889 lines
43 KiB
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889 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Wed Nov 29, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 92
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
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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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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #7.92 (Wed, Nov 29, 1995)
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File 1--Cyber Robber Barons
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File 2--LoGIC: Call for papers
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File 3--Reconfiguring Power, Challenges for the 21st century
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File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 1995)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 22 Nov 1995 23:57:01 GMT
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From: rkmoore@internet-eireann.ie (Richard K. Moore)
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Subject: File 1--Cyber Robber Barons
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********************************
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This article may be posted in entirety for non-profit use.
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********************************
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To appear in: INFORMATION SOCIETY, Vol 12(2)
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Edited by: Mark Poster <mposter@benfranklin.hnet.UCI.EDU>
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See WWW: http://www.ics.uci.edu/~kling/tis.html
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********************************
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Cyberspace Inc and the Robber Baron Age,
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an analysis of PFF's "Magna Carta"
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Copyright 1995 by Information Society
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Richard K. Moore
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August 19, 1995
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Reference:
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Cyberspace and the American Dream:
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A Magna Carta for the Knowledge Age
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Release 1.2 // August 22, 1994
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The manifesto "Cyberspace and the American Dream: A Magna Carta for the
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Knowledge Age", published by the Progress and Freedom Foundation (PFF), is a
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document of considerable significance. Its very title reveals much about its
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intent. Its promoters -- both alleged and concealed -- are indicative of its
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propagandistic mission. Its contents have accurately prophesied the
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legislative
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agenda and rhetoric which have unfolded subsequent to the manifesto's
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publication.
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Given the powerful telecommunications interests behind PFF -- and the close
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ties of that organization to Speaker Newt Gingrich -- a detailed analysis
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of the
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manifesto can provide insight into what may (unfortunately) be the most likely
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scenario for the future of cyberspace.
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* * *
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The title invites direct comparison with the original Magna Carta, which is
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defined in The Cassell Concise English Dictionary as follows:
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Magna Carta - The Great Charter of English liberties,
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sealed by King John on 15 June, 1215
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With due respect to Cassell's, this is a misleading definition. The Magna
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Carta
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did not grant liberties generally to "the English", but rather devolved powers
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and privileges exclusively to an elite aristocracy. As shall be shown in this
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article, PFF's "Magna Carta" is similarly misleading: much of its rhetoric
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seems
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to imply a concern with individual liberties, but its substance would devolve
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power and privilege exclusively to the biggest corporate players in the
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telecommunications industry.
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Just as the Magna Carta supported the power of the Nobles -- with each to have
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autocratic power in his own domain -- so PFF's manifesto supports the power of
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communications monopolies -- with each to have unregulated control over its
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own cyberspace fiefdom. Rather than being a charter of liberties, the
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manifesto
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promotes a regime of robber barons in cyberspace.
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Instead of an infrastructure for public communications -- like the current
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Internet, or the American highway system -- cyberspace would be developed as a
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corporate owned monopoly -- priced at whatever the traffic will bear. Instead
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of providing a "space" in which citizens are free to speak and associate (like
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Internet), cyberspace would become a profit-machine and propaganda channel
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for media conglomerates. PFF's manifesto is a formula for neo-feudalism in the
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"Knowledge Age" -- it is a charter for what could aptly be dubbed "Cyberspace
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Inc".
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* * *
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The ultimate promoters of the manifesto are concealed. Its introduction claims:
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This statement represents the cumulative wisdom and innovation of many
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dozens of people. It is based primarily on the thoughts of four
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'co-authors': Ms. Esther Dyson; Mr. George Gilder; Dr. George
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Keyworth;
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and Dr. Alvin Toffler. This release 1.2 has the final 'imprimatur' of
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no one.
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The implication would seem to be that enlightened individuals spontaneously
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composed the manifesto, in the interests, presumably, of progress and freedom.
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The true authorship is uncertain. According to Mark Stahlman of New Media
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Associates, a scheduled speaker at an upcoming PFF conference:
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The 'author' of this rambling camel-of-a-report is Frank Gregorsky.
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He's a journalist working for PFF who does their newsletter. None of
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the listed contributors actually did any work directly on the
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document.
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That's why it's simply *not* coherent.
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[posted to telecomreg@relay.doit.wisc.edu on Sun, 5 Feb 1995]
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The "coherence" of the manifesto will be discussed in some detail below.
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As for
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the authorship, it would appear that PFF itself must be considered the
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source of
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the manifesto.
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PFF turns out to be a typical industry-front organization. Characterized
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by Mr.
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Stahlman as "Newt's 'think tank'", PFF is funded by a panoply of corporate
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sponsors. The February 6, 1995 issue of The Nation carries an article by David
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Corn, entitled "CyberNewt". Here's an excerpt;
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There is nothing particularly futuristic about the funding sources
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behind the P.F.F. and its conference. Telecommunications firms
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subsidize the group: AT&T, BellSouth, Turner Broadcasting System, Cox
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Cable Communications. Other donors to the P.F.F.'s $1.9 million bank
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account include conservative foundations, Wired magazine, high-tech
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firms, military contractors, and drug companies (another foundation
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passion is attacking the Food and Drug Administration).
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When Senator Phil Gramm spoke at the [PFF] conference luncheon, the
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tables closest to the podium were reserved for corporate benefactors:
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Eli Lilly, Seagram's, Phillip Morris, S.B.C. Communications (formerly
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Southwestern Bell) ...
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Brock N. Meeks published an article in Inter@ctive Week, dated April 28, 1995,
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entitled "Freedom Foundation Faces Scrutiny". These brief excerpts from the
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article outline Mr. Meeks' understanding of how PFF funds are used, and how it
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seeks to hide its link to Mr. Gingrich:
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...Among I@W's findings:
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* PFF spent $483,000 to underwrite a college
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course taught by Gingrich. ...
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* PFF spent $148,000 to underwrite The Progress
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Report, Gingrich's weekly cable talk show carried
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on his own National Empowerment Television. ...
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The PFF links to Gingrich and his own political
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action committee, called GOPAC, have drawn the
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interest of the Ethics Committee and the IRS, which
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is "reevaluating" PFF's nonprofit status,
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according to an IRS source.
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The PFF link to Gingrich's rising political
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currency has proved lucrative. From March 1993 to
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March 1994 the group raised $611,000. During the
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remainder of 1994, when it became clear that the
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Republicans stood a good chance to capture both the
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House and the Senate for the first time in 40
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years, an additional $1.07 million poured into PFF
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coffers, according to its financial records. ...
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The latest PFF tax returns do not make any link to
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GOPAC or Gingrich. Any such linking would violate
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IRS tax exemption rules. However, Eisenach is on
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record acknowledging that he did the basic
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groundwork of setting up PFF while running GOPAC.
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The money trail apparently goes from media/telecommunications
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conglomerates, to PFF, and finally to Mr. Gingrich's projects, which seem to be
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heavily focused on propaganda ventures. Small wonder that PFF's manifesto,
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and Mr. Gingrich's legislative agenda, promote excessive deregulation of the
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telecommunications industry, and pave the way for monopolistic control.
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Evidently the Lords of Cyberspace Inc are to include the likes of AT&T,
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BellSouth, Turner Broadcasting System, and Cox Cable Communications. Mr.
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Gingrich's famous pledges to "empower the individual" and "provide laptops
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for ghetto dwellers" should be seen for what they are: a shallow populist
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veneer
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covering a corporate-pandering agenda.
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* * *
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The text of PFF's manifesto is an artful piece of propaganda. Clouded in cyber-
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jargon, illogical in its flow of argument, and disjoint in its presentation --
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it does superficially appear to be a "rambling camel-of-a-report", as Mr.
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Stahlman observes. But beneath the deceptive rhetoric -- if one digs patiently
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-- there can indeed be found a coherent set of proposals for the commercial
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exploitation of cyberspace.
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The rhetoric is grandiose. It talks about the original American experience,
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characterized as daring pioneers conquering a new land -- based on the
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principles of individual initiative and freedom. Cyberspace is described as a
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similar frontier, and a rallying cry is raised to reaffirm freedom for the
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individual -- especially from government control. The preservation of the
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American heritage itself, the manifesto argues, hangs in the balance: freedom
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for the individual in cyberspace must be protected!
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But the manifesto makes no mention whatever of protections for _individual_
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freedoms. There's no discussion, for example, of guaranteeing freedom of
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expression or of protecting privacy. In addition, there's no discussion of
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preserving the viability of Internet mailing lists and bulletin boards -- which
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have proven to be cyberspace's equivalent of "freedom of association" and
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"freedom of the press".
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What the manifesto does discuss -- at great length -- is the protection of
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freedoms for _telecommunications & media conglomerates_: freedom to form
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monopolies, freedom to set arbitrary price rates and structures, freedom to
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control content, and freedom from fair taxation, through special accounting
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procedures. This is a formula which harks back to the robber-baron capitalism
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of the late nineteenth century, when railroad, oil, and steel monopolies ran
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roughshod over America's economy and political system.
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Hence the rhetoric of PFF's manifesto is aimed at accomplishing a clear
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propaganda mission. It aims to stir up sentiment for freedom of the
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individual,
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and then to deftly shift the ground under the manifesto's audience. The pro-
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freedom sentiment is subtly transferred from the _individual_ to the
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_corporation_, not explicitly, but by deceptive turns of phrase. "The
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corporation" is subtly equated to the "the individual", so that
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"deregulation of
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conglomerates" _seems_ to be synonymous with "freedom for the individual".
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Implementation of the manifesto's agenda would not lead to individual
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freedom at all. It would lead to subjugation of the individual by corporate
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media monopolies. The right to access services, the price of the services, the
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definition of what services would be provided, the content of "news" and
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entertainment -- these would all be decided entirely by media conglomerates,
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based on their business interests and political agendas. Neither individuals
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nor their elected representatives would have any say over how cyberspace is to
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be developed or used, under PFF's charter for Cyberspace Inc.
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Most of the remainder of this article is devoted to examining representative
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excerpts of the manifesto text, in order to substantiate and illustrate the
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summary analysis above. At the end there's a brief discussion of the
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relationship between the manifesto and the current legislative agenda in
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Washington.
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* * *
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In its Preamble, the manifesto sets forth its grandiose characterization of
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cyberspace as the next frontier of the American Dream:
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What our 20th-century countrymen came to think of as the
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"American dream," and what resonant thinkers referred to
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as "the promise of American life" or "the American Idea,"
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emerged from the turmoil of 19th-century industrialization.
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Now it's our turn: The knowledge revolution, and the Third
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Wave of historical change it powers, summon us to renew the
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dream and enhance the promise.
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In the first section, "The Nature of Cyberspace", the emphasis on cyberspace as
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a delivery media for information products is introduced:
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Cyberspace is the land of knowledge, and the exploration of
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that land can be a civilization's truest, highest calling.
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The opportunity is now before us to empower every person to
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pursue that calling in his or her own way.
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As is typical throughout the manifesto, the substance is hidden within fluff
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rhetoric. The operative phrases in this paragraph, confirmed by the rest
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of the
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manifesto, are "land of knowledge" and "exploration". Cyberspace is to be
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primarily a source of "knowledge" -- meaning commercial media products -- and
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the role of the _consumer_ will be to "explore" it -- meaning to navigate the
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purchasing options.
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This first section also introduces the theme that government is inconsistent
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with cyberspace pioneering:
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[Cyberspace] spells the death of the central institutional
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paradigm of modern life, the bureaucratic organization.
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(Governments, including the American government, are the last
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great redoubt of bureaucratic power on the face of the planet,
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and for them the coming change will be profound and probably
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traumatic.)
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As you might expect, nowhere does the manifesto acknowledge that Internet was
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established due to government initiative and sponsorship. And interestingly
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enough, the word "Internet" occurs only twice in the manifesto, and the
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Internet
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precedent is seldom cited as a source of models for how cyberspace might
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evolve.
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Also, the authors are evidently blind to the possibility that _corporations_
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might be "redoubts bureaucratic power".
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The next section, "The Nature and Ownership of Property", introduces a number
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of complex topics regarding ownership of hardware infrastructure, intellectual
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property, and the electromagnetic spectrum. This section also introduces the
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issue of pricing regulation, and touches on preferential taxation.
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The main propaganda theme, intentionally confusing the individual with
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corporations, is introduced at this point:
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At the level of first principles, should ownership be public
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(i.e. government) or private (i.e. individuals)?
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The hook is set here, favoring private over government ownership -- in the
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name of the individual. But in all that follows, it is the corporation that is
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granted privileges, not the individual. As part of the same deceptive
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dichotomy, "public/government" is everywhere equated to central bureaucracy,
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with no acknowledgement that any kind of regulation could ever be useful, nor
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that any kind of public agency, even if highly decentralized, could possibly be
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beneficial. And there is no hint that individuals might ever need to be
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protected from corporations, or that government might play some role in such
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protection.
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The ownership of hardware infrastructure is mentioned, but not discussed.
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It is
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patently obvious, evidently, to both the authors and the presumed readers, that
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this level of infrastructure is to be privately owned. State operated
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telecommunications systems are so far beyond the pale as to be unimaginable.
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Again the precedent of Internet (until very recently supported by a public
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backbone network) is conspicuously absent from the manifesto.
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The discussion of intellectual property is interesting, and appears to have
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some
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merit. Patents and copyrights are described as being a "public good" approach
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to intellectual property, outdated and cumbersome in the age of cyberspace:
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Third Wave customized knowledge is by nature a private good.
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The manifesto's favored approach to intellectual property is described in a
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quotation from John Perry Barlow:
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"One existing model for the future conveyance of intellectual
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property is real-time performance... In these instances, commercial
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exchange will be more like ticket sales to a continuous show...
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The other model, of course, is service... Who needs copyright when
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you're on a retainer?"
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Apparently the model is that authors would sell their services or their rights
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to a commercial distributor, who would then charge the consumer on a "pay per
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view" basis.
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Dealing with copyrights in electronic media has indeed proven to be a thorny
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problem. Journalists have complained about not being remunerated by
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electronic republishing services; rap musicians have allegedly "sampled"
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previous material without payment; copyrighted articles are forwarded around
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Internet on a free basis. New mechanisms are needed, and the private sector
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_is_ likely to be a creative source of solutions, such as metering technologies.
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This model makes no mention of royalties. Many authors would prefer
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royalties, based on distributor revenues, rather than being forced to sell
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their
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services or works on a fixed-price basis. This is a time-honored practice in
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pre-electronic media, and a fully accountable and enforceable royalty scheme
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would be a desirable part of any cyberspace solution for intellectual
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property.
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With regard to ownership of the electromagnetic spectrum, ominous questions
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are raised, but a specific agenda is not developed. Existing channel
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auctioning
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practices are criticized as being too limiting. Perhaps PFF's corporate
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backers
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are seeking outright permanent ownership of this presumably public resource:
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...Is the very limited 'bundle of rights' sold in those
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auctions really property, or more in the nature of a use
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permit -- the right to use a part of the spectrum for a limited
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time, for limited purposes?...
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Thus far, the manifesto has "established" that private ownership of
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infrastructure, intellectual property, and the electromagnetic spectrum should
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be strengthened and extended, with the root justification hanging on the thin
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thread of deception equating corporation with individual. Next, the specter of
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evil regulation is raised:
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Regulation, especially price regulation, of this property
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can be tantamount to confiscation, as America's cable
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operators recently learned when the Federal government
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imposed price limits on them... there is no disagreeing
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with the proposition that one's ownership of a good is less
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meaningful when the government can step in, at will, and
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dramatically reduce its value.
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Thus the manifesto proposes that every aspect of cyberspace is to be corporate
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owned, and that no price regulation should be imposed. If adequate measures
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were taken to insure healthy competition, this formula _might_ serve the public
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welfare. But the monopoly proposals, to be discussed further on, make this a
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dangerous formula indeed. Note above the use of the phrase "one's ownership",
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reinforcing the confusion of individual and corporate identity. Notice also,
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there was no discussion of the consumer complaints that led to the regulation,
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nor of the immense profits that the cable operators continue to reap subsequent
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to the "confiscation".
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Next is raised the issue of property depreciation. The precedent of microchips
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is used to claim that cyberspace investments should be depreciated rapidly.
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Current capital depreciation practices are denigrated:
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...Yet accounting and tax regulations still require property
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to be depreciated over periods as long as 30 _years_. The result
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is a heavy bias in favor of 'heavy industry' and against nimble,
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fast-moving baby businesses.
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The comparison with microchips and small entrepreneurial ventures is patently
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absurd. Cyberspace Inc is aiming to consolidate ownership of existing
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infrastructures, and to deploy new cable, fiber, and coax. These are
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long-range
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hardware investments by big players, and the above argument for accelerated
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depreciation make no sense. Such inappropriate tax treatment would amount to
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yet another giveaway to rich corporations, at the expense of the oft-touted
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individual. Perhaps small, risk-taking, nimble companies _should_ enjoy more
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rapid depreciation, but not these corporate giants, aiming as they are to
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exploit
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already proven technologies .
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In the next section, "The Nature of the Marketplace", the principle of "dynamic
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competition" is discussed. The principle is very simple, essentially that new
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kinds of products should be allowed to capture markets from outmoded
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products, just as the automobile replaced the horse and buggy. The manifesto
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attempts to present the idea as if it were a major breakthrough in economic
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theory. It then issues a rallying cry for bold new directions:
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The challenge for policy in the 1990s is to permit, even
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encourage, dynamic competition in every aspect of the cyberspace
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marketplace.
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What the manifesto fails to mention is that the American communications
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industry is already experiencing _dramatic_ dynamic competition. Cable,
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cellular, satellite, telephone, and broadcast modalities are increasingly
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overlapping, evolving, competing, shifting markets around, and bringing down
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prices. By a strange twist of logic, as we shall see later, the _concept_ of
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dynamic competition will be used as an argument for increased monopoly control
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over markets -- for reducing the _actual_ dynamic competition that is working
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so well today.
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The next section, "The Nature of Freedom", develops several threads. It
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presents a revisionist version of U.S. and Internet history; it continues the
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blurring of individual and corporate interests; it continues the
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demonization of
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government; it restates the corporate goal of gaining outright ownership of the
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electromagnetic spectrum; it hints at the monopolist agenda.
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In a Second Wave world, it might make sense for government
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to assume ownership over the broadcast spectrum and demand
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massive payments from citizens for the right to use it.
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Broadcast license fees (hardly massive, by the way) are paid by corporate
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broadcasters, not citizens. Having laid its propaganda groundwork, the
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manifesto now freely interchanges individualist and corporate terms with
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Orwellian impunity. By an incredible stretch of doublethink, handing over the
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public airwaves to corporate ownership is to be a victory for the individual!
|
|
|
|
In a Second Wave world, it might make sense for government
|
|
to prohibit entrepreneurs from entering new markets and
|
|
providing new services.
|
|
|
|
In a single sweeping revisionist fantasy, America's remarkable record of
|
|
supporting innovative entrepreneurs vanishes from history! And the manifesto
|
|
would have us swallow the premise that billion-dollar telecommunications and
|
|
media giants are poor, struggling entrepreneurs.
|
|
|
|
However desirable as an ideal, individual freedom often
|
|
seemed impractical. The mass institutions of the Second
|
|
Wave required us to give up freedom in order for the system
|
|
to "work."
|
|
|
|
In yet another revisionist fantasy, America's world-famous history of
|
|
freedom is
|
|
discounted. And once again individual freedom is praised, as if that had some
|
|
connection to the corporate agenda being espoused.
|
|
|
|
The next section, "The Essence of Community", proclaims the notion of
|
|
distributed communities -- long common on Internet -- as if they were a bold
|
|
new idea:
|
|
|
|
No one knows what the Third Wave communities of the future
|
|
will look like... It is clear, however, that cyberspace will
|
|
play an important role knitting together in the diverse
|
|
communities of tomorrow, facilitating the creation of
|
|
"electronic neighborhoods" bound together not by geography
|
|
but by shared interests.
|
|
|
|
Why does "no one know"? Why aren't Internet lists and newsgroups cited as
|
|
living prototypes for distributed communities of the future? Such frequent and
|
|
glaring omission of the Internet precedent is disturbing. Just as the American
|
|
pioneer (so often praised by the manifesto) saw the New World (falsely) as a
|
|
virgin land ready for exploitation, so the manifesto seems to see cyberspace as
|
|
an empty frontier, yet to be explored and developed. Are the "natives" of this
|
|
frontier -- today's extensive Internet culture -- to be similarly decimated and
|
|
pushed onto bleak reservations? Just as the Magna Carta metaphor reveals
|
|
much about the manifesto's robber-baron objectives, perhaps the darker
|
|
implications of the pioneering metaphor should be taken seriously as well.
|
|
|
|
Given the monopoly-priced environment proposed by the manifesto (in the next
|
|
section), the kind of informal, citizen-oriented virtual communities popular on
|
|
Internet are highly unlikely to be viable. PFF's notion of distributed
|
|
communities (called "cyberspaces") seems to resemble today's internal corporate
|
|
networks, as described in a quote from Phil Salin:
|
|
|
|
"...Contrary to naive views, these cyberspaces will not all be
|
|
the same, and they will not all be open to the general public.
|
|
The global network is a connected 'platform' for a collection
|
|
of diverse communities, but only a loose, heterogeneous community
|
|
itself. Just as access to homes, offices, churches and
|
|
department stores is controlled by their owners or managers,
|
|
most virtual locations will exist as distinct places of private
|
|
property."
|
|
|
|
Those groups which can afford to pay the monopolist prices -- such as
|
|
corporations and well-funded associations -- can enjoy the benefits which today
|
|
are affordable to millions of individuals and groups. Perhaps nowhere else in
|
|
the manifesto is the pro-individualist rhetoric so clearly revealed to be the
|
|
lie that it is. Instead of promoting individual freedom in cyberspace,
|
|
existing
|
|
freedoms and privileges are likely to be taken away. The ominous precedent
|
|
implicit in the "pioneer" metaphor threatens to recur as cyberspace is cleared
|
|
for commercial development.
|
|
|
|
The next section, "The Role of Government", re-iterates previously stated
|
|
corporate objectives -- no price regulation, corporate ownership of
|
|
spectra, new
|
|
definition of intellectual property, favored tax treatment -- and proclaims a
|
|
new objective: enabling total monopoly control over communications markets.
|
|
|
|
Much is made of the distinction between one-way and two-way
|
|
communications, the implication apparently being that phone companies are
|
|
better prepared to develop cyberspace than cable operators:
|
|
|
|
"...None of the interactive services will be possible, however,
|
|
if we have an eight-lane data superhighway rushing into every
|
|
home and only a narrow footpath coming back out..."
|
|
|
|
The claim is made that the multimedia future depends on greater collaboration
|
|
between phone and cable companies:
|
|
|
|
...it can be argued that a near-term national interactive
|
|
multimedia network is impossible unless regulators permit
|
|
much greater collaboration between the cable industry and
|
|
phone companies. ...That is why obstructing such collaboration
|
|
-- in the cause of forcing a competition between the cable
|
|
and phone industries -- is socially elitist.
|
|
|
|
Next, it is claimed that dynamic competition requires that regulated-monopoly
|
|
mechanisms (which govern today's RBOCs and cable companies) should be
|
|
abolished. Price and entry regulation are to be replaced by new anti-trust law:
|
|
|
|
Antitrust law is the means by which America has...fostered
|
|
competition in markets where many providers can and should
|
|
compete. ...The market for telecommunications services --
|
|
telephone, cable, satellite, wireless -- is now such a market.
|
|
...price/entry regulation of telecommunications services...
|
|
should therefore be replaced by antitrust law as rapidly as
|
|
possible.
|
|
|
|
The obvious likely consequences of such an agenda are conspicuously not
|
|
discussed by the manifesto. If entry regulation is removed, and phone/cable
|
|
collaboration is encouraged, then the obvious alternatives for collaboration
|
|
would be interconnection, joint venture, and acquisition. Given the multi-
|
|
billion dollar capital reserves of the phone companies, the best business
|
|
opportunity would presumably be for phone companies to simply acquire cable
|
|
companies, thus establishing total monopolies over wires coming into the
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
Anti-trust law would be largely irrelevant to this scenario. To begin with,
|
|
anti-trust enforcement seems to be a thing of the past -- especially with the
|
|
Republican radicals in Congress. More important, perhaps, is the current anti-
|
|
trust stance toward the RBOCs: partitioning them into separate turfs seems
|
|
to be
|
|
the most that anti-trust enforcers demand. Within their turfs, they're allowed
|
|
be as monopolistic as they can get by with.
|
|
|
|
If price-regulation is removed, then we would be left with _totally_
|
|
unregulated
|
|
telecommunications monopolies in each RBOC region -- controlling phone,
|
|
television, multimedia, and messaging services, and charging whatever the
|
|
traffic will bear. Hence the appropriateness of this article's title:
|
|
"Cyberspace Inc and the Robber Baron Age". America's total communications
|
|
infrastructure would be divided into feudal fiefdoms, and the economic regime
|
|
would resemble the railroad cartels of the nineteenth century.
|
|
|
|
All the manifesto's rhetoric about individual freedom and dynamic competition
|
|
is deception -- the agenda is totally anti-competitive, anti-individual, and
|
|
anti-free-enterprise. A century's progress in achieving dynamic, competitive,
|
|
and diverse communications industries -- based on appropriate and non-stifling
|
|
regulation -- would be thrown out the window all at once.
|
|
|
|
The final section of the manifesto, "Grasping The Future", is mostly devoted to
|
|
reiterating the grandiose rhetorical visions of the mythical "Third Wave". The
|
|
phrase "grasping the future" is an apt conclusion to the manifesto: the
|
|
conglomerates behind PFF are indeed grasping at the future with both hands,
|
|
ready to pocket monopolistic windfall profits, presumably enhanced by favored
|
|
tax advantages.
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
Despite the strongly adversarial attitude this article has taken toward the
|
|
"Magna Carta", not all of the points made in that manifesto are considered by
|
|
this author to be wrong-headed. Creative initiatives to the problems posed by
|
|
cyberspace are indeed needed, and the manifesto offers some constructive ideas
|
|
in that regard. A pay-per-view model of intellectual property may have
|
|
merit --
|
|
if original authors are fairly and accountably compensated, and if
|
|
non-commercial material is also accommodated at reasonable cost. Close
|
|
collaboration among existing installed bases of coax, cable, and satellite may
|
|
be desirable -- if appropriately regulated with respect to price and
|
|
common-carrier status. And new paradigms and visions for understanding the
|
|
meaning of communications in the "information age" are needed -- but with more
|
|
honesty about the metaphors to be embraced and how they actually map onto
|
|
cyberspace realities.
|
|
|
|
What _is_ highly objectionable in the manifesto is the deceptive manipulation
|
|
of libertarian/individualist sentiment, the ignoring of the Internet precedent
|
|
and the lessons to be learned from that, the absence of provisions for freedom
|
|
of communication and privacy for individuals, the discounting of the proven
|
|
constructive role for appropriate regulation, and the disguised corporate power-
|
|
grab inherent in the proposed package of polices.
|
|
|
|
This is not the place to analyze or even enumerate the plethora of competing
|
|
legislative proposals currently before Congress regarding telecommunications.
|
|
Suffice it to say that the agenda promulgated by the "Magna Carta" is finding
|
|
widespread expression in that legislation. This fact -- along with the
|
|
manifesto's close connection to the communications industry and to Speaker
|
|
Gingrich -- indicates that the "Magna Carta" should be taken very seriously, as
|
|
regards both its agenda, and the kind of rhetoric and deception employed. The
|
|
"Magna Carta" provides a rare insight into the threat facing America's future
|
|
from corporate power grabbers, and simplifies the task of seeing through the
|
|
propaganda smokescreen being employed by legislators and industry spokespeople.
|
|
|
|
********************************
|
|
CyberLib maintained by:
|
|
|
|
Richard K. Moore rkmoore@internet-eireann.ie
|
|
(USA Citizen) Moderator: Cyberjournal
|
|
Wexford, Ireland http://www.internet-eireann.ie/cyberlib
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Wed, 15 Nov 1995 17:18:53 -0500
|
|
From: Dov Wisebrod <sherlock@io.org>
|
|
Subject: File 2--LoGIC: Call for papers
|
|
|
|
LoGIC WANTS TO PUT YOU ON THE WEB
|
|
=================================
|
|
|
|
The Legal Group for the Internet in Canada (LoGIC) calls on authors of legal
|
|
essays and articles to submit their work for presentation on the World Wide
|
|
Web. Interested persons should read the information in this notice carefully.
|
|
|
|
(Also available online at "http://www.io.org/~logic/papers/solicit.htm".
|
|
Please repost in all appropriate places.)
|
|
|
|
|
|
INTRODUCTION
|
|
|
|
LoGIC is a conduit for the exchange of information and ideas about policies
|
|
concerning emerging communication and information technologies. We are
|
|
devoted to ensuring informed public, legislative, and regulatory responses
|
|
to these technologies, which at present are manifest most profoundly in the
|
|
Internet. We want to ensure that new laws and regulations have no
|
|
detrimental effects on the free and interactive communication of information.
|
|
|
|
Our work focuses on four broad areas of activity relating to our goals:
|
|
|
|
1. Dissemination of information about legislative, jurisprudential, and
|
|
political developments in Canada.
|
|
2. Research and commentary about legislative, jurisprudential, and
|
|
political developments in Canada.
|
|
3. Participation in the shaping of Canadian law and public policy to new
|
|
developments.
|
|
4. Monitoring of, and participation in, criminal and civil cases in the
|
|
Canadian legal system.
|
|
|
|
Further information is available in our Mandate at our web site.
|
|
|
|
|
|
ELIGIBILITY
|
|
|
|
LANGUAGE: Papers must be written in English -- and written well.
|
|
|
|
AUTHORSHIP: Papers must be original work, but need not be unpublished. Work
|
|
published elsewhere previously, concurrently, or subsequently is acceptable.
|
|
Work prepared by multiple authors is acceptable.
|
|
|
|
SUBJECT: We are The Legal Group for the Internet in Canada. Clearly, the
|
|
work must relate to law, the Internet, and Canada. If it fails to meet any
|
|
of these criteria, it is unacceptable.
|
|
|
|
*Please browse LoGIC's web site for samples.
|
|
|
|
|
|
DEADLINE
|
|
|
|
Submissions must be received by 11:59pm, Sunday, January 14, 1996.
|
|
|
|
|
|
TERMS
|
|
|
|
FORMAT: Work must be submitted in electronic form only. We will not
|
|
consider hard copy work; we will not return hard copy work. Work must be
|
|
submitted as a wordprocessed file that can be filtered into Lotus AmiPro 3.1
|
|
for Windows. This includes MS Word for Windows 1.x/2.0/6.0 and WordPerfect
|
|
4.2/5.x/6.0. ASCII files (with footnotes appearing at the end) are optimal
|
|
and encouraged. The less fancy the formatting, the better. Sorry, but
|
|
Macintosh files are unacceptable. We will appreciate submissions that are
|
|
compressed using PKZip or ARJ, but uncompressed work is acceptable.
|
|
|
|
SUBMISSION: Work may be submitted as a file attachment to an e-mail, or as
|
|
a UUencoded e-mail, sent to Dov Wisebrod at "sherlock@io.org".
|
|
Alternatively, work may be submitted on a 3.5" floppy disk to either Dov
|
|
Wisebrod or Daniel Shap. (Browse LoGIC's web site for contact information,
|
|
or e-mail LoGIC at "logic@io.org".) All authors must submit their name,
|
|
address, telephone number, and e-mail address. An e-mail address for contact
|
|
purposes is essential, though it need not be the author's own.
|
|
|
|
COPYRIGHT: Persons who submit work must warrant their ownership of
|
|
copyright in the work. LoGIC will not ask authors to assign copyright to us.
|
|
Authors are free to publish elsewhere. LoGIC asks only that it be provided
|
|
with the most recent version of the work for presentation on its web site.
|
|
|
|
ACCEPTANCE: Not all submissions will be accepted. All work that qualifies
|
|
according to the terms set out in this notice will be reviewed. The results
|
|
will be communicated by e-mail to all authors who have submitted work.
|
|
|
|
|
|
INQUIRIES
|
|
|
|
E-MAIL: logic@io.org
|
|
WWW: http://www.io.org/~logic
|
|
|
|
/-----------------------\/--------------------------------------------\
|
|
/ Dov Wisebrod \ The Legal Group for the Internet in Canada /
|
|
/ sherlock@io.org \ http://www.io.org/~logic /
|
|
/ http://www.io.org/~sherlock \ logic@io.org /
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Mon, 13 Nov 1995 12:08:05 -0800
|
|
From: Gilberto Arriaza <arriaza@UCLINK2.BERKELEY.EDU>
|
|
Subject: File 3--Reconfiguring Power, Challenges for the 21st century
|
|
|
|
Dear colleagues: Here is a Call for Papers you might be interested.
|
|
Gilberto Arriaza. School of Education, UC Berkeley
|
|
|
|
|
|
Journal of Social Justice
|
|
|
|
Reconfiguring Power, Challenges for the 21st century
|
|
Recent backlash against immigrants and affirmative action can be seen as
|
|
part of a larger struggle over resources, national identity, and more
|
|
generally (re)configurations of power in the United States in the twenty
|
|
first century. Demographic trends continue to point to greater diversity
|
|
in the U.S. population, however there is growing resistance to the
|
|
adjustments which must be made in society generally, and in the
|
|
workplace and social institutions (i.e. education, the arts, political
|
|
parties) in particular, to accommodate those who have historically and
|
|
who are presently excluded. Already the debates which have emerged over
|
|
these issues differ in several important ways from the manifestations of
|
|
social conflict and polarization that occurred in the latter part of the
|
|
twentieth century.
|
|
|
|
This issue of the Journal of Social Justice is dedicated to exploring the
|
|
contours and substance of these new struggles. In addition to
|
|
documenting how these conflicts are being played out in particular social
|
|
and cultural contexts, contributors will analyze the underlying social
|
|
and cultural forces and interests which influence how issues are viewed,
|
|
and how social action and discourse are affected. Beyond analyzing the
|
|
content and character of those conflicts, contributors are encouraged to
|
|
illuminate possibilities of influencing how they can be resolved such
|
|
that greater social justice is achieved.
|
|
|
|
Topics for this issue may include::
|
|
Issues of immigration, cultural identity and the nation state.
|
|
Dismantling of the welfare state, social implications.
|
|
Schools and the meaning of citizenship, national identity and cultures,
|
|
and the access to power.
|
|
Obstacles to Gay, Lesbian and bisexual rights.
|
|
Crime, violence and social policy.
|
|
Language, language rights and the dynamics of power.
|
|
Gender equity, reproductive rights.
|
|
Local impact of macro level economic and political change.
|
|
Racial and ethnic conflict.
|
|
|
|
Review: Each submission will be read by a committee of two members. In
|
|
case a disagreement among them arises, the editors will call for the
|
|
opinion of a third member..
|
|
|
|
Format: Submit three hard copies of a 12 size font, double spaced of no
|
|
more than thirty 8 X 11.5 pages. This includes references. Each paper
|
|
must have an abstract of no more than one, double space, 8 X 11.5 page.
|
|
On a separate card of 3 X 5 (approximately) include title, your name,
|
|
affiliation, local address, telephone numbers, fax and electronic mail,
|
|
to contact you.
|
|
|
|
Deadline: Submission must be in our office by Monday, May 6th, 1996. No
|
|
contributions will be accepted after this date. The accepted papers will
|
|
be part of a panel for AERA '97.
|
|
|
|
Address: c/o Professor Pedro Noguera
|
|
University of California at Berkeley
|
|
School of Education
|
|
Social and Cultural Studies
|
|
4501 Tolman Hall
|
|
Berkeley, 94720
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 22:51:01 CDT
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 1995)
|
|
|
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
|
available at no cost electronically.
|
|
|
|
CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
|
|
|
|
Or, to subscribe, send a one-line message: SUB CUDIGEST your name
|
|
Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
|
|
|
|
DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
|
|
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
|
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
|
60115, USA.
|
|
|
|
To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CUDIGEST
|
|
Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
|
|
(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
|
|
|
|
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 RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
|
|
and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (203) 832-8441.
|
|
CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
|
|
1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
|
|
|
|
EUROPE: In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
|
|
Brussels: STRATOMIC BBS +32-2-5383119 2:291/759@fidonet.org
|
|
In ITALY: ZERO! BBS: +39-11-6507540
|
|
In LUXEMBOURG: ComNet BBS: +352-466893
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|
|
|
UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/
|
|
ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
|
|
aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
|
|
world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
|
|
wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
|
|
EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud/ (Finland)
|
|
ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
|
|
|
|
|
|
The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
|
|
Cu Digest WWW site at:
|
|
URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
|
|
|
|
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.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #7.92
|
|
************************************
|
|
|