829 lines
34 KiB
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829 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Wed Feb 5, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 07
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.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, #9.07 (Wed, Feb 5, 1997)
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File 1--Re - Internet Forum in Italy (CuD 9.04)
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File 2--Court upholds Internet case as free speech (fwd)
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File 3--Christopher Schanot sentenced in St. Louis
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File 4--Cybersitter & Wallace
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File 5--PROTEST: "Remember the Blackout"
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File 6--Panel - Copyright and the Net: Is Legislation the Answer?
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File 7-- The (1997) 7th Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy
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File 8--The Information Superhighway Transportation System
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File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996)
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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: Mon, 3 Feb 1997 23:14:12 -0800 (PST)
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From: caponi@SSSUP1.SSSUP.IT
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Subject: File 1--Re - Internet Forum in Italy (CuD 9.04)
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The CU Digest #9.04 report "Internet Forum In Italy Subjected To
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Censorship" was incomplete and inaccurate. As owner of the mailing
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list censored, I would like to offer here more info for a better
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understanding of the event. Hosted on a server located at Bologna
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University, the mailing list LISA (Lista Italiana Sull'Accesso a
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Internet) launched in early 1995 as an unmoderated area devoted to
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discussion about social, cultural and economic aspects related to
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the development of the Internet in Italy.
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In these two years, discussion topics concerned many different
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issues, such as net regulation, censorship, netiquette and online
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behavior. As with most of similar lists, sometimes subscribers
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opinions were strongly different occasionally leading to some sort
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of personal animosity. In these cases, I called anyone (both in
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public and in private) to the respect of other people words and
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invited all users to get along with the netiquette, helding each
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subscriber accountable for his/her own content, as clearly stated
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in the charter list.
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On November 1996, the president of a political association,
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involved with electronic communications and repeatedly criticized
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on the list, contacted the University professor in charge of the
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computer department where LISA was hosted. He asked for an
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official intervention to stop that verbal criticism, and the
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faculty member decided to close down the mailing list. No
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previous attempt to contact myself, the list owner, was ever made:
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I simply received the notification announcing the list immediate
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closure. Two days later, I managed to get LISA re-opened at the
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Utah University.
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Nobody is questioning the right of Bologna University officials to
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cancel any hosted list, but this decision (and its circumstances)
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was a very harsh termination of an open discussion. LISA is an
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on-going exchange of different points of view: what we were facing
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was an attempt to restrain uncomfortable opinions, to silence an
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area devoted to open confrontation on the Net.
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Well beyond this single event, we netizens must keep close
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attention to any concealment to stop the flow of free speech. In
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the LISA case and anywhere in the world, we are forced to deal
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with attempts to prevent public discussion, to refuse the
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diversity of opinions. Choosing censorship instead of an open
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debate is something we will never be willing to silently accept.
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Laura Caponi
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Owner of LISA
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Lista Italiana Sull'Accesso a Internet
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------------------------------
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Date: Mon, 3 Feb 1997 13:38:15 +0600
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From: jthomas@VENUS.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
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Subject: File 2--Court upholds Internet case as free speech (fwd)
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((MODERATORS NOTE: The original poster's address was garbled
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in transit))
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By MaryAnne George and Jeff Martin
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Knight-Ridder Newspapers
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DETROIT -- Former University of Michigan student Jake Baker wrote on
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the Internet about raping, torturing and murdering women. But he
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didn't threaten them -- at least not under federal law, a court
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ruled Wednesday.
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Civil libertarians, who feared regulation of the vast reaches of
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cyberspace, cheered the ruling. But others said it means women's
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safety will take a backseat to free speech.
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Ruling 2-1, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals panel in
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Cincinnati upheld a June 1995 ruling by U.S. District Court Judge
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Avern Cohn in Detroit dismissing charges against Baker. Cohn had
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said the writings were constitutionally protected as free speech.
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Baker, 22, now a computer science major at the University of
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Pittsburgh, is the first person to be prosecuted for Internet
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writings in a case that drew a storm of controversy about regulating
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cyberspace.
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.................
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(c) 1997, Detroit Free Press. Distributed by Knight-Ridder/Tribune
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Information Services.
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Copyright Chicago Tribune (c) 1997
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------------------------------
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Date: Mon, 3 Feb 1997 15:56:49 -0600 (CST)
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From: Bruce Umbaugh <bumbaugh@LISTS.WEBSTERUNIV.EDU>
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Subject: File 3--Christopher Schanot sentenced in St. Louis
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According to Saturday's St. Louis Post-Dispatch (Feb. 1,
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copyrighted article by Tim Bryant), Christopher Schanot, was
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sentenced Friday by U.S. District Judge Catherine D. Perry. The
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judge called Schanot "obviously . . . very skilled" and
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expressed a desire that he not be influenced by others "who may
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not have your best interests at heart." Predictably, the
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prosecutor called him a computer genius, and his own attorney
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noted that he intended no harm.
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According to the report, Schanot admitted in November "that he
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had installed secret programs into a Southwestern Bell computer
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system in St. Louis and in another system in New Jersey, giving
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him access to the computer files of the seven regional phone
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companies." SWB and BELLCORE put the cost of "clean up" at
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US$80,000. The piece reports that the U.S. attorney's office
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says Schanot originally gained access using a Southwestern Bell
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employee's account, the employee having given his son access and
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the son having shared the account information with Schanot.
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Schanot should be released in about six weeks, according to the
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article, since he has served jail time and been in a halfway
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house for four and one-half months. (The sentence is five
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months imprisonment and six months in a halfway house.)
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 30 Jan 97 08:23:58 -0500 (EST)
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From: kkc@COMPETITOR.NET(K.K. Campbell)
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Subject: File 4--Cybersitter & Wallace
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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WHO'S WATCHING THE 'WATCHERS'?
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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by
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K.K. CAMPBELL
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Net.column
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The Toronto Star
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Thursday, January 30, 1997
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One of the most controversial aspects of cyberspace is censorship. A
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widely accepted solution to eliminating the "unwanted" is self-imposed
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censorship, through special software which blocks out types of content
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not desired.
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The appeal of these programs is that people needn't rely on distant
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authority to dictate acceptability. We police ourselves; or at least we
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have some control over how we will be policed.
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The news media have generally blessed "blocking software" with
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unexamined sprinklings of warm praise. After all, who dares suggest
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that stopping your 5-year-old from seeing graphic gore, violence or sex
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is bad? What could go wrong with that?
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But, now critics are starting to ask, who is "watching the watchers?"
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Could these watchers themselves develop more "creative applications"
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for their power to silence? Could they apply their own personal
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prejudices, or even their own hidden agendas?
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Or is that paranoid nonsense?
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Ask U.S. author Jonathan Wallace (jw@bway.net). Wallace says
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California's Solid Oak software, which produces Cybersitter blocking
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software, has added his site to its "block list" in retaliation for
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critical remarks he made about the company.
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Solid Oak claims 900,000 registered Cybersitter users.
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Wallace, a New York-based software business executive and attorney is
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co-author of the book _Sex, Laws and Cyberspace_ (Henry Holt, $34.95).
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Net.column will discuss the book with its author next installment.
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He's also editor of the monthly Webzine _The Ethical Spectacle_, which
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focuses on "the intersection of ethics, law and politics in our
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society."
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The Webzine recently asked readers to not purchase Cybersitter because
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of continuing reports of Solid Oak's "unethical behavior."
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"In the book," Wallace says in a press release explaining his current
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attitude to Cybersitter, "we took the position -- naively, I now think
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-- that use of blocking software by parents was a less restrictive
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alternative to government censorship. We never expected that publishers
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of blocking software would block sites for their political content
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alone, as Solid Oak has done."
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Solid Oak unequivocably denies there is a political agenda of any kind
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et work.
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"Absolutely, 100 per cent not," Marc Kanter told the Toronto Star in a
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phone interview. Kanter is Solid Oak's vice president of marketing.
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"There is no hidden political agenda."
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Kanter says someone criticizing Cybersitter would not be blocked. He
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says Wallace's site is blocked because it "links information on how to
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hack Cybersitter. We do not allow our customers to have hacking
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information for the program."
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Wallace told The Star that's not true. "There's no such information on
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my site, nor is there on Peacefire's. I link to some pages maintained
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by Glen Roberts, who -- along with some political commentary on
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Cybersitter, and analysis of its blocking policy -- offers a (legal)
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work-around. However, since his site is separately blocked by
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Cybersitter, there is no reason for them to block my site as well."
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Kanter dismisses Wallace's complaints. "The guy didn't do any
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homework," Kanter says. "There are a few people who are right-wing
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activists who are out there that are trying to defame the filtering
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program. This is what leads to stories like you are doing -- and
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hopefully you are not supportive of their actions."
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Wallace didn't know what to make of that. "I've been called a
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communist, a socialist, and a wild-eyed civil libertarian, but no one
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has ever called me right wing before," he says. "Kanter has obviously
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never read _The Ethical Spectacle_."
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While Cybersitter, with fanfare, claims its mission is to block Web
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sites containing pornography, obscenity, gratuitous violence, hate
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speech, criminal activity, etc., an increasing number of investigative
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Net.journalists also claim Cybersitter, without fanfare, blocks access
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to Web sites based on political criteria.
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FOR OUR OWN GOOD
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This brouhaha began last summer when CyberWire Dispatch revealed
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Cybersitter blocks sites based on political agenda, such as the
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feminist National Organization for Women (www.now.org).
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Dispatch journalist/editor Brock Meeks asked Solid Oak CEO Brian
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Milburn (bmilburn@solidoak.com) about that.
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"Milburn isn't shy about it," Meeks reported. "He was outright
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indignant when he originally told Dispatch: 'If NOW doesn't like it,
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tough'."
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Solid Oak threatened to sue Dispatch for its article, but things
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quieted down.
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In December, the issue erupted again when 18-yearold Bennett Haselton
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(bennett@peacefire.org) wrote an article about the company's selection
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of blocked sites: "Cybersitter: Where Do We Not Want You To Go Today?"
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(www.peacefire.org/censorware/CYBERsitter.html).
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Haselton takes computer science and math at Vanderbilt University.
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"Peacefire" is his own creation, a teen cyberrights group, average age
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15.
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According to various Net.journalists, Solid Oak now threatened Bennett
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with a lawsuit and even tried to get the Peacefire site booted from its
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host system (media3.net) by telling Media3 that Haselton was making it
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"his mission in life to defame our product" by "routinely" publishing
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names of sites blocked by Cybersitter.
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(It should be noted it's easy to figure out which sites are blocked,
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the software provides an output list. Try "playboy.com" -- blocked. Try
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"whitehouse.com" -- okay. Try "peacefire.org" -- blocked. Try "now.org"
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-- blocked.)
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Unsuccessful in his pressure against Media3, Milburn instead included
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the peacefire.org domain in Cybersitter's block list.
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On Dec. 9, HotWired picked the story up
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(www.wired.com/news/story/901.html). NetAction Notes
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(www.netaction.org) quickly followed suit. Haselton told his story to
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the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the EFF assured him it would
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represent him, should Solid Oak deliver on its threat to sue.
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On Dec. 20, The Netly News (http://netlynews.com) continued the
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investigation of Cybersitter. Aside from the irony of Cybersitter
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censoring the newsgroup alt.censorship, it "blocks dozens of ISPs and
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university sites such as well .com, zoom.com, anon.penet.fi, best.com,
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webpower.com, ftp.std.com, cts.com, gwis2.seas.gwu.edu, hss.cmu.edu,
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c2.org, echonyc.com and accounting.com. Now, sadly, some libraries are
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using it."
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BLACK LIST TO BLOCK LIST
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Wallace read the reports of legal threats against the teenager and
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thought "Milburn was acting like the proverbial 800-pound gorilla."
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So Wallace added a link on _The Spectacle_'s homepage called "Don't Buy
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Cybersitter."
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"I wrote the company," he says, "informing them of my actions and
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telling them that they misrepresent their product when they claim it
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blocks only indecent material, hate speech and the like."
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Wallace says Solid Oak responded by adding his Webzine to its block
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list. Learning of this, Wallace wrote Milburn and Solid Oak tech
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support.
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"I pointed out that _The Spectacle_ does not fit any of their published
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criteria for blocking a site," he says. "I received mail in return
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demanding that I cease writing to them and calling my mail 'harassment'
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-- with a copy to the postmaster at my ISP."
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Kanter acknowledges this. "He spoke to us more than once or twice -- he
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continued to send mail -- mail like that is considered 'not wanted' and
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is automatically sent back."
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By the end of our phone conversation, Kanter had dropped the
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"right-wing activist" explanation of who was behind the Cybersitter
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complaints and offered a new one:
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"Some of this rhetoric was started by someone we believe to be a highly
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-- how do you put it? -- a highly homosexual individual, who did not
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believe we should have the right to block any sites or links to
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alternative lifestyles. That's how a lot of this got started."
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Why is the National Organization for Women site blocked?
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"Very simple. It contains links to gay and lesbian hardcore material. I
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was on their page this morning, and there is a lot of offensive
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material linked directly. Just go to their links page and start looking
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at 'gay' and 'feminism.' Our parents don't want that kind of stuff."
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I asked if he really meant "hardcore" -- suggestive of full-penetration
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images/stories.
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"Yes, by links through links," he clarifies. If someone followed the
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links starting at now.org, they'd eventually find hardcore sexual
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material.
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Kanter says parents are not permitted to know which sites Cybersitter
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blocks.
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"That list is not given to anybody under any circumstances -- including
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law enforcement agencies that have requested it." He says it's to
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prevent the list from "getting into the wrong hands."
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It would be a cybermap to naughtiness for some kids. And parents aren't
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allowed to remove blocked sites from Cybersitter, although they can add
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to the list.
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Cyber-rights activists claim the incident underscores warnings they've
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issued for years: While censorship software may first aim to protect
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children against "pornography," it can quickly be adopted for political
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agendas.
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_The Ethical Spectacle_ is at www.spectacle.org. Solid Oak's Web site
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can be found at www.solidoak.com.
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-30-
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Copyright 1997 K.K. Campbell
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 5 Feb 1997 16:23:21 -0800
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From: --Todd Lappin-- <telstar@wired.com>
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Subject: File 5--PROTEST: "Remember the Blackout"
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THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK
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February 5, 1997
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Greetings!
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Dave Winer -- a Silicon Valley software developer, essayist, and friend --
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passed along a message today marking the first anniversary of the "Paint
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the Web Black" campaign, which took place almost one year ago, on February
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8, 1996, to mourn President Clinton's signing of the CDA into law.
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Over 5000 Web sites participated in the 1996 campaign -- during which
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Webmasters were encouraged to blacken the backgrounds of their Web pages to
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protest the passage of America's first Internet censorship legislation. The
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campaign was so successful (and so visually compelling) that newspaper and
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television journalists throughout the US took notice of the story --
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showing the world for the first time that the Internet community is capable
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of rallying as a political force.
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Dave is planning an event to commemorate this anniversary, so I'll let him
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tell you all about it in his own words...
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Work the network!
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--Todd Lappin-->
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Section Editor
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WIRED Magazine
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PS: I should mention that Voters' Telecommunications Watch and the Center
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for Democracy and Technology were instrumental in organizing the protest
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last year, so I want to send them my belated thanks. Like the Electronic
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Frontier Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union that Dave
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mentions below, these groups also "deserve and require our support."
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================================
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Date--Wed, 5 Feb 1997 13:23:14 -0800
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From--dwiner@well.com (DaveNet email)
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Subject--Remember the Blackout
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---------------------------------------
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Amusing Rants from Dave Winer's Desktop
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Released on 2/5/97; 1:23:14 PM PST
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---------------------------------------
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A short piece, in the middle of much website work, to remind everyone
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that Saturday February 8 is the first anniversary of an important
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event in our new medium -- the web blackout of 1996.
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It's already history. In some circles it's not fashionable to
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remember that the United States government attempted to censor free
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speech on the Internet. I believe it would be cynical to overlook it.
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We defeated the law, even though we re-elected many of the
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politicians who tried to outlaw free speech in the name of protecting
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children.
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I'm building a website that will go live on Saturday to commemorate
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the protest, and to serve as a monument to the spirit of free speech. To
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remind us that this is a worldwide community, and no political system
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has the power to enforce its standards of decency on the medium.
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The battle to retain our rights is ongoing. Important organizations
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such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil
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Liberties Union deserve and require our support. It's easy to lose
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sight of the principles that we believe in, to be distracted by
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questions of corporate survival, of fear or greed. These are
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interesting issues, no doubt. But this is a creative and expressive
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medium and to protect its potential, unqualified free speech is
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essential.
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I played a small role in the web blackout last year. This year I hope to
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facilitate, to organize more sites and help to spread the word that
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free speech is not an option, not something that can be traded or
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limited and that no compromises are possible.
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<http://www.scripting.com/davenet/misc/blackout/>
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If you run a democracy-related site, large or small, please visit the
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page before Saturday and register. If you know someone who does,
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please pass this on. And if you value free speech, please visit the
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site on Saturday or later. It'll be a fascinating trip thru Internet
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history, if nothing else!
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Remember the blackout. Remember why it was necessary. Don't let
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people use children as an excuse to deprive people of their power to
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express themselves.
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Dave Winer
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-------------------------------------------
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News & Updates: <http://www.scripting.com/>
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+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
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This transmission was brought to you by....
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THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK
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The CDA Disaster Network is a moderated distribution list providing
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up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the
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Communications Decency Act.
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To SUBSCRIBE, send email to <majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe
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cda-bulletin" in the message body. To UNSUBSCRIBE, send email to
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<info-rama@wired.com> with "unsubscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 4 Feb 1997 22:03:10 -0500
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From: Dave Banisar <banisar@EPIC.ORG>
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Subject: File 6--Panel - Copyright and the Net: Is Legislation the Answer?
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Copyright and the Net: Is Legislation the Answer?
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ACM97: The Next 50 Years of Computing
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Sunday March 2 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
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Fairmont Hotel San Jose, CA
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Sponsored by the U.S. Public Policy Committee of ACM (USACM)
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Panelists: Hank Barry, Pam Samuelson, Mark Stefik, Gio Wiederhold
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Moderator: Barbara Simons, Chair, USACM
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o What is the role of copyright in all-electronic publication world?
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Will it be replaced by contract law?
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o Can the needs of authors who want to publish for renown (academics) and
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authors that want to publish for pay (entertainment etc) be handled in one
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mechanism?
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o Should browsing on the World Wide Web of full copyrighted texts be made
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illegal because people make temporary copies in their computer's memory
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when they look at a web page?
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o Should online service providers, including libraries and universities,
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have to monitor user accounts in order to enforce copyright laws?
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o Should firms that compile data have intellectual property rights so
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that scientists and news reporters can't use the data without permission
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or payments?
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o How should existing differences in national copyright be handled in a
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networked world where national boundaries and are little more than a
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speedbump on the information superhighway?
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o Does technological protection for copyrighted works inherently undermine
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fair use ?
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These and related issues will confront the 105th Congress in the coming year.
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They will also be examined by this panel, which will discuss controversies
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surrounding the extension of copyright law to deal with cyberspace.
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Examples include: How does proposed legislation reflect the net?
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How much influence have lobbyists for the entertainment industry had
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in writing legislation? What should be the role of professional
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societies in analyzing policy initiatives?
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We will discussed legislation and international treaties that
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have been proposed by the White House. We will also examine both
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technical and legal approaches to problems created by the net,
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as well as how various approaches might impact the
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science, technology, and business communities.
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A significant amount of time will be allowed for audience
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interaction in the discussion.
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Biographical sketches
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Hank Barry is member of the firm of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
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and is Chairman of the firm's Interactive New Media practice group.
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He represents publicly and privately-held companies in the multimedia,
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software, computer, on-line and entertainment industries. Hank has authored
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numerous articles in the fields of venture capital, interactive
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media and technology transactions. He currently serves on the
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Editorial Board of the Cyberspace Lawyer.
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Hank received his law degree in 1983 from Stanford University,
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where he was managing editor of the Stanford Law Review.
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Pamela Samuelson is a Professor at the University of California at Berkeley
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where she holds a joint appointment at the School of Information Management
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and Systems and in the School of Law. She has written and spoken
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extensively on the challenges posed by digital technologies for the law,
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particularly in the field of intellectual property. She is a Contributing
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Editor of Communications of the ACM and a Fellow of the Electronic Frontier
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Foundation.
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Mark Stefik is a principal scientist at the Xerox Palo Alto Research
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Center. At Stanford University he received a Bachelor of Science degree in
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mathematics in 1970 and a Ph.D. in computer science in 1980. His current
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research activities are in approaches for creating, protecting, and reusing
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digital property. Stefik is review editor for the international
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journal "Artificial Intelligence" and has authored two books on
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AI-related topics and a third book on the Internet.
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Gio Wiederhold is a professor of Computer Science at Stanford
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University, with courtesy appointments in Medicine and Electrical
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Engineering. His research focuses on large-scale software construction,
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specifically applied to information systems, the protection
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of their content, often using knowledge-based techniques.
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Wiederhold has authored and coauthored more than 250 published papers
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and reports on computing and medicine. Wiederhold received a degree
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in Aeronautical Engineering in Holland in 1957 and a Ph. D. in Medical
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Information Science from the University of California at San Francisco
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in 1976. He has been elected fellow of the ACMI, the IEEE and the
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ACM. He currently serves on the ACM Publications Board,
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focusing on the move to electronic publication.
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Barbara Simons received her Ph.D. in Computer Science from U.C. Berkeley
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in 1981. She joined the Research Division of IBM in 1980;
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she is currently working in IBM Global Services.
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Simons is a Fellow of both the American Association for the Advancement
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of Science (AAAS) and ACM. In 1995 she was selected as one of 26 Internet
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"Visionaries" by c|net, and in 1994 Open Computing included her in its list
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of the top 100 women in computing. She was awarded the 1992 CPSR Norbert
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Wiener Award for Professional and Social Responsibility in Computing.
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Simons founded and chairs USACM, the ACM U. S. Public Policy Committee.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 4 Feb 1997 11:26:04 -0800 (PST)
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From: Bruce R Koball <bkoball@well.com>
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Subject: File 7-- The (1997) 7th Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy
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The Seventh Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy
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March 11-14, 1997
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San Francisco Airport Hyatt Regency; Burlingame, California
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Sponsored by ACM SIGCOMM & SIGSAC
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CFP'97 : Commerce & Community
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CFP'97 will assemble experts, advocates, and interested people
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from a broad spectrum of disciplines and backgrounds in a balanced
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public forum to address the impact of new technologies on society.
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This year's theme addresses two of the main drivers of social and
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technological transformation. How is private enterprise changing
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cyberspace? How are traditional and virtual communities reacting?
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Topics in the wide-ranging main track program will include:
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PERSPECTIVES ON CONTROVERSIAL SPEECH
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THE COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE NET
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GOVERNMENTAL & SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS OF DIGITAL MONEY
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INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON CRYPTOGRAPHY
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CYPHERPUNKS & CYBERCOPS
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REGULATION OF ISPs
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SPAMMING
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INFOWAR
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INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND INFO-PROPERTY
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THE 1996 ELECTIONS: CREATING A NEW DEMOCRACY
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THE COMING COLLAPSE OF THE NET
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CFP'97 will feature parallel-track lunchtime workshops during the
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main conference on topics including:
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THE CASE AGAINST PRIVACY HOW A SKIPTRACER OPERATES
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CYBERBANKING HOW THE ARCHITECTURE REGULATES
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RIGHTS IN AVATAR CYBERSPACE NATIONAL I.D. CARDS
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PUBLIC KEY INFRASTRUCTURES EUROPEAN IP LAW
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SEXUAL HARASSMENT IN CYBERSPACE VIRTUAL COMMUNITIES
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DOMAIN NAMES ARCHIVES, INDEXES & PRIVACY
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GOVERNMENT REGULATION OF ECASH CRYPTO AND THE 1st AMENDMENT
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The conference will also offer a number of in-depth tutorials on
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subjects including:
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* The Economics of the Internet
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* Regulation of Internet Service Providers
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* The Latest in Cryptography
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* The Constitution in Cyberspace
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* Info War: The Day After
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* Personal Information and Advertising on the Net
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* Transborder Data Flows and the Coming European Union
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* Intellectual Property Rights on the Net: A Primer
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INFORMATION
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A complete conference brochure and registration information are
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available on our web site at: http://www.cfp.org
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For an ASCII version of the conference brochure and registration
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information, send email to: cfpinfo@cfp.org
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For additional information or questions, call: 415-548-2424
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 6 Feb 1997 00:22:55 -0800 (PST)
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From: B Jones <ae750@freenet.unbc.edu>
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Subject: File 8--The Information Superhighway Transportation System
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A while ago I was talking to my freenet's sysadmin and
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I quipped that freenets are bicycles on the information
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superhighway. Upon seeing your CuD 9.04 issue, and the
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item on OS airlines, I was inspired enough (or insipid
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enough, take your pick) to do what follows.
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THE INFORMATION SUPERHIGHWAY TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM:
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---------------------------------------------------
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BBSs: A skateboard. Usually dressed up to look cool, but can't
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really go anywhere. You hitch rides on cars to pretend to go
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fast. Only useful as local transportation.
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Freenets: Bicycles. Not very fast, you can't carry very much,
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but you can get from A to B, and can do whatever you need to.
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Usually you end up eating dust from some jerk in a Trans-Am.
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LANs/WANs: Local bus system. Limited area of where you can go,
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but you can get transfers to other transportation systems.
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Ethernet: Highspeed railways. Very fast, but can only go where
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track exists. Adding new track is expensive, usually only where
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management decides to build.
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ISPs: Rental cars on Interprovincial/Interstate Highways. Fast,
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and you can move a lot of information (think of baud rate as
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maximum vehicle weight). If you can't afford gas (hourly rates
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on ISPs) or the monthly payments, you can't go anywhere.
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ARPA/MilNet: Tanks, trucks, and jeeps. The roads cross military
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installations, but connect to the highways.
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AOL: Cars that have unlimited mileage. Only 100 cars exist for
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the 500,000 users, but no rules exist to force people to share
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them. The cars can only be taken where the roadmap says you can
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go, and they often break down. (You still have to pay for using
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the car, even if you didn't get a chance to. No refunds.)
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Compuserve: Edsels.
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AT&T/MCI/Sprint/Cable: GM, Ford, and Chrysler. They haven't
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built any cars yet, and want a government created monopoly to
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make it illegal for anyone else to build cars.
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Netscape/Internet Explorer: GUIded scenic tours of the Internet.
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A lot of tourist stops on the way, meant only to look good.
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Lynx: The same itinerary as Netscape/MSIE, but you drive
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yourself; you're too busy reading the map to see the sights.
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ARCHIE: Rand-McNally atlas, a photo album, and a phone book. You
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can find out about the place, but not actually go there.
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FTP/Gopher: Not a transportation method; actually, it's UPS and
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Federal Express.
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Finger: Fodor's guide books.
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Telnet/IRC: Good old Ma Bell. You don't actually go anywhere,
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you just connect to the other end.
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Usenet: A bulletin board in a post office.
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E-mail: The postal service. (About as slow as the real post
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office when compared to the Web.)
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BITNET: A courier service being bought out by the post office.
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 15 Dec 1996 22:51:01 CST
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From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 9--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 13 Dec, 1996)
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
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available at no cost electronically.
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CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
|
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Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line:
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SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
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Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
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DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
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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
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60115, USA.
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To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
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Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
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(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
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LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
|
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libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
|
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
|
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On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
|
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on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
|
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and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (860)-585-9638.
|
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CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
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1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
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EUROPE: In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
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In ITALY: ZERO! BBS: +39-11-6507540
|
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In LUXEMBOURG: ComNet BBS: +352-466893
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UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/CuD
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ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
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aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
|
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world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
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wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
|
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EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/CuD/CuD/ (Finland)
|
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
|
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
|
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Cu Digest WWW site at:
|
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
|
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
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they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
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specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
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relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
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preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
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unless absolutely necessary.
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DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
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the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
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responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
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violate copyright protections.
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------------------------------
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End of Computer Underground Digest #9.07
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************************************
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