a much wider array of people than
|
||
you would encounter in everyday life. On our network teenagers talk to
|
||
grandparents, bikers talk with born-again Christians, and Socialists
|
||
talk to Republicans. These people would never speak to one another if
|
||
they met on the street, but because they can use computers, they freely
|
||
exchange thoughts, ideas, dreams and hopes.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Liedtke stated that we are "Using the First Amendment as a legal
|
||
shield" and that "The bulletin boards remain open by straddling a fine
|
||
line between the legal definitions of free speech and criminal
|
||
behavior."
|
||
|
||
I'm surprised that a newspaper reporter, of all people, has such a
|
||
callous disregard for the First Ammendment. There is no "fine line". We
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||
are not engaged in criminal activities, period. We are engaged in
|
||
speech, period. Speech is protected, period. When the day comes where
|
||
people can be imprisoned merely for what they say or what they think,
|
||
it's time to move to another country. As Pacific Bell spokesman Craig
|
||
Watts stated in the article "You can't prosecute someone for bad
|
||
thoughts."
|
||
|
||
The information in the "criminal" text files that Mr. Liedtke refers to
|
||
can be found in any well-stocked library, or ordered from any number of
|
||
book publishers in this country. Many of our files were found on the
|
||
Internet, a worldwide government/university/industry network funded in
|
||
part by the National Science Foundation.
|
||
|
||
The article also stated that "The Times isn't publishing the phone
|
||
numbers of the rebel bulletin boards as a children's safeguard."
|
||
Another reason might be that people would actually call the systems in
|
||
question and find out that Mr. Liedtke did not tell the whole story,
|
||
and as everyone knows, the most effective way to lie is to only tell
|
||
part of the truth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Jeff Hunter
|
||
Sysop, & the Temple of the Screaming Electron
|
||
|
||
--- GEcho 1.00
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
Conference: 2,General
|
||
Number: 2590
|
||
Reply-to: 0
|
||
Private: No
|
||
Receipt: No
|
||
Date--1993-07-29,09:07
|
||
From--DEMENTED PIMIENTO
|
||
To: ALL
|
||
Subject--My response to the CCT ra
|
||
Flags:
|
||
|
||
The following is the letter I sent in response to the Contra Costa Times
|
||
article slamming NIRVANAnet bbses as a 'rabble-rousing' network. I encourage
|
||
all reasonably lucid people to voice their opinions to the editor of said
|
||
paper.
|
||
|
||
===========================================================================
|
||
|
||
The New Dork Sublime BBS (415) 864-DORK Sysop:
|
||
Demented Pimiento OR (415) 255-NERD 42A Broderick
|
||
Street 24 Hours / 300-14.4k v.32bis/v.42bis San Francisco, CA
|
||
94117-3115 NIRVANAnet% Node 9:900/10 Subliminal News For New Dorks
|
||
Everywhere - Don't Die Wondering...
|
||
|
||
|
||
July 28, 1993
|
||
|
||
|
||
Letters to the Editor
|
||
c/o Michael Liedtke
|
||
Contra Costa Times
|
||
P.O. Box 8099
|
||
Walnut Creek, CA 94596-8099
|
||
|
||
Mr. Liedtke:
|
||
|
||
I'd like to take this opportunity to thank you for your recent article on
|
||
NIRVANAnet, (although you never mentioned the network by name). It's proven
|
||
quite popular among our callers, and I thank you for your unsolicited
|
||
publicity.
|
||
|
||
Blatantly slanted, chock-full-o-buzzwords ("rebel network," "bizarre sexual
|
||
behavior," "rogue bulletin boards"), long on sensationalism and short on
|
||
content, Mr. Liedtke's story weaves a fantastic vision of intrigue,
|
||
underground conspiracies, and computer criminals lurking in suburban rumpus
|
||
rooms in the guise of adolescent cyberpunks. While this certainly adheres
|
||
to the media stereotype of computer hobbyists that your paper seems happy to
|
||
portray, it is simply not the truth.
|
||
|
||
All information compiled on NIRVANAnet% has been compiled over the years fro
|
||
other such "rebel" sources as the Library of Congress, and the Internet
|
||
(network which connects universities & government offices worldwide), but
|
||
perhaps I shouldn't include their addresses here "as a children's safeguard
|
||
|
||
NIRVANAnet was founded on the belief that bulletin board systems should rema
|
||
open and free. We don't charge for access to our systems because we're all
|
||
nice folks and wouldn't want the public to pay for something which is
|
||
absolutely free and available at any public library. We are not "undergroun
|
||
in any way, and the phone numbers to ALL the NIRVANAnet BBSes are printed ev
|
||
two weeks in Computer Currents and every quarter in MicroTimes (Bay Area
|
||
computer trade magazines) and indeed, the numbers have been printed there fo
|
||
years. I'm including the phone numbers to all NIRVANAnet% bulletin boards,
|
||
and I encourage your readers to call the nearest one to judge for themselves
|
||
whether or not criminal behavior is encouraged or even tolerated on NIRVANAn
|
||
|
||
Perhaps if Mr. Liedtke had bothered to actually READ a few messages in ANY o
|
||
the message areas, he would have come to a more reasonable conclusion on
|
||
NIRVANAnet before going to press.
|
||
|
||
& the Temple (510) 935-5845
|
||
of The Screaming Electron
|
||
realitycheck (510) 527-1662
|
||
My Dog Bit Jesus (510) 658-8078
|
||
Lies Unlimited (415) 583-4102
|
||
The New Dork Sublime (415) 864-DORK
|
||
Burn This Flag (408) 363-9766
|
||
The Shrine (408) 747-0778
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Demented Pimiento
|
||
Sysop - The New Dork Sublime BBS
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
BBS: BTF
|
||
Conference: 2,General
|
||
Number: 2591
|
||
Reply-to: 0
|
||
Private: No
|
||
Receipt: No
|
||
Date--1993-07-29,13:44
|
||
From--SAM UZI
|
||
To: ALL
|
||
Subject--MY letter to CCTimes
|
||
Flags:
|
||
|
||
Sirs,
|
||
|
||
I am deeply disturbed at the tone of your article, dated Aug, 28, 1993,
|
||
by Michael Liedtke, concerning the supposed criminal
|
||
predilections of the free-access electronic bulletin-board
|
||
community. The bulletin boards (BBSs) that you singled out in your article
|
||
all belong to what is called the NirvanaNet, which is a
|
||
network of Bay Area BBSs. I have been a user of this network for four years,
|
||
and take great offense at your relentless
|
||
characterization of NirvanaNet as an "unorthodox", "rebel", "rogue" network,
|
||
and by the wanton claim that we are "primarily interested is promoting
|
||
disorder".
|
||
I would like to address the charges that you have made against us in
|
||
detail.
|
||
You stated that "using the First Amendment as a shield", we
|
||
are a collection of "rabble-rousing electronic bulletin boards
|
||
turning the personal computer into a clearinghouse for crime" which "remain
|
||
open by straddling a fine line between the legal
|
||
definitions of free speech and criminal behavior". Using these
|
||
terms, you have painted a picture of us a group of criminal-minded people who
|
||
advocate crime, and who's purpose is to create more
|
||
criminals in the world, as well as directly implying that we
|
||
ourselves are engaged in criminal behavior. This is patently
|
||
untrue, and a gross misinterpretation of fact. The statement that "Pacific
|
||
Bell can't refuse phone access to underground bulletin
|
||
boards" further implies; one, that we are an "underground" network, and also;
|
||
that the telephone company should somehow have the right to deny telephone
|
||
access to anyone that it might find politically offensive. We are in no way
|
||
an "underground" network. All of the NirvanaNet BBSs advertise quite openly,
|
||
as noted by Liedtke himself elsewhere in the article. In fact, in attempted
|
||
support of his
|
||
claims of our supposed "criminal behavior", Liedtke quoted a "self-
|
||
description" of Lies Unlimited (which is a NirvanaNet BBS) which
|
||
stated that its focus is "on political realities". The quote went on to say
|
||
that "the point being that this reality is created by
|
||
consensus, and the only way to change the reality is to change the consensus".
|
||
I fail to see how this statement can, in any way, be interpreted as an
|
||
advocacy of criminal behavior, unless the author is intending to imply that
|
||
any attempt to become involved in the
|
||
political process is criminal in and of itself, which - if true -
|
||
would be in direct conflict with the letter and intent of the
|
||
Constitution of the United States and with the basic principles of our nation.
|
||
The NirvanaNet BBSs do have available all of the noxious text files that
|
||
were mentioned, but, quite frankly, none of the regular users I know of on the
|
||
network has much interest in reading any of them. In discussions with the
|
||
system administrators (Sysops) of
|
||
the various BBSs, I have gathered that the main reason that they
|
||
are there is because we have a legal right to have them. Far from "using the
|
||
First Amendment as a shield", the NirvanaNet users are, as a whole, deeply
|
||
dedicated to the concepts contained and
|
||
expressed by the Bill of Rights, and the Sysops seem to have
|
||
decided that it is their duty to take a stand on this issue. Also, far from
|
||
being "primarily interested in promoting disorder" by
|
||
"distributing criminal expertise", the main function of NirvanaNet is as a
|
||
message system, by which the users can (and do) engage in debates on broad
|
||
topics ranging from our tastes in books and films, our views on psychology, to
|
||
our opinions on political issue such
|
||
as the National Debt and Constitutional law. Never has anyone I
|
||
know of on the network (other than the occasional crank, who might call once
|
||
or twice, leave an inflammatory message, and then never be heard from again)
|
||
ever advocated criminal activity, nor
|
||
expressed a sentiment of condoning criminal activity. We are all responsible
|
||
and concerned citizens. As for the statement made by Liedtke that he
|
||
refrained from noting the telephone numbers of the BBSs, as "a children's
|
||
safeguard", this strongly implies that we
|
||
are somehow intent on the corruption of children. There are many things in
|
||
the world that are dangerous to children, but access to a BBS dedicated to
|
||
free speech is not one of them. In any case,
|
||
if a parent does not wish a child to have access (which is wholly appropriate
|
||
in the case of pornography), then it is up to the
|
||
parent to restrict the child, as much as it is for the Sysops to
|
||
attempt to restrict their access, in just the same way that it is a parent's
|
||
responsibility to restrict a child's access to
|
||
pornographic telephone services. The Sysops, in good conscience, do attempt
|
||
to restrict access of pornographic materials to minors, and there is no one on
|
||
NirvanaNet who would wish it to be
|
||
otherwise.
|
||
NirvanaNet is a forum which provides its users with the
|
||
opportunity to engage in discussion and debate on a daily basis. It is NOT a
|
||
"clearinghouse for crime", as Liedtke characterized it, nor are the NirvanaNet
|
||
users rogues, rabble-rousers, or criminals.
|
||
I am disappointed that a responsible and respected newspaper such as the
|
||
Contra Costa Times would make such a vilifying attack on a entity such as
|
||
NirvanaNet, leaving the general public with an image of us which is very much
|
||
the inverse of the truth.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
(me)
|
||
NirvanaNet user.
|
||
|
||
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
BBS: BTF
|
||
Conference: 2,General
|
||
Number: 2607
|
||
Reply-to: 0
|
||
Private: No
|
||
Receipt: No
|
||
Date--1993-07-29,06:18
|
||
From--POINDEXTER FORTRAN
|
||
To: ALL
|
||
Subject--More CCTimes Letters...
|
||
Flags:
|
||
|
||
Letters to the Editor
|
||
Contra Costa Times
|
||
P.O. Box 8099
|
||
Walnut Creek, CA 94596-8099
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dear Sir/Madam,
|
||
|
||
In regards to Michael Liedtke's article, "MODEM OPERANDI: Tips
|
||
on Crime go online":
|
||
|
||
How can the Bulletin Board Services (BBSes) mentioned in the
|
||
article be "Underground" when the telephone numbers are
|
||
published in several publications?
|
||
|
||
According to my BBS logs, Mr. Liedtke logged onto my BBS on
|
||
Tuesday, 7/27 at 11:50 a.m.. Without looking at any part of the
|
||
Bulletin board, he left me a message, and logged off. I find
|
||
it curious that an investigative reporter would not actually
|
||
investigate a BBS he was writing about, given the opportunity.
|
||
|
||
The message asked me to contact him that day, because the piece
|
||
was going to press tomorrow, 7/28. Other sysops mentioned in
|
||
the article have cited a similar lack of notice.
|
||
|
||
I would like to note that Mr. Liedtke took this article
|
||
to press without any information from the people involved, and
|
||
he denied those people the opportunity to present all sides of the
|
||
issue in question. BBSes offer a lot to their callers - a
|
||
place for debate, a place to make friends, a place to call
|
||
their own. Mr. Liedtke appears to have not seen this.
|
||
|
||
As it stands, Mr. Liedtke has presented one side of the story.
|
||
I invite him to contact any of the system operators of any of
|
||
the BBSes he mentioned for further information.
|
||
|
||
<my real name>
|
||
Sysop, RealitycheckBBS
|
||
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
BBS: BTF
|
||
Conference: 25,SYSOPS
|
||
Number: 902
|
||
Reply-to: 0
|
||
Private: No
|
||
Receipt: No
|
||
Date--1993-07-29,18:46
|
||
From--QUAKER STATE TAPIOCA RUPT
|
||
To: ALL
|
||
Subject--Letter To The Editor
|
||
Flags:
|
||
|
||
Editor
|
||
Contra Costa Times
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Editor,
|
||
|
||
I read with amusement your yellow-journalism piece, "Modem
|
||
Operandi: Tips on Crime Go On-Line" (Michael Liedtke, 07/28/93).
|
||
As a frequent browser of such systems, I can tell you his gross
|
||
mischaracterization of BBSs was reminiscent of the Hippie-Scare
|
||
articles of the late sixties.
|
||
|
||
The alarmist sensationalism of the article notwithstanding,
|
||
BBSs are a lot more than Liedtke makes them out to be: they are
|
||
repositories of all sorts of arcana, some of it rather hair-
|
||
raising. "Using the first amendment as a kind of shield?" The
|
||
first amendment is the boards' Reason for being (the same
|
||
shield, incidentally, that lets him sell sleazy papers by telling
|
||
only half a story). Like Rap music, BBSs are a forum for the
|
||
voiceless.
|
||
|
||
Yes, some of the data he reports can be found; it's also
|
||
commonly available elsewhere. A lot of the mayhem described
|
||
comes from such "underground" sources as the Navy Seals training
|
||
and CIA covert activities in Nicaragua; the chickens come home to
|
||
roost. Actually, most of what your reporter saw was teen
|
||
posturing, nothing more. Do you think a true criminal needs such
|
||
a system for pointers? Or that he would give away his/her best
|
||
trade secrets?
|
||
|
||
Would that this were the work of some diabolical cabal.
|
||
Boards of this nature are a nationwide social phenomenon,
|
||
numbering in the tens of thousands, and growing. It's almost
|
||
mainstream! That ought to give Mr. Liedtke pause enough to ask,
|
||
"Why is it that law-abiding citizens feel they need to trade in
|
||
such unsavory information? What's going on?"
|
||
|
||
In a New World Order, where the Only Policeman In Town
|
||
(with its Only Media In Town) acts with increasing arrogance and
|
||
impunity, from Simi Valley to Iraq, is it any surprise the
|
||
powerless are asking "Who will tell me the truth, protect me?"
|
||
As The Boomers loot the last of the goodies from the economy,
|
||
does it come as a shock that the twentysomethings don't have a
|
||
whole lot of respect for ethics or morals? Why, this stuff is as
|
||
American as apple pie!
|
||
|
||
So the cheesy bathos of Liedtke's invocation of "protecting
|
||
the children" rings pretty hollow, except perhaps as a comfort to
|
||
parents who need a scapegoat to explain away the alienation of a
|
||
generation of abandoned kids. When those kids see what a crock
|
||
that article was, they'll just know they've been lied to again.
|
||
|
||
Adam Douglass Burtch
|
||
|
||
540 Alcatraz #A
|
||
Oakland Ca 94609
|
||
(510) 655-8508
|
||
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
BBS: BTF
|
||
Conference: 2,General
|
||
Number: 2542
|
||
Reply-to: 0
|
||
Private: No
|
||
Receipt: No
|
||
Date--1993-07-28,21:36
|
||
From--JEFF HUNTER
|
||
To: ALL
|
||
Subject--Contra Costa Times
|
||
Flags:
|
||
|
||
If you are angry about being branded as a "criminal" for calling NIRVANAnet(tm)
|
||
and you wish to send a letter to the editor about the article in The Contra
|
||
Costa Times, the address is:
|
||
|
||
Letters to the Editor
|
||
Contra Costa Times
|
||
P.O. Box 8099
|
||
Walnut Creek, CA 94596-8099
|
||
|
||
Letters must include your signature, first and last names, address and daytime
|
||
telephone number. Letters of more than 200 words are subject to condensation.
|
||
Letters are subject to editing, and not all can be published. You can also FAX
|
||
letters to: 510-943-8362.
|
||
|
||
Please try to be civil when writing. Angry rants, flames, and threats are NOT
|
||
needed.
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
From : ZARDOZ Number : 908 of 915
|
||
To : ALL Date : 07/30/93 3:39pm
|
||
Subject : My Letter to Editor Reference : NONE
|
||
Read : [N/A] Private : NO
|
||
Conf : 025 - ** Blabbing Sysops **
|
||
|
||
Here is my letter to the editor, for what it's worth. Didn't feel
|
||
particularly inspired, so isn't some of my best work.
|
||
|
||
++++++
|
||
|
||
07/30/93
|
||
|
||
Box 36022
|
||
San Jose, CA 95158-6022
|
||
|
||
This letter is in response to a recent story by an editor of yours, Michael
|
||
Liedtke. In his cover story about Bay Area BBS systems, he made several
|
||
inaccurate statements about my BBS and the rest of the NIRVANAnet
|
||
network. I would like to set the record straight.
|
||
|
||
First off, the reason that he didn't get callbacks from the operators of these
|
||
systems is because he contacted us too late. And on my system, his first
|
||
log on was THE DAY BEFORE the story went to press and he spent only
|
||
10 minutes on-line. The article suggests we were unwilling to discuss our
|
||
systems with him. This was just not true.
|
||
|
||
Secondly, my system (Burn This Flag) was represented as not employing
|
||
enough safeguards to keep adult material from minors. I am asking that the
|
||
person requesting access to the materials sign a form and mail it in that
|
||
states they are of legal age. Major men's publications such as Playboy and
|
||
Penthouse employ the same methodologies as I do for age verification. I
|
||
would think this was sufficient. If you have a better idea how it should be
|
||
done I would be interested in hearing it.
|
||
|
||
Lastly, you take a very biased position against our network and don't give
|
||
any way for people to examine it for themselves. Refusing to publish the
|
||
phone numbers is just an excuse to avoid being challenged on any of the
|
||
issues you've presented. Once a user logs in and reads the message base,
|
||
they will realize there are many intelligent callers that may have a only
|
||
passing interest in some of the topics you find offensive (such as promoting
|
||
disorder). And yes, many of them are in fact older that the "teenagers" you
|
||
suggest we've based our systems upon.
|
||
|
||
I suggest you log on, spend some time on the systems, talk to the users,
|
||
talk to the sysops and then make up your mind. Sure, it makes it harder to
|
||
beat a deadline but it also will offer you more accurate insights.
|
||
|
||
As a reminder, here is the list of the Nirvananet network phone numbers..
|
||
|
||
Burn This Flag 408/363-9766 San Jose Volitile Conversations
|
||
&TOTSE 510/935-5845 Walnut Creek Raw Data for Raw Nerves
|
||
realitycheck 510/527-1662 Albany No Truth and Nothing But
|
||
Lies Unlimited 415/583-4102 South SF Politics and Polemics
|
||
My Dog Bit Jesus 510/658-8078 Berkeley Women on the Edge
|
||
New Dork Sublime 415/864-DORK San Francisco Sublime News for Dorks
|
||
The Shrine 408/747-0778 Sunnyvale Magick, Religions & Sex
|
||
|
||
|
||
Sincerely,
|
||
|
||
|
||
Zardoz
|
||
Burn This Flag BBS
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
In-Reply-To: royb@netcom.netcom.com's mail message of Jul 30, 13:36.
|
||
Reply-To: John Higdon <zygot.ati.com!john@netcomsv.netcom.com>
|
||
Organization: Green Hills and Cows
|
||
X-Mailer: Mail User's Shell (7.1.2 7/11/90)
|
||
To: netcom!royb
|
||
Subject--Re: My BBS Slammed by Local Paper
|
||
Status: OR
|
||
|
||
On Jul 30 at 13:36, royb@netcom.netcom.com writes:
|
||
|
||
> by: Michael Liedtke
|
||
> staff writer for the Contra Costa Times
|
||
> Wednesday, July 28, 1993
|
||
|
||
> Using the First Amendment as a legal shield, a group of electronic
|
||
> bulletin boards in the Bay Area has created an information network
|
||
> providing criminal insights to anyone with a phone, personal
|
||
> computer and modem.
|
||
|
||
What nonsense. This same generalization could be applied to public
|
||
libraries, university libraries, or even a place where two or more
|
||
people gather and talk freely among themselves.
|
||
|
||
Newspapers tend to have a real struggle with the First Amendment. On
|
||
the one hand, it is freely invoked by reporters as an excuse to impede
|
||
an ongoing police investigation of a real crime; but it is denounced by
|
||
these same reporters when applied in the abstract to forums that simply
|
||
discuss criminal activity in general. Go figure.
|
||
|
||
If you take this reporter's stand to its inevitable conclusion, law
|
||
enforcement should monitor all telephone calls to make sure no
|
||
discussion of criminal activity is taking place. He apparently believes
|
||
that children have such a weak foundation in moral and ethical
|
||
principles that exposure to even the concept of aberrant behavior is
|
||
enough to turn them into irretrievable socialogical misfits.
|
||
|
||
The computer is sorely testing the application and fact of the First
|
||
Amendment. It puts the means and method of rapid mass communications
|
||
within the reach of everyone. It has been easy for the media to defend
|
||
the right of free speech when it was only they who possessed
|
||
printing presses and broadcast stations. Now that the common man has
|
||
the ability to express himself publically without the watchful eye of
|
||
an editor, the tune changes. Now the First Amendment is something that
|
||
people "hide behind", rather than being a fundamental right to be
|
||
defended by and for everyone.
|
||
|
||
> In a self-description appearing on a bulletin board review, Lied
|
||
> Unlimited said it tries to focus "on political realities. The
|
||
> point being that this reality is created by consensus, and the only
|
||
> way to change the reality is to change the consensus."
|
||
|
||
This has been the credo of the broadcast and print media during my
|
||
entire lifetime. Whether or not it was succinctly expressed is
|
||
irrelevant; it has been the defacto underlying principle governing all
|
||
news presentation. It is amusing to see a reporter recoil in horror
|
||
when the concept is expressed openly on a BBS. Is he afraid they might
|
||
steal his show?
|
||
|
||
> The Time left electronic messages on several of those bulletin
|
||
> boards seeking interviews with the system operators. None of the
|
||
> operators responded by late Tuesday.
|
||
|
||
Whether the lack of response was intentional or not, it was for the
|
||
best. My experience with newspaper reporters has been 100% negative. No
|
||
matter what you say, it is twisted around to serve the bias and agenda
|
||
of the reporter himself. As a person active in legal matters, I have
|
||
freqently been contacted by the press and my words and concepts have
|
||
been distorted each time without fail.
|
||
|
||
> The Time isn't publishing the phone numbers of the rebel bulletin
|
||
> boards as a children's safeguard.
|
||
|
||
How public spirited of the paper. Any kid with an IQ over 5 knows that
|
||
you get BBS numbers from Computer Currents or Micro Times, not the
|
||
pompous, self-righteous "mainstream" media.
|
||
|
||
> The bulletin boards remain open by straddling a fine line between
|
||
> the legal definitions of free speech and criminal behavior.
|
||
|
||
This "fine line" is a fundamental cornerstone for what we call
|
||
"freedom" in this country. Yes, you have to commit a crime in this
|
||
country to be prosecuted for criminal behavior. While it is true that
|
||
in other nations, particularly in the former "Eastern Bloc" countries,
|
||
a person could be arrested, charged, and convicted on the basis of his
|
||
ideas and the expression of them, we have not quite yet arrived at that
|
||
sorry state here. I have to admit, however, that the newspapers are
|
||
doing one hell of a workmanlike job convincing the public that the
|
||
First Amendment was written exclusively for the media and does not
|
||
apply to ordinary folk.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Thu, 5 Aug 1993 11:19:41 CDT
|
||
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
|
||
Subject: File 2--NIRVANAnet BBSes and the Media (CuD Commentary)
|
||
|
||
Despite the best efforts of cybernauts to "educate the media,"
|
||
misinformation and hyperbole in news stories about cyberspace
|
||
continue. As we've repeatedly emphasized, the concern is not that
|
||
stories don't present a "favorable view" or are simply not to our
|
||
liking. The issues are far more important: Deceptive stories,
|
||
regardless of how well-intended, have a way of creating false images
|
||
that demonize BBSes, the Nets, and other cyberterritory. These images
|
||
influence legislators, law enforcement, and the public, few of whom
|
||
are cyber-literate. Techno-ignorance stimulates fears of unknown
|
||
dangers lurking beneath information technology, which lead to implied
|
||
or overt calls for legislation that would curtail the freedoms in
|
||
cyberspace that are taken for granted in "real-space." Further, media
|
||
stories tend to have a recursive effect by feeding each other as one
|
||
reporter will uncritically accept the slant of a previous story.
|
||
Judging from media accounts we've seen, media representatives tend to
|
||
rely on computer security specialists with a vested interest in
|
||
dramatizing dangers, or law enforcement officials with little
|
||
substantive understanding of computer technology or culture, for
|
||
dramatic sound-bytes. Relatively few of the media personnel with whom
|
||
CuD has spoken demonstrate even a modicum of familiarity with the
|
||
culture about which they write. The Contra Costa Times story is no
|
||
exception.
|
||
|
||
The CCT story depicts NIRVANAnet as a conspiratorial group of
|
||
potential criminals. So, CuD called a NIRVANAnet board, Burn This
|
||
Flag, and asked the sysop, "Zardoz," to summarize the network:
|
||
|
||
Our BBS network, NIRVANAnet, started several years ago with
|
||
three systems in the Bay Area that had the same basic
|
||
philosophies. It was decided that since their message
|
||
bases were very similar, and since they all shared the
|
||
same basic philosophies on how to run a BBS system (no
|
||
registration, trust your users, freedom of speech reigns
|
||
supreme, knowledge should be available to everyone, no
|
||
discrimination based on age, sex, religion, drug use, or
|
||
mental stability, etc.) they decided to form NIRVANAnet.
|
||
|
||
The network has since grown to seven systems (with six
|
||
operational and one currently relocating). The original
|
||
premise is still alive with what we believe is one of the
|
||
best message bases offered in the country. We allow and
|
||
encourage user aliases, which in turn promotes a level of
|
||
honesty and frankness that would be otherwise absent from
|
||
the discussion areas. We pride ourselves on believing that
|
||
a user can dial up a bulletin board without giving up
|
||
their identity and/or personal privacy.
|
||
|
||
Here is the current list of NIRVANAnet systems...
|
||
|
||
Burn This Flag 408/363-9766 San Jose Zardoz
|
||
&TOTSE 510/935-5845 Walnut Creek Jeff Hunter
|
||
realitycheck 510/527-1662 Albany Poindexter Fortran
|
||
Lies Unlimited *JUST-MOVED* ???????? Mick Freen
|
||
My Dog Bit Jesus 510/658-8078 Berkeley Suzanne d'Fault
|
||
New Dork Sublime 415/864-DORK San Francisco Demented Pimiento
|
||
The Shrine 408/747-0778 Sunnyvale Tom Joseph
|
||
|
||
CuD requested a list of files from Burn This Flag, which are shadowed
|
||
to the other boards. We also checked the file area for ourselves.
|
||
Judging from our perusal of files on the list and from the available
|
||
files and extensive message bases, the BBS seemed no different than
|
||
many other publicly accessible boards around the country. In fact,
|
||
although the message bases were lively, of reasonable quality, and
|
||
addressed the same topics found on other BBSes or the Internet, and
|
||
although the file list was extensive but not overwhelming, the system
|
||
was substantively no different than thousands of other BBSes in the
|
||
country. Users were not granted first-call access, and access to adult
|
||
files appeared to require a rigorous screening process to assure no
|
||
juveniles would be given access. To our mind, the CCT story seemed
|
||
much ado about nothing and reflected yet another example of media
|
||
hysteria.
|
||
|
||
Curious about the genesis of the story, CuD called the author, Mike
|
||
Liedtke, at the Contra Costa Times (510-943-8088) to discuss the
|
||
story. Despite the tone of the story, Mr. Liedtke was neither hostile
|
||
to NIRVANAnet nor unsympathetic to the First Amendment and other
|
||
issues involved. The following points emerged from the conversation:
|
||
|
||
1. Prior to writing the story, Mr. Liedtke had not called a BBS or
|
||
similar system, although he does have an account on Prodigy. He
|
||
seemed unaware that most "anarchist" files were mundane and simply
|
||
basic information written up in an "anarchist" or phreak/hack
|
||
vocabulary.
|
||
|
||
2. He wrote the story based on a tip from a computer security
|
||
specialist who was disturbed by the boards. Although unstated, it was
|
||
my impression that the tipster influenced the spin of the
|
||
interpretation of files, which cast them as far more insidious than
|
||
they are. The concern of the tipster was that some files might be
|
||
"dangerous" to the "business community," especially if juveniles
|
||
accessed them.
|
||
|
||
3. Mike Liedtke said that he wrote (and the CCT ran) the story as a
|
||
"human interest" piece with the intent to raise the issue of
|
||
information availability. He made several legitimate points:
|
||
Computerized information is more accessible via modems/PCs than it is
|
||
in libraries; information is more readily archived and retrieved; and
|
||
monitoring access by juveniles is extremely difficult. He felt the
|
||
story was necessary to alert parents to the potential dangers of the
|
||
files to which their children might have access. He made it clear that
|
||
he did not intend to imply that First Amendment rights should be
|
||
abridged.
|
||
|
||
4. The choice of pejorative adjectives in the story, such as "rebel
|
||
board," "unorthodox network," and other phrases that exaggerate the
|
||
"deviant" character of NIRVANAnet (and other) systems, seems to derive
|
||
primarily from the author's lack of familiarity with his topic, a not
|
||
uncommon problem. Many readers still remember and associate Joe
|
||
Abernathy's infamous "porn on the internet" article, written nearly
|
||
three years ago, with sensationalist journalism. Sadly, many readers
|
||
also remain unaware that Joe's article was actually well-intended. His
|
||
lack of familiarity and the contemporary media style toward the highly
|
||
visible and audience-provoking angle, not mean-spiritedness, resulted
|
||
in a story that some considered distorted. Despite the extensive
|
||
criticism, Joe invested considerable time in learning the issues.
|
||
Since then, he has become one of the most accurate, articulate, and
|
||
sympathetic observers of cyberculture.
|
||
|
||
And that might be the lesson to be drawn from the CCT story. I am
|
||
convinced that Mike Liedtke had no intention of casting aspersions on
|
||
NIRVANAnet. He seemed honestly surprised by the critical reactions. He
|
||
clearly had little knowledge of the topic and sincerely--and
|
||
correctly--believed that a story on information accessibility would be
|
||
a service to his community, especially the parents of minors. In the
|
||
lengthy CuD conversation, he expressed considerable curiosity about
|
||
the BBS world, especially the so-called "underground." More simply, he
|
||
acknowledged his limitations and demonstrated an eagerness to learn.
|
||
As he becomes more familiar with the topic, he may become hostile. Or,
|
||
he may become sympathetic. No matter which: As long as he is informed
|
||
and reports honestly and without stigmatizing distortion, few of us
|
||
will have any complaint.
|
||
|
||
There's a bit of an irony in all this: Those of us who believe in
|
||
unrestricted information, including CuD, tread a thin line when we
|
||
object when information about cyberculture is made available. Just as
|
||
we (rightfully) complain when legitimate information is restricted
|
||
from public access, we should bear in mind that information about us
|
||
is also legitimate to publicize. There is adult material on the Nets
|
||
and on BBSes. There is material describing pyrotechnics and other
|
||
anti-social behavior on the nets. There are virus codes and live
|
||
viruses on the nets and on BBSes. Information can be as potentially
|
||
dangerous as it is liberating.
|
||
|
||
Those of us who advocate relatively unconstrained access to the type
|
||
of information described in the CCT (and other) articles should also
|
||
remember that the debate over accessibility raises serious issues.
|
||
Beneath Mr. Liedtke's hyperbole lies a crucial question: How do
|
||
parents monitor and control their children's access to information
|
||
that might be inappropriate for a pre-teen? What is the best way to
|
||
establish a balance between freedom of speech and unconstrained
|
||
information flow with the need to impose some limitations on propriety
|
||
and accessibility?
|
||
|
||
These issues are reminiscent of the counter-culture/"underground" of
|
||
the 1960s. The "alternative press" typified by The Berkeley Barb, The
|
||
Anarchists Cookbook, and other outlets, along with the then-scandalous
|
||
full-frontal nudity of Playboy, shifting standards of acceptability in
|
||
depicting language or sex in film, and the breakdown of what some saw
|
||
as the foreshadowing of the demise of civilization-as-we-know-it,
|
||
resulted in considerable consternation amongst moral entrepreneurs.
|
||
Evolving technology simply substitutes a new medium for old ones and
|
||
resurrects old issues.
|
||
|
||
It's fully appropriate to critique media stories such as the CCT
|
||
article. On the other hand, merely flaming the messenger is not likely
|
||
to contribute to dialogue. Our guess is that most reporters are
|
||
amenable to new information. It's frustrating to see continued media
|
||
misinformation being spread to the public. On the otherhand, it's
|
||
refreshing to see the topic being covered, because it means that
|
||
slowly, albeit too slowly, the mystique of the Nets and BBSes is
|
||
breaking down and the cyberworld is emerging from the periphery of
|
||
public awareness toward the center. This provides us all with the
|
||
opportunity to educate. Mike Liedtke and his media siblings ought be
|
||
contacted, as users of NIRVANAnet did, and gently brought into the
|
||
21st century by letters and phone calls that point out the concerns.
|
||
They should be invited to participate more fully and write follow-up
|
||
stories on the issues. They should be enticed to obtain Internet
|
||
access through Compuserve, GEnie, The Well, Mindvox, and other public
|
||
access systems that would make them accessible (and hopefully more
|
||
accountable) to readers.
|
||
|
||
Despite the unfortunate slant and twists of phrase in the CCT story,
|
||
there's optimism beneath it. It reminds us that our own
|
||
responsibilities include responding to individual authors. More
|
||
importantly, it provides an opportunity to open up dialogue with the
|
||
media, especially with reporters who appear amenable to approaching
|
||
the topic with a curious and open mind.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #5.59
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
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