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43 KiB
Plaintext
860 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Sun May 31, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 24
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Associate Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, Jr.
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Arcmeisters: Brendan Kehoe and Bob Kusumoto
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CONTENTS, #4.24 (May 31, 1992)
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File 1-- Spring 2600
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File 2-- Correction on "Cybermyth" Article
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File 3--Info from French CCC--One Year After
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File 4-- GEnie Transcript: Steve Cisler/"Data Highways"
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Issues of CuD can be found in the Usenet alt.society.cu-digest news
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group, on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of LAWSIG,
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and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM, on Genie in the PF*NPC RT libraries, on
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the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210, and by anonymous ftp from
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ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4), chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu, and
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ftp.ee.mu.oz.au. To use the U. of Chicago email server, send mail
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with the subject "help" (without the quotes) to
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archive-server@chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu. European distributor: ComNet
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in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893.
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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 as long as the source
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is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
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be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
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mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
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Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to
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computer culture and communication. Articles are preferred to short
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responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely
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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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From: Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
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Date: Sat, 30 May 1992 12:22:41 CDT
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Subject: File 1--Spring 2600
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The Spring '92 issue of "2600: The Hacker Quarterly" is out, and it's
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another fine issue. Articles include MS DOS viruses and inadequate
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virus scanners, boxes and cruising through Unix, and security
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information on WWIV BBS software. There's the usual technical
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information and letters, and an overview of the Australian phone
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system. And more. The review of the month is the Steve Jackson game
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HACKER: THE COMPUTER CRIME CARD GAME (it gets a highly positive
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review).
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2600 is a excellent value for $21 (U.S./Canada). More information can
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be obtained directly from the editor, Emmanuel Goldstein, at
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2600@well.sf.ca.us, or:
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2600
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PO Box 752
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Middle Island, NY 11953-0752
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------------------------------
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From: Gene Spafford <spaf@CS.PURDUE.EDU>
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Date: Wed, 20 May 1992 11:52:28 EDT
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Subject: File 2--Correction on "Cybermyth" Article
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Gene Spafford reminds us that he was the original author of the
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article in Cu Digest 4.23 on the "myth of the dying child."
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Attribution to Spaf as the author was inadvertently left out as it
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made the rounds from its original posting to news.announce.important
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last year. Further, in formatting the article, the initials of the
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contributor of the article to CuD made it appear that the poster
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signed the original moderator comment by Mark Horton. We attribute
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the inadvertent omissions to the quirks of recursive circulation of
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messages, and are certain that those whose hands the message passed
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through intended no slight to the original author. Spaf indicates
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that the message is as he wrote it with the exception of some minor
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formatting changes, the bibliography, and the omission of a paragraph
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with UNICEF and Red Cross addresses.
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For those who missed it, the article was about the cybermyth of Craig
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Shergold, a "dying child," that circulated the nets. Like other
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cybermyths ("chocolate chip cookie recipe" and "FCC modem tax"), the
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post took on a life of its own and still occasionally can be seen. We
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are waiting for an ambitious reader to compile a list of similar
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cybermyths that have been net-spread periodically. But, do it before
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Sun Devil II hits.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 26 May 92 08:52 GMT
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From: Jean-Bernard Condat <0005013469@MCIMAIL.COM>
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Subject: File 3--Info from French CCC--One Year After
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DON'T HESITATE TO FOLLOW TO OTHER BULLETIN BOARDS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD.
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June 6th, 1991 6:24 pm
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The French Police Judiciaire inculped of computer fraud (]462.2 of the
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French legislation) Jean-Bernard Condat, general secretary of the Chaos
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Computer Club France (cccf).
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The police said that like an hackers club (72 members in France) and
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1,800 correspondents throughout the world) cannot be legal and found a
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crazy story of NUI (the well known BND2 code used from two years by all
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the people via Minitel, the French terminal) and inculped Jean-Bernard
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for paying US$1,000 pro month... "ad vita aeternam"!
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The anniversary of this day, the CCCF make a great fest with a lot of
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articles on computer hacking, etc. Don't hesitate to collaborate and/or
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send a message in this e-mail box for Jean-Bernard.
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Thank for your help. Don't hesitate to put this e-mail address on your
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mailing list... and to ask us for all your French questions.
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(bureau of) Jean-Bernard Condat
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Chaos Computer Club France (CCCF)
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B.P. 8005
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69351 Lyon Cedex 08, France
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Tel.: +33 1 47 87 40 83
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Fax.: +33 1 47 87 70 70.
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------------------------------
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Date: 20 May 92 19:04:48 EDT
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From: Gordon Meyer <72307.1502@COMPUSERVE.COM>
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Subject: File 4--GEnie Transcript: Steve Cisler/"Data Highways"
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______________________________________________________
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| |
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| The Public Forum * NonProfit Connection RoundTable |______
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|______________________________________________________| |
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| Sysops' GE Mail: PF$ RTC Sunday 9pm EDT: MOVE 545;2 |______
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|___________________________________________________________| |
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| News, Current Events, Government, Societal Issues, Nonprofits |
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|________________________________________________________________|
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__________________________________________________________________
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| Rights & responsibilities, government, politics, minority civil |_
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| rights, volunteerism, nonprofit management, the media, the | |
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| environment, international issues, gay/lesbian/bisexual issues, | |
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| women & men, parenting, youth organizations and more! | |
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|__________________________________________________________________| |
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|__________________________________________________________________|
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________ PF$ PF*NPC Sysops _____________
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| |_ | Weekly RTC: |_
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| The | | SHERMAN Tom Sherman | 9pm Eastern | |
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| PF*NPC | | SCOTT Scott Reed | on Sundays! | |
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| Staff: | | CHERNOFF Paul Chernoff | Type M545;2 | |
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|________| | GRAFFITI Ric Helton |_____________| |
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|________| SHERRY Sherry |_____________|
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This is a transcript of the RealTime Conference with Apple's Steve
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Cisler, a note librarian and data access pioneer, discussing access to
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the "data highways" and computer systems that will increasingly shape
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the world around us.
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An electronic meeting place for friends, family and national "town
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meetings," GEnie is an international online computer network for
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information, education and entertainment. For under $5.00/month, GEnie
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offers over 50 special interest bulletin boards and unlimited electronic
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mail at no extra charge during evenings, weekends and holidays. GEnie is
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offered by GE Information Services, a division of General Electric Company.
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In the Public Forum*NonProfit Connection, thousands of people every day
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discuss politics and a wide range of social and nonprofit issues. A neutral
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arena for all points of view, the PF*NPC is presented by Public Interest
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Media, a nonprofit organization devoted to empowering people through the
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socially productive use of information and communication technology.
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For more information about GEnie or the Public Forum, call 1-800-638-9636
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or send electronic mail to tsherman@igc.org.
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Future real-time conferences, all beginning at 9 p.m. ET, include:
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Katie Hafner, author of Cyberpunk (May 24)
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Jerry Berman, Esq., Electronic Frontier Foundation (May 31)
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To sign up for GEnie service, call (with modem in HALF DUPLEX)
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800-638-8369. Upon connection, type HHH. At the U#= prompt,
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type XTX88367,GENIE <RETURN>. The system will prompt you for information.
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Copyright (c)1992 Public Forum * NonProfit Connection RT and GEnie(R)
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May be redistributed as long as it is unedited and this notice appears.
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__________________________________________________________
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-=(( The Public Forum * NonProfit Connection RoundTable ))=-
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-==((( GEnie Page 545 - Keywords PF or NPC )))==-
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-=((__________________________________________________________))=-
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Let me say a few quick words of introduction . . .
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Welcome to the second in this month's series of
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RTCs on Technology and Society! Please check
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the schedule, posted in our Announcements topic
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(cat 1/topic 3) for the other events . . .
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These realtime conferences raise important
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issues for the future -- some of them already
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being discussed in BB Cat 7: Technology,
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Science and Society . You'll also find many
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excellent files in the Public Forum library. .
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Because we have a small, well-mannered group
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tonight <grin> . . . I'm going to leave the
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room open for everyone to talk, BUT .... it'll
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be a lot easier if you /RAIse your hand to be
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called on so that STeve only has to answer one
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question at a time . . .
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Now the PF*NPC is delighted to introduce Steve
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Cisler from Apple Computer. A former librarian,
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Steve is now internationally known for his
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involvement in . . . .issues involving public
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access to information and the networks that
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carry it. Here's Steve! GA
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> The room is open now . . . Steve will you say
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hello -- and anything else you want to say? GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I still consider myself a librarian, but I have
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been working a lot with national networking
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issues ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Steve, today's NY Times has a review of Neil
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Postman's latest book . . . in which he claims
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that technology has sapped us of our initiative
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and control . . . and I wonder if you see
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evidence of that happening in the world of
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online information. GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Yes, I read it. I think he chooses not to
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understand some of the positive aspects of
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technology, esp. interactive computing. ...
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I know that people have tried to show him the
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benefits of computer discussions. In fact, he
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was sent a discussion of his AMUSING OURSELVES
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TO DEATH (about TV) but he never responded. Re:
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lost of initiative and control. I think that
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loss of control over personal information as
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well as information generated by the govt seems
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out of our control ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Scott, your question?
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<SCOTT> Can you address the problems of making
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telecommunications more accessible to people?
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ga
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I think the interfaces, the modem setup or even
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elimination of such equipment will be important
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to attract a whole new class of users on to
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these and other systems. The barriers
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(including typing ability) are still great...
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Also, there is the problem of cost. Some places
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are providing public access to online services.
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Santa Monica City has public access PC's in
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libraries and public places. These have been
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used by non-computer... owners including the
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homeless who used them to negotiate with the
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city council for some services. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Ric, your question?
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> How much does the hardware infrastructure have
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to do with how many people will utilize public
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data networks? Will we need desktop ISDN before
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it becomes widescale, or is it starting to
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becoming pervasive even now? GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Obviously, people are getting a lot of use out
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of 2400 bps systems, so the speed is not all
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that important. I do believe that new sorts of
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services will emerge from commercial providers
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and from amateurs when we get something like
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ISDN ... [garbled] ... If these short answers
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don't suffice, I'll try and answer in more
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detail by mail ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty, your question?
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<[MARTY] MKB> Steve, you cite cost. Why shouldn't consumers
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of information services pay the true cost of
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the information? Libraries have been energetic
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in seeking subsidized information. At some
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point, we taxpayers have to stop subsidizing
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everything.
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Part of my posting was clipped. sorry
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Many people believe that our country was based
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on access to information. It has been a big
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part of the democratic tradition. I do think
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there are many arguments about just how much
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should be subsidized...
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<[MARTY] MKB> This country is based on access to information.
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But I don't remember the constitutional
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arguments about who was supposed to pay for it.
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> In the 80's and 90's there seems to be far less
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support for what I would call an information
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commons, be it electronic or print, Systems
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such ... as the FreeNets in Cleveland, Peoria,
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Youngstown and online libraries such as Melvyl
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(Un. of California) are open to all callers and
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Internet users. They have turned nobody away
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except when all the ports are full. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty, follow up question?
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<[MARTY] MKB> I think what's important is the access to
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information. That issue is being addressed by
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the EFF.
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> My turn! . . . Is there any way to set a price
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for information? Should its cost be determined
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by what the market will pay? And is it
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technologically possible these days to control
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the distribution of information?
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I think that EFF is promoting access to the
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network by providing info about tools, the Net,
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and the policies. Now to Tom's question...
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I don't think that all information should be
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driven by market considerations. For instance
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the Smithsonian sells GIF files on CompuServe
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and America Online but will be giving the same
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ones away on the Internet. In fact, they will
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be better quality!... Controlling dist. of
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info: CD-ROM publishers can time date software
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to stop working after a certain time. Network
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providers are looking at models for metering
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smaller and smaller chunks of info, and I think
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encryption will be very very big in a couple of
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years ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty (or others), care to comment?
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<[MARTY] MKB> We're sitting here on an information utility,
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all enjoying access to a cornucopia of
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information, and we've priced it very
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effectively. And it's growing! We're getting
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the tools.
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> I think the major focus on 'information' in our
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culture has been on how much money we can make
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from it, and not an any democratic process.
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Copyright law itself is based on protecting
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commercial interests.
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Well, copyright was originally intended to
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foster the spread of information by assuring
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that the creator would get some remuneration.
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That has been forgotten to some extent. ga
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> How long will it be before we see other city,
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county, state or even the federal government
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online and accessible to the public at large?
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Access to current laws, referendums, email to
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elected officials, that sort of thing. GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> It's happening in different areas. Apple
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Library of Tomorrow has provided equipment
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grants to Access Colorado. The state wants to
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hook up all the libraries in Colorado... so
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that each citizen can reach them with a local
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call. Now, other agencies want to provide some
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of their databases and information for public
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access via this network (which will be on the
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Internet this year)... One problem is that some
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states want to re-sell the information and
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programs to access that info. It seems like a
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natural course to take for some MIS folks at
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state and local level... but it can make access
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to that info very expensive, if not totally out
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of reach to many. Given the touch budgets they
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are working with, there are no easy solutions.
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ga
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> So UNIX is turning out to be a popular harward
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choice? GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Someone once said, "In Unix, no one can hear
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you scream." But yes, it is getting popular. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Randy, your question?
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<[Randy] R.ZEITMAN4> Do you think the accessibility of information
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will contribute to widening the gap between
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gov't and 'the people' as gov't will continue
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to take a more 'well, that information is
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available, why didn't you read it'. done
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Well, the inaccessibility should widen the gap.
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Also, many legislators fear the day when they
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start getting email. Heck, they are not listing
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their fax machines in some parts of Congress. I
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think all of us are... having a hard time
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dealing with the information fire-hose. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Randy, follow up question?
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<[Randy] R.ZEITMAN4> ..and what about we as people. It seems one day
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that a person will be able to live a whole life
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from the desktop because
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> As I said, I'll take email and try to answer,
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or else in the conferences. ga
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> (Ever watched British Parliament in session? A
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member stands, and says "Question #34." The
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speaker stands and answers, "Answer #125." And
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on, and on.... I am picturing that. :)
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<[Randy] R.ZEITMAN4> the very need to developer 'ties' to other
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people by simply going out and talking to them
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will be eliminated. in other words, can
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information access cause alienation fo a whole
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society?
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> the last question was garbled. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Randy commented that someday a person may be
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able to live a whole life from a desktop
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because the very need to develop ties to other
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people will be eliminated (by online
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connections)
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<[Randy] R.ZEITMAN4> as Tom said.
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I think the technologies are going to be more
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seductive. People may scorn human contact, if
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the computer is more satisfying, or if the
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other users are more in tune with them...
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<[Ric] GRAFFITI> That's a fatalistic view, isn't it? Couldn't
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technology actually augment our interpersonal
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connections, allowing us to meet (both
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electronically AND in person, people we'd never
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have had the opportunity to know otherwise?
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<SCOTT> Could you say more about the near-term
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technological advances that will make computer
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telecom more accessible? (Please tell us what
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ISDN is about.) How about the long-term? GA
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<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> ISDN provide two 64 kilobit/sec channels and 1
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16 kb/sec. With video compression you will see
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video conferencing possible. The phone
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companies are looking at a technology called
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ADSL... which gives you about 1.5 megabits/sec
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outbound with a return speed of perhaps 64
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kb/sec. That is fast enough for full motion
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video of laserdisc quality. The big plus for
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the telcos is that they won't have to rewire
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with fiber. ga
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<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty, your question/comment?
|
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<[MARTY] MKB> Steve, you're right that all of us are
|
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challenged by the need to cope with the
|
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information cornucopia. Electronic newspapers
|
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edited according to the reader's personal
|
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criteria will be powerful in giving us a high
|
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information density. Do you see them comDo you
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see them coming? <ga>
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||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Ric I fully agree that remote connections to
|
||
people encourages face to face meetings. It has
|
||
for me (that's how I've met Tom Sherman and
|
||
many other people.
|
||
|
||
About electronic newspapers... We were working
|
||
on a research project called Rosebud where you
|
||
could put in a series of personal questions for
|
||
the software to take and ask many different
|
||
databases... In the night the answers would
|
||
arrive, and a newspaper would be built and
|
||
would be sitting on your desktop in the morning
|
||
(or whenever). That's about all I can say
|
||
now... but I'm sure it's a model many other
|
||
companies are working on. Already there are
|
||
many electronic clipping services: News Edge,
|
||
Individual Inc are 2 that come to mind. Not
|
||
cheap though! ga
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Rosebud sounds interesting. I'm thinking more
|
||
of an online feed from, say, AP; each story
|
||
would have a specific subject tag, and the
|
||
computer would pick out the stories the reader
|
||
wanted, at varying levels of detail.
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty, follow up? Like that cable news
|
||
arrangement?
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Something like it. I picture the reader
|
||
spending half a day or so programming the thing
|
||
by subject and level of depth, from basic to
|
||
professional.
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Are you familiar with X*Press Info. Services?
|
||
It's a service of TCI and is sold through local
|
||
cable companies. DOS and Mac software can grab
|
||
stories by keywords, broad subject areas
|
||
(Japan, Red Sox, serial killers) and save those
|
||
for you...
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> No, is it what I'm describing? More to the
|
||
point, is it priced where an average middle
|
||
income information professional might want it?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Marty, there is a system called TOPIC from
|
||
Verity. You do spend a couple of hours
|
||
programming the personal profile, assigning
|
||
'weights' to diff. terms so your articles are
|
||
graded by relevance. That is really ...
|
||
attracting a lot of attention in some circles.
|
||
Librarians are skeptical of this sort of
|
||
system. For the individual user, I'm not sure
|
||
what to recommend. I think it's a bit too new
|
||
and costly for an information broker working at
|
||
home to use, but a system like GEnie might make
|
||
money providing Certainly print pubs are
|
||
targeting readers more and more narrowly. My
|
||
newsweek has ads for stores three miles away!
|
||
ga
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Now that's it. Is it priced in the ballpark for
|
||
the private individual rather than the office?
|
||
To a certain extent, of course, we already have
|
||
that with specialized newsletters. We read
|
||
MacWeek, we get specialized info.
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Marty, the last phone # I have for X*PRESS is
|
||
Linda Nicholson, 303-721-5130. Steve may have
|
||
newer numbers.
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Thanks, I'll check it out.
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Ric, you had a question?
|
||
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI> Do you think that allowing users to read
|
||
"personalized" newspapers contributes somehow
|
||
to censorship... after all, you'd never read
|
||
anything you didn't WANT to read about, so you
|
||
would stagnate. Injustices would go
|
||
uncorrected.... activism would become
|
||
worthless: you'd be preaching to the choir,
|
||
people who WANTED to read your message. GA
|
||
|
||
(Oh, X-Press can be reached at 1-800-7PC-NEWS)
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Ric, a person has the right to receive only the
|
||
information he wants to receive!
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I think that personal newspapers should have a
|
||
serendipity factor built in so you get fresh
|
||
info. Nicholas Negroponte of the Media Lab said
|
||
that was important. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI> I'm not talking 'rights' but the sociological
|
||
effects.
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> The reader can SET a serendipity factor if he
|
||
wants it. I would. But freedom of speech has
|
||
never included the ability to make someone
|
||
listen.
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I and other librarians kind of surf the
|
||
information waves in a general sort of way, and
|
||
our users find that very useful. So there is
|
||
value is staying abreast of all sorts of info,
|
||
not just narrow subjects. ga marty, I could not
|
||
read yours. ga
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> I agree it's good to have a serendipity factor,
|
||
but the individual should decide that for
|
||
himself.
|
||
|
||
<SCOTT> I could imagine that folks might subscribe to a
|
||
service which acted like the ditor of a
|
||
newspaper in deciding for them what current
|
||
events were worth finding out about.
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Steve, what are your thoughts about the federal
|
||
government's current understanding of public
|
||
access to info and its control over that access
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> To change the subject, if any Mac owners want a
|
||
couple of disks with lots of info on the
|
||
Internet including guide books, then send... a
|
||
self addressed label to Internet Stuff, Apple
|
||
Library, 10381 Bandley Dr. MS8C Cupertino, CA
|
||
95014. Next: Tom's Question...
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Steve, can you put them in the online service
|
||
libraries?
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Or can we post 'em for you?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> The feds have different views about access to
|
||
info. The drive to privatize it has diminished
|
||
since Bush took over, but there is also an
|
||
argument about what constitutes govt. info...
|
||
Some agencies think only printed stuff should
|
||
be disseminated, but many Congresspeople
|
||
disagreed. There are some people in the Office
|
||
of Management and Budget who will agree... but
|
||
they have to listen to the Information
|
||
Information Society on one hand and the
|
||
librarians and other who advocate unrestricted
|
||
access on the other... Another interesting
|
||
controversy: is any electronic message a govt.
|
||
record? Should you be able to get it with a
|
||
Freedom of Info. Act request? I believe in
|
||
access to most govt. info, but I know I'd...
|
||
feel hampered if all my email became an
|
||
official record. I like it to remain
|
||
conversation, and I think govt. employees
|
||
should have the right to electronic
|
||
conversation. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Now there's a can of electronic worms! Scott,
|
||
your question?
|
||
|
||
<SCOTT> I find it a lot easier to comprehend and retain
|
||
info I've read in hardcopy. Can you suggest
|
||
reasons why reading info on the screen is more
|
||
difficult? GA
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> The resolution is much lower than a cheap
|
||
paperback, but that is going to change. I have
|
||
been reading Voyager's Expanded Books on our
|
||
Mac portable. Jurrasic Park by M. Crichton was
|
||
a good read on screen, but it will get much
|
||
better. ...
|
||
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI> (I think the screen orientation -- standing up
|
||
or laying down -- is important, too)
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Still, books will be around quite a while as
|
||
these technologies develop. I may be able to
|
||
use the device in the bathroom but not in the
|
||
tub or the pool. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Scott, follow up?
|
||
|
||
<SCOTT> This has something to do with being able to
|
||
hold the page in my hand and knowing it will be
|
||
there when I go back to look again.
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Well, when I reviewed the Crichton book on the
|
||
PowerBook, I read it on the plane flying from
|
||
San Jose to Austin and then the bus to
|
||
|
||
<SCOTT> Why is that? ga
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> San Antonio and finally in bed, with my head on
|
||
the pillow and the PowerBook on its side. I
|
||
drifted off to sleep, as did my machine. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Steve, we've more questions! Can you stay
|
||
another 10 minutes or so?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Sure, as long as you want. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> GREAT! Marty, your question?
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> A record is a record if it's an official
|
||
document, signed by a competent authority.
|
||
E-mail is not a record, it's a communication.
|
||
There will always be a zone of privacy for
|
||
government officials to exchange frank
|
||
comments, and they will find it one way one
|
||
way or another. Agree? <ga>
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> In some local governments, all meetings have to
|
||
be open. School boards and city councils are
|
||
one example. Dave Hughes of Colorado Springs
|
||
discussed this aspect (lack of privacy) some
|
||
time ago.... I agree that email is a
|
||
communication, but memos can be requested by
|
||
citizens who want to find out how business was
|
||
carried out on some rezoning controversy. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> A. Duda is a librarian, if I remember. Welcome.
|
||
|
||
<A.DUDA> Thanks. Sorry to be so late.
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Right Steve, a memo is a record. But e-mails
|
||
are a communication.
|
||
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI> email = memo?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I know that corporate lawyers caution people
|
||
about what they put into the email system. It
|
||
might show up in a court case later because it
|
||
is 'discoverable' (is that the term?) ga
|
||
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB> Right again. E-mails are discoverable, but they
|
||
shouldn't be considered fair game as policy
|
||
input.
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> My turn :-) . . . Steve, would you say
|
||
something about the management of NREN and who
|
||
will profit (as well as benefit) from it?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Historians are worried about the use of
|
||
electronic comms because they cut out a lot of
|
||
informal records. Big gaps in how policy or
|
||
history is made.
|
||
|
||
On to Tom's Question... Many people are
|
||
concerned about the lack of governance in the
|
||
present Internet. Some LOVE the anarchy and see
|
||
strength in that. However, there is nobody you
|
||
can call when... you can't connect up to that
|
||
computer in Israel or Ann Arbor, and for
|
||
commercial firms to use the Internet, they want
|
||
accountability... I think there are several
|
||
circles of beneficiaries: 1. the research and
|
||
education community plus the national lab.
|
||
personnel 2. then the smaller colleges, K-12
|
||
schools, and some libraries... After that you
|
||
have small businesses, non-profits. museums and
|
||
some non-affiliated users who are sophisticated
|
||
about information access. The final group is
|
||
the biggest: ... the consumer who uses
|
||
electronics and computers but has not gone
|
||
online yet. Left out are lots of people who
|
||
don't have a need for this sort of info or who
|
||
choose to get it in other ways. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Steve, how soon will the general consumer have
|
||
access to the highspeed data highways?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> In some areas (Boston, DC, San Francisco Bay
|
||
Area) people can get accounts and begin using
|
||
the databases, discussion groups, and other
|
||
services right now. Netcom in San Jose offers a
|
||
flat rate connection for about $16/month plus a
|
||
lot of disk storage. Colorado Supernet has a
|
||
$2/hr. connect charge. Other places are much
|
||
much higher. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Steve, will NREN have the same access as
|
||
Internet? Andrea, you'll be next.
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> NREN is the broadband expansion of the American
|
||
part of the Internet, and it will probably have
|
||
a broader user base, just because so many
|
||
people are clamoring for connections (the
|
||
groups I mentioned before) ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Andrea, your question?
|
||
|
||
<[Andrea] A.DUDA> There's been some talk about "virtual"
|
||
libraries. What do you think we have to look
|
||
forward to?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> George Brett in North Carolina is designing a
|
||
text-based one, using MUDD software (multi-user
|
||
dungeons and dragons). You will be able to
|
||
enter... the library, examine objects, execute
|
||
code which will drop you into a 'real' database
|
||
or perhaps electronic object (text for now,
|
||
images and sounds later). That will be a start,
|
||
and then you'll have... much more media-rich
|
||
services. If these are successful, you'll
|
||
probably have 3D realistic browsing of
|
||
libraries and media objects. There will have to
|
||
be a good business model though. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Andrea] A.DUDA> Will there be a role for virtual librarians?
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I think there will be a role for people and for
|
||
software agents that may seem like people to
|
||
users on the other end of the system... I think
|
||
librarians will have a big challenge to keep up
|
||
with the technology, redefine their roles, and
|
||
continue to provide more traditional services
|
||
for people who are not fond of computers. ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> I want to remind you all that Katie Hafner will
|
||
be here May 24 and Jerry Berman May 30 . . .
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> Hafner is working on a new book. I hope she
|
||
tells you about it! ga
|
||
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN> Next Sunday, we're doing a joint RTC with the
|
||
SPACE RT talking about government spending for
|
||
protection from asteroids!!
|
||
|
||
<SHERRY> Frank, why don't you go ahead and say just a
|
||
bit about the RTC next week.
|
||
|
||
<FRANK.REDDY> There's a move a foot in the planetary science
|
||
community .. . to spend some modest bucks to
|
||
locate small -- meaning yards across -- debris
|
||
that crosses Earth's orbit. Sounds small, but
|
||
such impacts could wipe out a city!
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> I'm going to sign off tonight. Thanks for
|
||
inviting me. I enjoyed it. The time certainly
|
||
flew by. -Steve
|
||
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI> Thanks for coming, Steve!
|
||
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20> ** has left.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----# Participants #-----
|
||
|
||
|
||
<[Andrea] A.DUDA>
|
||
<[rookie] B.COOKE5>
|
||
<FRANK.REDDY>
|
||
<[Ric] GRAFFITI>
|
||
<[jim&pat] J.ENG9>
|
||
<[MARTY] MKB>
|
||
<[Mark] MLEWIS>
|
||
<[Steve Cisler] PRESS20>
|
||
<[Randy] R.ZEITMAN4>
|
||
<SCOTT>
|
||
<[Tom] SHERMAN>
|
||
<SHERRY>
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
|
||
| This listing was generated by LRTC Version 1.00
|
||
| (C)opyright by Hartmut W. Malzahn, 1991. All rights reserved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
||
|
||
______________________________________________________
|
||
| |
|
||
| The Public Forum * NonProfit Connection RoundTable |______
|
||
|______________________________________________________| |
|
||
| Sysops' GE Mail: PF$ RTC Sunday 9pm EDT: MOVE 545;2 |______
|
||
|___________________________________________________________| |
|
||
| News, Current Events, Government, Societal Issues, Nonprofits |
|
||
|________________________________________________________________|
|
||
|
||
# # #
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #4.24
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
|