704 lines
34 KiB
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704 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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COM NET NEWS
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Vol. 1 No. 3 June
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>From the Editor
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Thanks to everyone for their kind words concerning COM NET
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NEWS--the readership is growing significantly with each issue. One
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comment was received from an individual asking that articles from
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Edupage and other such newsletters not be reproduced here, as he
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already saw them. Unfortunately, everyone cannot be pleased all of
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the time. These types of articles are reproduced because I believe
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that they should be of interest to the readership. Not all, and in fact,
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most of the COM NET NEWS readership apparently do not
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subscribe to these newsletters. One of the problems with the
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explosion of information that is now available via print media, radio,
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television, and computer networks is that there is way too much for
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everyone to read and sort through. The purpose of this newsletter is
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to help fill the need for selective reporting of news of interest to the
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CNN readership. However, you can help define its content by
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indicating to me your preferences and dislikes. Please feel free to let
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me know what you think so that CNN can better serve you.
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Richard W. Bryant, Editor
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RW Bryant Associates
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P.O. Box 1828
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El Prado, NM 87529
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Tel/fax: 505-758-1919
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rbryant@hydra.unm.edu
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***************************************************************
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***************************************************************
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HOW ABOUT A 9% RETURN ON DIRECT MAIL?
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A Northern New Mexico entrepreneur who conducts summer
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workshops covering various artistic media such as painting,
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sculpture, pottery, etc., recently reported a 9% return on a direct
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mailing to America Online subscribers. First, a search was made of
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the profiles of AOL users looking for individuals who had indicated an
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interest in the arts. After sending about 300 very low-key messages
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to these individuals, within a few days, about 9% requested the
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printed brochure. Not bad considering the typical return on direct
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snail mail is 1%.
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FEDERAL GOVERNMENT SLOW TO PROMOTE THE
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GRASSROOTS
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In its report last year, "Making Government Work: Electronic
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Delivery of Government Services," the Office of Technology
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Assessment (OTA) recommended the federal government stimulate
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grassroots citizen involvement in all stages of electronic delivery from
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planning and pilot-testing to implementation and evaluation. The
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report recommended a "mandatory set-aside" from project or agency
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budgets to assure a proper amount of funding for such citizen
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participation. The report also suggested the establishment at the
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Office of Management and Budget and the General Services
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Administration of "service to the citizen" or "grassroots community
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involvement offices." These offices would help coordinate electronic
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delivery initiatives with other federal programs that include
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grassroots involvement in some form. Six months later, little has
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been done to implement this suggestion, and no legislation has been
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proposed to establish a mandatory set-aside. Fred Wood, OTA Project
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Director of the study, said in an interview last week, "One thing that I
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feel has not received the attention that I think is appropriate is this
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grass roots empowerment idea. There is some activity in this
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direction, but nothing systematic." Source: Summary of Electronic
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Public Information Newsletter.Vol. 4, No. 9; May 6, 1994.
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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE TO PUT THE NATIONAL
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TRADE DATA BASE ON THE INTERNET
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A year after putting its Economic Bulletin Board (EBB) on the
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Internet, the Office of Business Analysis (OBA) of the Department of
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Commerce is moving to make its granddaddy of databases~the
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National Trade Data Base (NTDB)~also available over the Internet
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in June. Up to now, the NTDB has been available from the
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government on CD-ROM. According to Ken Rogers, Director of
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Information Product Development, the EBB has some 3000 files, as
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opposed to 160,000 files in the NTDB. He said just keeping the NTDB
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current is a formidable task. To start, only a part of the NTDB will be
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accessible over the Internet in a gopher architecture. Rogers
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cautioned searching a database the size of NTDB by gopher "will not
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be pleasant." The agency plans later in the year to install "Inquery", a
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search and retrieve software program developed and licensed by the
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University of Massachusetts. Inquery is like a WAIS, but according
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to Rogers, far superior. "We think the U of Mass product is better it
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has been developed for more commercial applications and in
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computing tests between this and other tools the Inquery system
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always wins," Rogers said.
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Source: Summary of Electronic Public Information Newsletter.Vol. 4,
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No. 9; May 6, 1994.
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UPDATE ON ITALIAN FIDOBUST
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"The crackdown needed to be done, software piracy has become a
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National sport in Italy. Unfortunately, the operation rapidly became
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too wide for our forces: right now, here in Pesaro we are only three
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Prosecutors, quite busy with penal trials, in court all day long. We will
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try to do our best withthe less possible damage for the entire
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community." Here are the explanatory words of Gaetano Savoldelli
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Pedrocchi, the Pesaro Prosecutor who is managing the investigations
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that last week led to a nationwide crackdown on Fidonet Italia BBSs.
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During the operation - confidentially known as "Hardware 1" - more
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than 60 (some sources go up to 130) Bulletin Board Systems have
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been visited and searched by police officials. In the central and
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northern part of the country, several Fidonet nodes were closed and
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dozens of operators were charged of "conspiracy with unknown for
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distribution of illegally copied software and appropriation of secret
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passwords."
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Some figures say the seizures included more than 120 computers,
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300 streamer-cassettes and CD-ROMs, 60,000 floppy disks, an
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imprecise number of modems and other electronic devices. In some
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cases, police officials sealed off rooms and garages where the BBSs
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were operated or closed all the hardware they found in a closet.
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Several Fidonet operators (generally students, professionals, small-
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company owners) lost their personal data because every magnetic
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support was "suspected to carry pirated software."
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Aimed to crack a distribution ring of illegal software run by two people
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using the publicly available Fidonet node list, investigators searched
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and seized every single site of the list - even those that had never had
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any contact with the two suspected. Also, many operators not
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inquired by police were forced to immediately shut down their
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systems, searching for possible illegal software covertly uploaded on
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their BBSs. As a consequence of such indiscriminate operations, the
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real, very few pirate boards had the chance to quickly hide their
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businesses - sources say.
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"I do not believe this scenario," said the Pesaro Prosecutor in an
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interview by SottoVoce Magazine. "We acted after precise
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information about the activities of a specific data-bank; if some
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operators have nothing to do with the charges, we'll verify it as soon
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as possible."
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Questioned about further investigations against BBSs users, the
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Prosecutor said: "We'll see later....at the present, users can sleep
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peacefully. Otherwise, I cannot imagine how many people should be
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investigated. I do not want to criminalize the entire population. Even
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if the inquiry has become so vast, this is not a subject of vital
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importance for our country. It is mostly a fiscal and bureaucratic
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issue, a matter of small-scale but spread illegality." However, rumors
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say other inquires are currently underway in other cities, and even
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the Criminalpol is working on similar issues.
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Assisting the investigated people, some lawyers already asked for the
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immediate return of the confiscated materials, while others suggested
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to wait for better times. In any case, it will probably take months
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(years?) before receiving official answers regarding the seizures.
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Struggling to re-open in some way their systems, Fidonet operators
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are also working to get the attention of mainstream media on the
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issue - with little success, so far. After an article published by La
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Repubblica, two localnewspapers, Il Mattino and Il Giornale di
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Brescia, run brief reports on May 15, both centered on "a wide
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software piracy ring cracked by police officials".
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But, the real activity is happening inside and around electronic
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communities. MC-Link and especially Agora' Telematica (the biggest
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Italian systems) are doing a great job, offering space for news,
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opinions and comments - also acting as connection links between the
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decimated net of BBSs and worried individuals scattered in the
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country. Here is just one example: "....police officials seized
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everything, including three PCs (one broken), a couple of modems
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(just fixed for some friends), floppies, phone cables, phone-books. Now
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Dark Moon is off, hoping to have at least one line available in a few
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days, maybe at 2400. I fear that more raids will soon follow
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elsewhere. So, please, stay alert..."
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A catching dynamism flourishes from the BBSs linked to Cybernet.
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Although some of them are currently not operating, a special issue of
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the Corriere Telematico was just released over the net and their
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printed voice, Decoder Magazine, will soon distribute news,
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testimonies, comments on "Operation Hardware 1".
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PeaceLink has set up a defense committee-news center in Taranto
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and its spokesperson, Alessandro Marescotti, will sign an article for
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the next issue of the weekly magazine Avvenimenti.
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Promptly alerted, the International online community gave good
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response -quickly redistributing the news over the Net and sending
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supportivemessages. Here is an email from Michael Baker, Chairman
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of Electronic Frontiers Australia: "To that end I am writing to offer
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assistance to anyone in Italy who wants to set up such an
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organisation. Recently I (along with others) have set up Electronic
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Frontiers Australia, and I am now its Chairman. Other national EF
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groups have been, or are being, set up in several other countries
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(Canada, Ireland, Norway, UK and Japan)....if there is anything we
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can do to help, please ask."
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Shifting toward politics, on May 19, the first working day of the new
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Italian Cabinet, six Members of the Reformers group presented a
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written question to the Ministers of Justice and Interior. After a short
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introduction about telecom systems, the document gives an account
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of the facts and asks three final questions to the Government: "if it
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will intend to open an investigation to verify if the raids ordered by
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the
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Pesaro Prosecutor's office were prejudicial to the constitutionally
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guaranteed freedom of expression; if it is not the case to set up a
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better and greater team of computer experts in order to avoid further
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random seizures of electronic devices that lead to shut down the
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BBSs; if it is not the occasion to confirm that current legislation does
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not charge system operators with objective responsibility for users'
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activities on telecom systems."
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Although the Fidonet sysops community (about 300 people) is still
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quite uncertain regarding its future, many of them feel the urgent
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need to overcome a sort of cultural and social isolation that clearly
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surrounds the telecom scene in Italy. At the moment the main issue
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is how to raise public interest and political pressure to obtain clear
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laws in support of civil rights in the electronic medium. Ideas and
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proposals are developing from several electronic laboratories, such as
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the Community Networking conference on Agora' Telematica and
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Cybernet.
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"We underestimate our strength; if we could just be able to set up an
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Italian Association of Telecom Users we could put pressure on
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political and legislative bodies...Overwhelm newspapers, radio and tv
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stations with faxes, letters, phone calls...We must attract common
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people, through hundreds of tables and events in the streets more
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than online, even if we do not have a Kapor to support us...There
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should be press-conferences in several cities, with the presence of
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investigated people along with famous persons, politicians...What
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about a 24-hours silence from any system in the country with
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simultaneous events in each city and village where a BBS operates?"
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The situation is rather fluid and in e-motion. Stay connected!
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Source: Bernardo Parrella (berny@well.sf.ca.us) Tue May 24 01:50:10
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1994
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==========================
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>From Edupage, a summary of news items on information technology,
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is provided three times each week as a service by Educom -- a
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consortium of leading colleges and universities seeking to transform
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education through the use of information technology.
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To add your name to the Edupage distribution list, send e-mail to:
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listproc@educom.edu. In the body of the message type: sub edupage
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<yourname>. To unsubscribe send the message: unsub edupage.
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Edupage is also available in Portuguese and Spanish: edunews@nc-
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rj.rnp.br.
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For archive copies of Edupage or Update, gopher to educom.edu or
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look at our WWW server: URL: http://educom.edu/.index.html. To
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communicate with Edupage or Educom, send mail to
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comments@educom.edu or info@educom.edu.
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BARBARIANS AT THE CYBERGATE
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The New York Times reports hostility and aggression are spreading in
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cyberspace, and network experts are worried about the future of the
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electronic community. A rash of newcomers in the last year or two
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has undermined the tradition of rational self-government and the
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democratic exchange of ideas. Commenting on the recent incident
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where two lawyers advertised their services to Usenet groups and
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were subsequently vilified, a University of California at San Diego
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professor observes, "If such events become routine -- and there's very
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little technical or legal reason why they won't -- then the whole net
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will
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basically collapse through flame-wars, the closing of e-mail discussion
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groups to outsiders and whatever." (Tampa Tribune 5/15/94 B2)
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CYBERPORN IS PROSECUTED
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In two recent cases in Oklahoma and Texas, courts have convicted
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defendants for using electronic bulletin boards to distribute obscene
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material. In the Oklahoma case, defense attorneys argued that state
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obscenity laws don't apply to electronic devices such as CD-ROMs,
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claiming that what was on the disks was actually binary code. In the
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Texas case, U.S. Secret Service agents seized computers and
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electronic equipment from an electronic publisher. (Wall Street
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Journal 5/27/94 B3)
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WILL COMMUNICATIONS GIANTS CONTROL DIVERSITY?
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By luring 12 major TV stations to leave their networks and sign up
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with Fox, Rupert Murdoch has expanded his global print and
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electronic communications empire -- demonstrating, says one
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reporter, that power is concentrating in the hands of those with the
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money, the experience and the programming, leaving them "poised to
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control the still-to-be-designed information and entertainment
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delivery systems of tomorrow." (New York Times 5/29/94 Sec.4, p.1)
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BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU'RE SAYING, THOSE DONUTS CAN
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HEAR YOU
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Many retail stores, restaurants and food outlets, such as Dunkin'
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Donuts, are using audio monitoring as a surveillance technique to
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prevent employee or customer theft; the practice is so new that
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many advocates of consumer privacy have not yet heard of it. (New
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York Times 5/28/94 p.6)
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BIG SAVINGS ON TELECOMMUTERS
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The director of marketing for AT&T Virtual Office Solutions says,
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"For every dollar spent, we saved $2," on their telecommuting project.
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With approximately 8.000 employees functioning in the virtual world,
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managers report productivity up 45% and office space savings up
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50%. (San Francisco Examiner 5/29/94 C5)
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NEW USES FOR HIGH-TECH TRAINING
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The Clinton administration plans to use expensive computer
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simulators developed for the Pentagon to train tomorrow's workers in
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subjects ranging from physics to manufacturing. (Business Week
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6/6/94 p.44)
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SNAIL MAIL AN ENDANGERED SPECIES?
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Canada's postal corporation is making preparations to join the info-
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highway. Its chair predicts that stamped mail likely will become
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extinct as electronic information replaces regular mail, delivering
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services by TV, telephone and computer. (Toronto Globe & Mail
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6/03/94 B3)
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EUROPE URGED TO REMOVE BARRIERS TO INFOBAHN
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The president of the European Union says that the benefits of more
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EU participation in the information society could include alleviating
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the union's chronic unemployment problem, which now stands at
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about 20 million people. (Wall Street Journal 6/3/94 A5A)
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INTERACTIVE LEARNING CURVE
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Apparently very little of the expertise in traditional merchandising,
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cost control and customer service translates into the electronic
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marketplace. "Opening an electronic store is completely different
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from a retail store or catalog... It took us six months just to figure
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out
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how to present our product effectively," says one merchant.
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(Investor's Business Daily 6/3/94 A3)
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TROLLING IN PUBLIC DATABASES
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The government routinely scours its 4,000 databases looking for
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welfare cheats, draft dodgers, tax cheats, etc. The Clinton
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Administration's proposed Health Security Card, a "smart card" with
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personal information on individuals, would create a huge new
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government database with medical records on every citizen.
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(Investor's Business Daily 6/2/94 A1)
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ELECTRONIC GOVERNMENT BENEFITS
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The federal government will start delivering public assistance benefits
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electronically over the next five years, and a nationwide system will
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replace welfare checks and food stamps by 1999. Following a pilot
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program in Maryland that reduced welfare fraud by 47% in the first
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year, it's expected that the new system will net $195 million a year in
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savings. (Wall Street Journal 6/1/94 A8)
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MECKLERWEB SEEKS CYBER-ADS
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Mecklermedia has launched a new service on the Internet aimed at
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providing a "politically correct" forum for companies that want to
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share information about their products and services. MecklerWeb
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provides each sponsor company 10 to 15 megabytes of space in
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exchange for a $25,000 annual fee, and user access to the site is free.
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"Our audience comes into MecklerWeb voluntarily. It is not
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unwanted, unsolicited e-mail," notes project manager Chris Locke.
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Try http://www.digital.com/demo.html. The permanent address will be
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: http://www.mecklerweb.com/demo.html. (Advertising Age 5/30/94
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p.18)
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INDIA SOFTWARE SHIPMENTS SURGE
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India's computer software exports totaled $330 million in the year
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ended March 31, up 47% from a year earlier. The country's software
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industry is increasingly moving from lower-end products toward more
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sophisticated, higher quality applications. (Wall Street Journal 6/1/94
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A10)
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FUTURISTIC FUNDRAISING
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Entrepreneurs can go online to find investors for their ventures
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through companies like Technology Capital Network and American
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Venture. Start-up businesses buy a listing describing their function
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and needs, and investors pay to search the database for new
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opportunities. "It's still an unconventional way of raising capital, but
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that doesn't mean it's not a fantastic idea," says Paul Saffo of the
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Institute for the Future. (Wall Street Journal 6/2/94 B1)
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NEW INTERNET TRADE ASSOCIATION
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Suppliers of Internet access software and services have formed a new
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trade group -- the Internet Business Association -- to be
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headquartered in Washington, DC. (San Francisco Chronicle 6/1/94
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B2)
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WIRING AFRICA
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The head of a UNESCO effort to revive the Pan African News
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Agency says, "For years, the main obstacle to real development has
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been the statement, `We have to feed the people first.' After all, who
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can withhold food? But if you want the people to feed themselves, you
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have to have a different view. Say you go to a small village. People are
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hungry. Is the priority an electronic mailbox...or 1000 kilograms of
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corn? What we've learned, over the past 20 years, is that the mailbox
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may well be the priority." (Wired June 94 p.60)
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>From Canada The Traffic Report
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Information Highway Secretarait. Vol. 7 June 2, 1994.
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ONE STOP SHOP FOR BUSINESS
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The business service center is up and running in Fredericton,
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providing one-stop shopping for businesses in the capital region.
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Participants include the Department of Economic Development &
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Tourism, the Capital Regional Development Commission, the
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Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency and Industry Canada. The
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objective is to give businesses a single point access to programs,
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services and regulations. Contact: Andre Charon (506) 444-6156
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THE TELEGRAPH JOURNAL GOES ONLINE
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Newspapers in New Brunswick have long used the telephone system
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and computer modems to transmit stories from bureaus to the
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editorial offices. But until now, they haven't been seen searching for
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story ideas on the Internet. Telegraph Journal reporter Jacques
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Poitras is the first. He's already done some research using NB*Net's
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news groups and says he's looking for more story ideas. Contact:
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Jacques Poitras jpoitras@nbnet.nb.ca
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TRAVEL INFORMATION ON A DISKETTE
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Aquilla Destination Marketing of Saint John launched its
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computerized travel information system at a gathering of Meeting
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New Brunswick this week. The Windows-based guide features color
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coded New Brunswick maps and other graphics, such as meeting floor
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plans and hotel locations.Hundreds of the diskettes will be mailed to
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meeting planners and associated businesses outside the province. The
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guide will be updated annually and distributed free of charge. Contact:
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Beth Kelly (506) 633-1224
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AUTOCAD ON THE HIGHWAY
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Ten students have graduated from the first ever distance education
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course of the well-known AutoCad computerized drafting software.
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The course was designed and delivered by the Moncton Community
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College in conjunction with TeleEducation New Brunswick. The
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project impressed AutoDesk, the owner of the software, and the
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community college is becoming an authorized AutoDesk training
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centre in order to deliver the course across Canada. Contact: John
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Hanusiak (506) 856-2169 or 1-800-263-4403
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U.S. CARD OR BIG BROTHER IS GETTING CLOSER
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Ever Feel Like You're Being Watched? You Will...
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Digital Media has learned that the Clinton administration is debating
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not if, but how, to create a card that every American will need in order
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to interact with any federal government agency. Combined with two
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potential executive orders and the Postal Service's designs on putting
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its stamp on personal and business electronic transactions, the card
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could open a window on every nuance of American personal and
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business life.
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The wrangling among the administration, the U.S. Postal Service, the
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Internal Revenue Service and Department of Defense, emerged into
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the public eye at this April's CardTech/SecureTech Conference. The
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gathering of security experts was convened to discuss applications for
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smart card and PCMCIA memory card technologies in business and
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government. The Postal Service, at the conference presented a
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proposal for a "general purpose U.S. services smartcard," which
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individuals and companies would use to authenticate their identities
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when sending and receiving electronic mail, transferring funds and
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interacting with government agencies, such as the I.R.S., Veterans
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Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services.
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President Clinton is also considering signing two executive orders that
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would greatly expand the government's access to personal records,
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including an order that would allow the I.R.S. to monitor individual
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bank accounts and automatically collect taxes based on the results,
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said sources close to the White House. The collection service will be
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presented as a convenient way to avoid filling out a tax return. The
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White House did not respond to requests for comments about this
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report.
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The Post Office: We deliver for you. The Postal Service's U.S. Card
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would be designed to use either smart cards (plastic cards with an
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embedded microprocessor carrying a unique number that can be read
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by a electromagnetic scanner and linked to computerized records
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stored on a network) or PCMCIA cards, which can contain megabytes
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of personal information. (You've probably seen this type card in
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AT&T's "You Will" ad campaign, which shows a doctor inserting a
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woman's card in a reader in order to access a recording of a
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sonogram). The Postal Service said it is considering AT&T and other
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companies' smart card technologies.
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In a slide presentation at the conference, Postal representative
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Chuck Chamberlain outlined how an individual's U.S. Card would be
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automatically connected with the Department of Health and Human
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Services, the U.S. Treasury, the I.R.S., the banking system, and a
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central database of digital signatures for use in authenticating
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electronic mail and transactions. The U.S. Card is only a proposal,
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Chamberlain insists. Yet the Postal Service is prepared to put more
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than a hundred million of the cards in citizens' pockets within months
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of administration approval, he said.
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"We've been trying to convince people [in the different agencies] to do
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just one card, otherwise, we're going to end up with two or three
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cards," said Chamberlain. He said in addition to the healthcare card
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proposed by President Clinton last year, various government agencies
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are forwarding plans for a personal records card and a transactions
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(or "e-purse") card. Chamberlain said the I.R.S in particular is
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pursuing plans for an identity card for taxpayers.
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Don't leave home without it. Though he did not name the U.S. Card at
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the time, Postmaster General Marvin Runyon suggested that the
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Postal Service offer electronic mail certification services during
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testimony before the Senate Governmental Affairs Subcommittee in
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March. The proposal is clearly intended as a way to sustain the
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Postal Service's national role in the information age, since it would
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give the agency a role in virtually every legally-binding electronic
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transaction made by U.S. citizens. For instance:
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* When sending or receiving electronic mail, U.S. Card users would be
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able to check the authenticity of a digital signature to screen out
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impostors.
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* Banking transactions (notably credit card purchases) that depend
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on authentication of the participants identities and an audit trail,
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would be registered in Postal Service systems.
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* Veterans, or for that matter college students and welfare recipients,
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could check their federal benefits using the identification data on their
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U.S. Cards.
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* Visitors to an emergency room would have instant access to
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medical records at other hospitals, as well as their health insurance
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information.
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These examples may seem benign separately, but collectively they
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paint a picture of a citizen's or business's existence that could be
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meddlesome at best and downright totalitarian at worst. Will buying a
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book at a gay bookstore with a credit card that authenticates the
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transaction through the Postal Service open a Naval officer up to
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cour marshal? If you have lunch with a business associate on a
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Saturday at a family restaurant, will the IRS rule the expense non-
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deductible before you can even claim it?
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"There won't be anything you do in business that won't be collected
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and analyzed by the government," said William Murray, an
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information system security consultant to Deloitte and Touche who
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saw Chamberlain's presentation. "This [National Information
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Infrastructure] is a better surveillance mechanism than Orwell or the
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government could have imagined. This goddamned thing is so
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pervasive and the propensity to connect to it is so great that it's
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unstoppable."
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Deep Roots; Deep Pockets; Long History. Chamberlain said the
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Postal Service has been working for "a couple years" on the
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information system to back up the U.S. Card. He said the project was
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initiated by the Department of Defense, which wanted a civilian
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agency to create a national electronic communications certification
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authority that could be connected to its Defense Messaging System.
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Chamberlain said the Postal Service has also consulted with the
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National Security Agency, proponents of the Clipper encryption chip
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which hides the contents of messages from all but government
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agencies, like law enforcement. The National Aeronautics and Space
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Administration's Ames Research Laboratories in Mountain View,
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Calif. carried out the research and development work for Clipper.
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"We're designing a national framework for supporting business-
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quality authentication," said John Yin, the engineer heading up the
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U.S. Card-related research for NASA Ames' advanced networking
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applications group. "This is not specifically with just the Postal
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Service. We'll be offering services to other agencies and to third-party
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commercial companies that want to build other services on the card."
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For example, VISA or American Express could link their credit
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services to the U.S. Card.
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Yin, who works on Defense Messaging Systems applications, said his
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group has collaborated with "elements of Department of Defense" for
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the past year, but would not confirm the participation of the National
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Security Agency, a Department of Defense agency. The NSA is
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specifically prohibited from creating public encryption systems by the
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Computer Security Act of 1987. Yin also would not comment on the
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budget for the project, which other sources said was quite large and
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has spanned more than two years.
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A false sense of security? According to Yin, the cards would allow
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individuals or businesses to choose any encryption technology. "It's
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not our approach to say, 'Here's the standard, take it our leave it,'" he
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said.
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"We're not trying to create a monopoly, rather it's an infrastructure
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for interoperability on which a whole variety of services can be built."
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Yet, NASA, which is a participant in the CommerceNet electric
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marketplace consortium will "suggest" to its partners that they adopt
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the U.S. Card certification infrastructure, he said.
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The reality is that government agencies' buying power usually drives
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the market to adopt a particular technology -- not unlike the way the
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Texas Board of Education, the largest single purchaser of textbooks in
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the U.S., sets the standard for the content of American classroom
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curricula. Since, the administration has already mandated use of
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Clipper and its data-oriented sibling, the Tesserae chip, in federal
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systems it's fairly certain that the law enforcement-endorsed chips
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will find their way into most, if not all, U.S. Cards. Even in the
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unlikely
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event that one government agency should weather the pressure and
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pass on the Clipper chip, it's still possible to trace the source,
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destination, duration and time of transactions conducted between
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Clippered and non-Clippered devices.
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"Most of this shift [in privacy policy] is apparently being done by
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executive order at the initiative of bureaucracy, and without any
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Congressional oversight or Congressional concurrence, " Murray said.
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"They are not likely to fail. You know, Orwell said that bureaucrats,
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simply doing what bureaucrats do, without motivation or intent, will
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use technology to enslave the people."
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EDITOR'S NOTE: Digital Media has filed a Freedom of Information
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Act request for Clinton and Bush Administration, Postal Service,
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NSA, Department of Defense, NASA, I.R.S. and other documents
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related to the creation of the U.S. Card proposal.
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-- Mitch Ratcliffe
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Copyright 1994 by Mitch Ratcliffe and Seybold Publications.
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Mitch Ratcliffe
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Editor in Chief
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Digital Media: A Seybold Report
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444 De Haro St., Ste. 128
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San Francisco, Calif. 94107
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415.575.3775 office
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godsdog@netcom.com
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The above article was resent-From: Sam Sternberg
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<SAMSAM@VM1.YorkU.CA> communet@uvmvm
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To: Multiple recipients of list COMMUNET
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<COMMUNET@UVMVM.BITNET>
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QUICKTAKE 100 DIGITAL CAMERA REVIEW
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I recently got the opportunity to use the new Apple QuickTake 100
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digital camera. The new Apple camera lists for $799, but has been
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advertized at a lower price. The unit works well with both Macs and
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Windows-based computers. The one-pound camera operates easily,
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simply, and plugs into a computer with a simple cable, supplied with
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the camera. It has a built in flash, with two settings. The QuickTake
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100 has two resolution settings. At high resolution (640 by 480 pixels)
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eight color images can be taken. And, at the low-resolution setting
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(320 by 240 pixels), 32 images are possible. Once the pictures are
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taken, they can be easily downloaded as PICT, TIFF, or Quick Take
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format files. The camera memory is then cleared and more images
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can be captured. The 24-bit color images are reasonably good for
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many applications. The resolution may not match your Nikon, but for
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the price and the ease of use, the QuickTake 100 is not a bad deal.
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The simplicity with which snaps can be taken allows use by most
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anyone. Some may complain because the unit has a fixed-focus lens
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that ranges from four feet to infinity, and the shutter speeds and
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aperture are automatically adjusted. However, it would appear that
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the 100 model number may indicate that more advanced camera are
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on the drawing board. Nonetheless, the camera works well and shows
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promise for many applications. Moreover, its great fun to use.
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At a recent demonstration of the La Plaza Telecommunity, I used the
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QuickTake to take pictures of those who came by our demonstration.
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Within seconds, the curious were immortalized with their pictures
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scattered around the edge of a 16-inch Apple monitor, with live
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Internet in the center. Everyone seemed impressed with the little
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digital camera. A number of business persons who stopped by the
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demonstration commented that the camera would be great for real
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estate, art gallery, desktop publishing, and other such applications.
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R. Bryant, Editor
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***************************************************************
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Please send an email message to Richard W. Bryant, Editor &
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Publisher at:
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rbryant@hydra.unm.edu
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***************************************************************
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COM NET NEWS is solely under my editorship, and is unrelated and
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independent of the La Plaza Telecommunity, of which I am vice
|
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president. The editorial comment is my own and does not reflect in
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any way on La Plaza.
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You may reproduce or publish any parts of this newsletter and
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distribute it electronically or in paper format. However, any
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reproduction or publishing of CNN material must be accompanied by
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the following reference:
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>From COM NET NEWS:
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Richard W. Bryant, Ph.D., Editor & Publisher
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RW Bryant Associates
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Advanced Technology Market Research & Com Net Consultants
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P.O. Box 1828
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El Prado, NM 87529
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Tel/fax: 505-758-1919
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rbryant@hydra.unm.edu
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