903 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
903 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
|
||
|
||
Computer underground Digest Wed Aug 26, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 39
|
||
|
||
Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
|
||
Copy Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, III
|
||
Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
|
||
Shadow-Archivist: Dan Carosone
|
||
|
||
CONTENTS, #4.39 (Aug 26, 1992)
|
||
File 1--Electronic Pests - Whiners, Thumpers, and Others
|
||
File 2--Mike Godwin's Response to William Sessions on FBI's Telephony Bill
|
||
File 3-- N.S.W. (Australia) anti-Corruption Report Released
|
||
File 4--Internet Guide (Nutshell resource)
|
||
File 5--What is Usenet? NOT.
|
||
|
||
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
||
available at no cost from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The editors may be
|
||
contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at:
|
||
Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115.
|
||
Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
|
||
news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
|
||
LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on Genie in the PF*NPC RT
|
||
libraries; from America Online in the PC Telecom forum under
|
||
"computing newsletters;" on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and by
|
||
anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au
|
||
European distributor: ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893.
|
||
|
||
COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
|
||
information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
|
||
diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted as long as the source
|
||
is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
|
||
be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
|
||
mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
|
||
Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to
|
||
computer culture and communication. Articles are preferred to short
|
||
responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely
|
||
necessary.
|
||
|
||
DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
|
||
the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
|
||
responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
|
||
violate copyright protections.
|
||
|
||
----------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
Date: 22 Aug 92 00:01:17 EDT
|
||
From: Bob McClenon <76476.337@COMPUSERVE.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 1--Electronic Pests - Whiners, Thumpers, and Others
|
||
|
||
This is a draft think piece for now. I have been thinking in the last
|
||
few weeks, based on experience on various bulletin board and mail
|
||
systems, about a taxonomy of electronic pests -- people who make
|
||
bulletin board systems unpleasant. I propose four categories for now:
|
||
whiners; thumpers; snipers; and dumpers.
|
||
|
||
Whiners are unhappy people who complain a great deal. Some whiners do
|
||
nothing but complain; they never ask for advice (which they wouldn't
|
||
accept anyway); offer advice; or engage in pleasantries. A few
|
||
whiners ask for advice but don't like it. There is no hard and fast
|
||
line between acceptable behavior and whining, but "you'll know it when
|
||
you read it". Whiners are unassertive unhappy people. (Bulletin
|
||
board users who are assertive about their unhappiness become other
|
||
types of pests.) In my experience most whiners have been female,
|
||
possibly because they have been socialized to be unassertive. Whiners
|
||
are the least destructive class of BBS pest, because they can
|
||
generally be ignored, and will usually heed a sysop warning to cool
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
Thumpers are doctrinaire or ideological people who believe that all
|
||
the answers that matter can be found by reference to a holy book or
|
||
similar authority. The prototype for a thumper is a Christian
|
||
Bible-thumper. Objectivists thump the works of Ayn Rand. Communists
|
||
thump the works of Marx. Pseudo-scientists or adherents of
|
||
pseudo-scientific cults are sometimes thumpers, if they have accepted
|
||
a single truth rather than pursuing bizarre truths electically; for
|
||
instance, Velikovskians are thumpers. I have also seen thumpers
|
||
holding subviews in the true sciences. Thumpers are a common problem
|
||
in the comp. newsgroups of Usenet, and are one reason why the number
|
||
of issues of digests constantly increase, to deal with their constant
|
||
counter-flamings. One difference between thumpers and other believers
|
||
is that thumpers habitually denigrate other views, rather than
|
||
ignoring them or engaging in real dialogue. Their usual objective is
|
||
to win converts; however, they generally do not succeed, because they
|
||
do little to persuade the unpersuaded. Telling a skeptic to read the
|
||
Bible is not useful; he may have already read it and find it complex
|
||
and requiring difficult interpretation. Telling him to read the Bible
|
||
and understand it is empty unless one already understands a particular
|
||
interpretation. Telling someone to read Atlas Shrugged who finds it
|
||
flawed literature is not helpful. Thumpers are common in religious or
|
||
ideological sections. They may be harmless there. But their
|
||
intolerance may cause others to lose faith, especially if the faith is
|
||
one, like Christianity, that has a tradition of tolerance. They often
|
||
engage in internal quarrels. However, I have seen that a few
|
||
Bible-thumpers in a political and general section can be destructive,
|
||
because they squelch questioners by their thumping. They are very
|
||
difficult for a sysop to silence because they are convinced of their
|
||
own rightness. The best way to deal with thumpers, if possible, is to
|
||
isolate them. This is not always possible.
|
||
|
||
Snipers are angry people who lie in wait for the unsuspecting and lash
|
||
out at them. Sometimes they do so briefly and obnoxiously, sometimes
|
||
at length. Unlike both whiners and thumpers, they are usually silent,
|
||
but when they are aroused they can cause great unpleasantness, and can
|
||
even be slanderous. Snipers are difficult to control because they
|
||
snipe at sysops.
|
||
|
||
Dumpers are a special class of whiners. They complain, but they also
|
||
attack people or classes of people whom they believe (rightly or
|
||
wrongly) have made them unhappy. They in particular "dump" torrents
|
||
of abuse on people and classes. They are difficult to control because
|
||
when admonished they dump on the sysop about the unfairness of
|
||
censorship.
|
||
|
||
Does anyone have any comments? Has anyone experienced other classes
|
||
of pests or unpleasant users?
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Tue, Aug 24 92 18:20:41 CDT
|
||
From: eff@eff.org
|
||
Subject: Mike Godwin's Response to William Sessions on FBI Telephony Bill
|
||
|
||
((Reprinted from: Effector 3.03, Aug 24, 1992))
|
||
|
||
THE EFF AND THE FBI: An exchange of views
|
||
|
||
This is an exchange of letters in the Wall Street Journal between the
|
||
Director of the FBI, William Sessions and EFF's Staff Counsel, Mike
|
||
Godwin.
|
||
++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
August 4, 1992
|
||
|
||
FBI Must Keep Up With Wonks & Hackers
|
||
|
||
Re your July 9 article about a very successful "computer hackers"
|
||
investigation conducted by the FBI and the Secret Service ("Wiretap
|
||
Inquiry Spurs Computer Hacker Charges"): The article mentions that
|
||
court-ordered electronic surveillance was a critical part of the
|
||
investigation and that the FBI is seeking laws to make it easier to
|
||
tap computer systems. Mike Godwin, general counsel for the Electronic
|
||
Frontier Foundation, said that "the success in this case 'undercuts'
|
||
the argument that new laws are needed." I believe the opposite to be
|
||
the case. This investigation clearly demonstrates why legislation is
|
||
absolutely necessary.
|
||
|
||
What Mr. Godwin is referring to is a legislative proposal on behalf of
|
||
law enforcement to ensure that as telecommunications technology
|
||
advances, the ability of law enforcement to conduct court-ordered
|
||
electronic surveillance is not lost. Without the legislation, it is
|
||
almost certain that will occur. The proposal is not directed at
|
||
computer systems, but pertains to telephone service providers and
|
||
equipment manufacturers.
|
||
|
||
In 1968, Congress carefully considered and passed legislation setting
|
||
forth the exacting procedure by which court authorization to conduct
|
||
electronic surveillance can be obtained. Since that time it has
|
||
become an invaluable investigative tool in combating serious and often
|
||
life-threatening crimes such as terrorism, kidnapping, drugs and
|
||
organized crime. The 1968 law contemplates cooperation by the
|
||
telecommunications service providers in implementing these court
|
||
orders. The proposed legislation only clarifies that responsibility
|
||
by making it clearly applicable regardless of the technology deployed.
|
||
|
||
Absent legislation, the ability to conduct successful investigations
|
||
such as the one mentioned in your article will certainly be
|
||
jeopardized. The deployment of digital telecommunications equipment
|
||
that is not designed to meet the need for law enforcement to
|
||
investigate crime and enforce the laws will have that effect. No new
|
||
authority is needed or requested. All the legislation would do if
|
||
enacted is ensure that the status quo is maintained and the ability
|
||
granted by Congress in 1968 preserved.
|
||
|
||
William S. Sessions Director, FBI, Department of Justice Wall Street
|
||
Journal, August 4, 1992
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
August 14, 1992
|
||
|
||
Letters to the Editor The Wall Street Journal: 200 Liberty Street New
|
||
York, NY 10281
|
||
|
||
In his Aug. 4 letter to the editor, FBI Director William Sessions
|
||
disagrees with my quoted opinion that the FBI's success in a
|
||
computer-wiretap case "'undercuts' the argument that new laws are
|
||
needed." His disagreement doesn't disturb me too much; it's the kind
|
||
of thing over which reasonable people can disagree.
|
||
|
||
|
||
What does disturb me, however, is Sessions's claim about the FBI's
|
||
initiative to require the phone companies (and other
|
||
communications-service providers, like CompuServe) to build
|
||
wiretapping capabilities into their systems. Says Sessions, apparently
|
||
without irony: "No new authority is needed or requested. All the
|
||
legislation would if enacted is ensure that the status quo is
|
||
maintained and the ability [of law enforcement to implement wiretaps]
|
||
is preserved." Earlier, Sessions says the proposed legislation "only
|
||
clarifies [the phone companies'] responsibility" to cooperate with
|
||
properly authorized law enforcement under the 1968 Wiretap Act.
|
||
|
||
|
||
What Sessions does not mention, however, is that his legislation
|
||
would, among other things, allow the government to impose upon those
|
||
phone companies and communications-service providers who do not build
|
||
wiretapping into their systems "a civil penalty of $10,000 per day for
|
||
each day in violation." By any standards other than those of Sessions
|
||
and the FBI, this constitutes "new authority." If this proposal "only
|
||
clarifies" providers' obligations under the 1968 Act, one shudders to
|
||
imagine what Sessions would call an "expansion" of law-enforcement
|
||
authority.
|
||
|
||
MIKE GODWIN Staff Counsel Electronic Frontier Foundation Cambridge,
|
||
Massachusetts
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Sat, 22 Aug 1992 09:32:08 EDT
|
||
From: Roger Clarke <clarcomm@FAC.ANU.EDU.AU>
|
||
Subject: File 2--N.S.W. (Australia) anti-Corruption Report Released
|
||
|
||
A long-running 'Independent Commission Against Corruption' enquiry in
|
||
N.S.W. has finally reported on an investigation into leakage of
|
||
personal data to private enquiry agents, and the leading Sydney daily
|
||
had over 2 large pages devoted to the matter. Here's the lead
|
||
article.
|
||
|
||
Roger Clarke
|
||
|
||
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
|
||
August 13 1992
|
||
|
||
HUGE TRADE IN PERSONAL FILES
|
||
By MALCOLM BROWN
|
||
|
||
Westpac, National Australia Bank, NRMA Insurance Ltd, Custom Credit
|
||
and Citicorp are some of the big names in a damning report by the ICAC
|
||
Assistant Commissioner, Mr Adrian Roden, QC, on the unauthorised
|
||
release of confidential government information.
|
||
|
||
Mr Roden found that there was a multi-million-dollar trade in such
|
||
information which involved public servants, including police, and
|
||
private inquiry agents.
|
||
|
||
"Information, from a variety of State and Commonwealth government
|
||
sources and the private sector has been freely and regularly sold and
|
||
exchanged for many years," he said. "NSW public officials have been
|
||
heavily involved."
|
||
|
||
Mr Roden heard 446 witnesses in public and private hearings over 168
|
||
days before compiling his 1,300-page report.
|
||
|
||
Even so, he said, it was necessary to be selective; thousands of
|
||
private and commercial inquiry agents had not examined.
|
||
|
||
Mr Roden found that more than 250 people had participated in the
|
||
illicit trade or had contributed to it.
|
||
|
||
Of these, 155 had engaged in corrupt conduct. A further 101 had
|
||
engaged in conduct which allowed, encouraged or caused the occurrence
|
||
of corrupt conduct.
|
||
|
||
Many are NSW and Commonwealth public servants who sold information
|
||
collected by the agencies where they work, including the Roads and
|
||
Traffic Authority (RTA), police force, Telecom and Sydney County
|
||
Council.
|
||
|
||
The Attorney-General, Mr Hannaford, announced that the Director of
|
||
Public Prosecutions had set up a task force to consider laying charges
|
||
against more than 100 people named in the report.
|
||
|
||
He said many of the public servants named could expect to lose their
|
||
jobs and that the heads of all the government departments involved had
|
||
been told to examine the report and take action against those
|
||
involved.
|
||
|
||
The Assistant Police Commissioner, Mr Col Cole, confirmed yesterday
|
||
that five police officers had been suspended and announced that three
|
||
task forces had been set up and computer security upgraded.
|
||
|
||
Mr Hannaford foreshadowed the introduction of privacy legislation to
|
||
make the unauthorised use of confidential information a criminal
|
||
offence.
|
||
|
||
The major banks said that they could not condone what their staff had
|
||
done but said the staff had believed that they were acting in the best
|
||
interests of their employers and the community.
|
||
|
||
None of the banks was planning to sack staff found to be corrupt
|
||
although several said the staff had been counselled or "educated".
|
||
|
||
Mr Roden said the trade involved banks, insurance companies and other
|
||
financial institutions which had provided "a ready market".
|
||
|
||
The link was provided by private and commercial inquiry agents. With
|
||
some banks, codes had been used to conceal the nature of the
|
||
transactions.
|
||
|
||
"As they have gone about their corrupt trade, commercial interest has
|
||
prevailed over commercial ethics, greed ha% prevailed over public
|
||
duty; laws and regulations designed to protect confidentiality have
|
||
been ignored," Mr Roden said.
|
||
|
||
"Frequently the client, generally an insurance company, bank or other
|
||
financial institution, ordered the information from the agent with a
|
||
full appreciation of how it was to be obtained.
|
||
|
||
"The evidence disclosed that in the collection and recovery
|
||
departments of a number of those institutions, it has long been
|
||
standard practice to use confidential government information . . . as
|
||
a means of locating debtors."
|
||
|
||
Some finance and insurance companies had directed agents to keep all
|
||
references to the trade off invoices and reports.
|
||
|
||
"Some even directed that the agents falsely state the source of the
|
||
information in their reports," Mr Roden said.
|
||
|
||
"Some solicitors in private practice have sought and purchased
|
||
confidential government information in circumstances in which they
|
||
must have known that it could not have been properly obtained."
|
||
|
||
Mr Kevin Rindfleish, an unlicensed private inquiry agent, had sold
|
||
Department of Motor Transport/Roads and Traffic Authority and social
|
||
security information "on a large scale". His principal client had been
|
||
the ANZ Bank.
|
||
|
||
A private investigator, Mr Terence John Hancock, and his company, All
|
||
Cities Investigations Pty Ltd, had sold confidential government
|
||
information to the National Australia Bank and Westpac on a regular
|
||
basis.
|
||
|
||
Two employees of the NAB had used prior contacts to provide the bank
|
||
with access to RTA, social security, Australia Post and immigration
|
||
information. Between them, the employees also provided silent numbers
|
||
and information on electricity consumers.
|
||
|
||
The Advance Bank had "over a period of years" obtained information
|
||
improperly released from the RTA, the Department of Social Security
|
||
and the Department of Immigration. The practice was "known and
|
||
approved at least to senior management level".
|
||
|
||
New Zealand Insurance and Manufacturers Mutual had bought confidential
|
||
government information from private investigators.
|
||
|
||
NRMA Insurance Ltd and the Government Insurance Office were "found to
|
||
have participated as freely in the illicit trade in confidential
|
||
government information as their more commercially oriented
|
||
competitors".
|
||
|
||
"Evidence relating to NRMA Insurance Ltd established not only that it
|
||
purchased confidential government information through private
|
||
investigators, but also that investigators were required to obtain
|
||
relevant government information by unauthorised means if they were to
|
||
retain the company's work."
|
||
|
||
Esanda Finance Corporation Ltd had bought confidential information
|
||
over at least 23 years. Custom Credit Corporation Ltd which had
|
||
engaged in the illicit trade over "many years", had maintained false
|
||
records to conceal how it obtained information.
|
||
|
||
Alston de Zilwa, former underwriter and operations manager of Citicorp
|
||
Ltd and later, Toyota Finance Australia Limited's credit operations
|
||
manager, had established for each of the two companies a system for
|
||
obtaining confidential information.
|
||
|
||
The companies would seek information directly from employees of the
|
||
DMA and RTA and pay a private inquiry agent, Mr Kevin Robinson, who
|
||
would "launder" it, then invoice the companies for the corresponding
|
||
sum.
|
||
|
||
Mr Roden said that hundreds of thousands of dollars had changed hands
|
||
in the trade uncovered. One agent had estimated that he had paid
|
||
$40,000 to $50,000 a year for Social Security information alone.
|
||
|
||
Another had said he received $100,000 over two years for government
|
||
information.
|
||
|
||
Yet another had, according to records, charged a bank $186,000 for
|
||
"inquiry services" over a period of 18 months.
|
||
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
||
|
||
Simon Davies and Graham Greenleaf know a great deal about these matters; I
|
||
know a bit too, so if there's valuable info in here to support your own
|
||
work, let one of us know and we'll track down the refs. If there's
|
||
interest, I could also get the rest of the articles scanned in and put them
|
||
on an archive.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, 24 Aug 1992 12:42:22 PDT
|
||
From: Brian Erwin <brian@ORA.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 3--Internet Guide (Nutshell Resource)
|
||
|
||
On September 13, O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. will publish the
|
||
most comprehensive guide to the Internet, THE WHOLE INTERNET USER'S
|
||
GUIDE & CATALOG. Written by Ed Krol, assistant director for LAN
|
||
Deployment at the University of Illinois, this 400-page book covers
|
||
the basic utilities used to access the network and then guides users
|
||
through the Internet's "databases of databases" to access the millions
|
||
of files and thousands of archives available.
|
||
|
||
To help users maneuver smoothly through the system, THE WHOLE
|
||
INTERNET USER'S GUIDE & CATALOG presents:
|
||
|
||
* The History of the Internet
|
||
* How the Internet Works
|
||
* What's Allowed on the Internet
|
||
* How to Remote Login, Use Electronic Mail, and Move A File
|
||
* How to Find Software or Someone
|
||
* How to Deal with Network Problems
|
||
|
||
An added bonus of Krol's work is a resource index that covers a
|
||
broad selection of several hundred important resources available on
|
||
the Internet, ranging from the King James Bible to archives for USENET
|
||
news. In addition, Krol uses commands that can be used on almost any
|
||
computer, be it a PC or an open system.
|
||
|
||
THE WHOLE INTERNET USER'S GUIDE & CATALOG
|
||
by Ed Krol
|
||
ISBN 1-56592-025-2
|
||
Publication Date: September 13, 1992
|
||
400 pages; indexed
|
||
$24.95
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Date: Mon, 24 Aug 92 16:19:09 EDT
|
||
From: Edward Vielmetti <emv@MSEN.COM>
|
||
Subject: File 4--What is Usenet? NOT.
|
||
|
||
I read the reviews of Zen, especially ch 4 the "what is usenet" bit.
|
||
_Zen_ has many good points but I suspect it will need to get better in
|
||
that section; the text there looks pretty old and stale to my eyes and
|
||
really hasn't been revised since the first "What is Usenet" postings
|
||
went out to the net oh lo those many years ago. Following is my
|
||
response to the "What is Usenet" information found in the "what is
|
||
Usenet" archive and reprinted in many books.
|
||
|
||
From-- emv@msen.com (Edward Vielmetti)
|
||
Subject-- What is Usenet? NOT.
|
||
References-- <spaf-whatis_692072008@cs.purdue.edu>
|
||
Organization-- MSEN, Inc. -- Ann Arbor, MI
|
||
|
||
Archive-name-- what-is-usenet/not
|
||
|
||
In article <spaf-whatis_692072008@cs.purdue.edu> spaf@cs.purdue.EDU (Gene
|
||
Spafford) writes:
|
||
>Archive-name: what-is-usenet/part1
|
||
>Last-change: 2 Dec 91 by chip@count.tct.com (Chip Salzenberg)
|
||
>
|
||
>The first thing to understand about Usenet is that it is widely
|
||
>misunderstood. Every day on Usenet, the "blind men and the elephant"
|
||
>phenomenon is evident, in spades. In my opinion, more flame wars
|
||
>arise because of a lack of understanding of the nature of Usenet than
|
||
>from any other source. And consider that such flame wars arise, of
|
||
>necessity, among people who are on Usenet. Imagine, then, how poorly
|
||
>understood Usenet must be by those outside!
|
||
|
||
Imagine, indeed, how poorly understood Usenet must be by those who
|
||
have the determined will to explain what it is by what it is not?
|
||
"Usenet is not a bicycle. Usenet is not a fish."
|
||
|
||
Any essay on the purported "nature of usenet" that doesn't get revised
|
||
every few months quickly becomes a quaint historical document, which
|
||
at best yields a prescriptivist grammar for how the net "should be"
|
||
and at worst tries to shape how the Usenet "really is". That's
|
||
especially true of essays on Usenet that complain about how little the
|
||
old hoary chestnuts get changed!
|
||
|
||
The first thing to understand about Usenet is that it is big. Really
|
||
big. Netnews (and netnews-like things) have percolated into many more
|
||
places than are even known about by people who track such things.
|
||
There is no grand unified list of everything that's out there, no way
|
||
to know beforehand who is going to read what you post, and no history
|
||
books to guide you that would let you know even a small piece of any
|
||
of the in jokes that pop up in most newsgroups. Distrust any grand
|
||
sweeping statements about "Usenet", because you can always find a
|
||
counterexample. (Distrust this message, too :-).
|
||
|
||
>Any essay on the nature of Usenet cannot ignore the erroneous
|
||
>impressions held by many Usenet users. Therefore, this article will
|
||
>treat falsehoods first. Keep reading for truth. (Beauty, alas, is
|
||
>not relevant to Usenet.)
|
||
|
||
Any essay on the nature of Usenet that doesn't change every so often
|
||
to reflect its ever changing nature is erroneous. Usenet is not a
|
||
matter of "truth", "beauty", "falsehood", "right", or "wrong", except
|
||
insofar as it is a means for people to talk about these and many
|
||
other things.
|
||
|
||
>WHAT USENET IS NOT
|
||
>------------------
|
||
|
||
> 1. Usenet is not an organization.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is organized. There are a number of people who contribute
|
||
to its continued organization -- people who post lists of things,
|
||
people who collect "frequently asked questions" postings, people
|
||
who give out or sell newsfeeds, people who keep archives of groups,
|
||
people who put those archives into WAIS or gopher servers. This
|
||
organization is accompanied by a certain amount of disorganization
|
||
-- news software that doesn't always work just right, discussions
|
||
that wander from place to place, people who don't follow the guidelines,
|
||
and parts of the net that resist easy classification. Order and
|
||
disorder are part of the same whole.
|
||
|
||
In the short run, the person or group who runs the system that you
|
||
read news from and the sites which that system exchanges news with all
|
||
control who gets a feed, which articles are propagated to what places
|
||
and how quickly, and who can post articles. In the long run, there
|
||
are a number of alternatives for Usenet access, including companies
|
||
which can sell you feeds for a fee, and user groups which provide
|
||
feeds for their members; while you are on your own right now as you
|
||
type this in, over the long haul there are many choices you have on
|
||
how to deal with the net.
|
||
|
||
> 2. Usenet is not a democracy.
|
||
|
||
Usenet has some very "democratic" sorts of traditions. Traffic is
|
||
ultimately generated by readers, and people who read news ultimately
|
||
control what will and will not be discussed on the net. While the
|
||
details of any individual person's news reading system may limit or
|
||
constrain what is easy or convenient for them to do right now, in the
|
||
long haul the decisions on what is or is not happening rests with the
|
||
people.
|
||
|
||
On the other hand, there have been (and always will be) people who
|
||
have been on the net longer than you or I have been, and who have a
|
||
strong sense of tradition and the way things are normally done. There
|
||
are certain things which are simply "not done". Any sort of decision
|
||
that involves counting the number of people yes or no on a particular
|
||
vote has to cope with the entrenched interests who aren't about to
|
||
change their habits, their posting software, or the formatting of
|
||
their headers just to satisfy a new idea.
|
||
|
||
> 3. Usenet is not fair.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is fair, cocktail party, town meeting, notes of a secret cabal,
|
||
chatter in the hallway at a conference, friday night fish fry,
|
||
post-coital gossip, conversations overhead on an airplane, and a bunch
|
||
of other things.
|
||
|
||
> 4. Usenet is not a right.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is a right, a left, a jab, and a sharp uppercut to the jaw.
|
||
The postman hits! You have new mail.
|
||
|
||
> 5. Usenet is not a public utility.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is carried in large part over circuits provided by public
|
||
utilities, including the public switched phone network and lines
|
||
leased from public carriers. In some countries the national
|
||
networking authority has some amount of monopoly power over the
|
||
provision of these services, and thus the flow of information is
|
||
controlled in some manner by the whims and desires (and pricing
|
||
structure) of the public utility.
|
||
|
||
Most Usenet sites are operated by organizations which are not public
|
||
utilities, not in the ordinary sense. You rarely get your newsfeed
|
||
from National Telecom, it's more likely to be National U. or Private
|
||
Networking Inc.
|
||
|
||
> 6. Usenet is not an academic network.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is a network with many parts to it. Some parts are academic,
|
||
some parts aren't. Usenet is clearly not a commercial network like
|
||
Sprintnet or Tymenet, and it's not an academic network like BITNET.
|
||
But parts of BITNET are parts of Usenet, though some of the traffic on
|
||
usenet violates the BITNET acceptable use guidelines, even though the
|
||
people who are actually on BITNET sites reading these groups don't
|
||
necessarily mind that they are violating the guidelines.
|
||
|
||
Whew. Usenet is a lot of networks, and none of them. You name
|
||
another network, and it's not Usenet.
|
||
|
||
> 7. Usenet is not an advertising medium.
|
||
|
||
A man walks into a crowded theater and shouts, "ANYBODY WANT TO BUY A
|
||
CAR?" The crowd stands up and shouts back, "WRONG THEATER!"
|
||
|
||
Ever since the first dinette set for sale in New Jersey was advertised
|
||
around the world, people have been using Usenet for personal and for
|
||
corporate gain. If you're careful about it and don't make people mad,
|
||
Usenet can be an effective means of letting the world know about
|
||
things which you find valuable. But take care...
|
||
|
||
- Marketing hype will be flamed immediately. If you need to post a
|
||
press release, edit it first.
|
||
- Speak nice of your competitors. If your product is better than
|
||
theirs, don't say theirs is "brain damaged", "broken", or "worthless".
|
||
After all someone else might have the same opinion of your product.
|
||
- Dance around the issue. Post relevant information (like price, availability
|
||
and features) but make sure you don't send everything out. If someone
|
||
wants the hard sell let them request it from you by e-mail.
|
||
- Don't be an idiot. If you sell toasters for a living, don't spout off
|
||
in net.breadcrumbs about an international conspiracy to poison pigeons
|
||
orchestrated by the secret Usenet Cabal; toaster-buyers will get word
|
||
of your reputation for idiocy and avoid your toasters even if they are
|
||
the best in the market.
|
||
- You can't avoid representing your company when you post under the
|
||
banner of the company's name. No matter how many disclaimers you
|
||
put on, no matter how laid back the audience, it still happens.
|
||
To maintain a separate net.identity, post from a different site.
|
||
|
||
> 8. Usenet is not the Internet.
|
||
|
||
It would be very difficult to sustain the level of traffic that's
|
||
flowing on Usenet today if it weren't for people sending news feeds
|
||
over dedicated circuits with TCP/IP on the Internet. That's not to
|
||
say that if a sudden disease wiped out all IBM RTs and RS6000s that
|
||
form the NSFnet backbone that some people wouldn't be inconvenienced
|
||
or cut off from the net entirely. (Based on the reliability of the
|
||
backbone, perhaps the "sudden disease" has already hit?)
|
||
|
||
There's a certain symbiosis between netnews and Internet connections;
|
||
the cost of maintaining a newsfeed with NNTP is so much less than
|
||
doing the same thing with dialup UUCP that sites which depend enough
|
||
on the information flowing through news are some of the most eager to
|
||
get on the Internet.
|
||
|
||
The Usenet is not the Internet. Certain governments have laws which
|
||
prevent other countries from getting onto the Internet, but that
|
||
doesn't stop netnews from flowing in and out. Chances are pretty good
|
||
that a site which has a usenet feed you can send mail to from the
|
||
Internet, but even that's not guaranteed in some odd cases (news feeds
|
||
sent on CD-ROM, for instance).
|
||
|
||
> 9. Usenet is not a UUCP network.
|
||
|
||
UUCP carried the first netnews traffic, and a considerable number of
|
||
sites get their newsfeed using UUCP. But it's also fed using NNTP,
|
||
pressed onto CD-ROMs, faxed to China, and printed out on paper to be
|
||
tacked up on bulletin boards and pasted on refrigerators.
|
||
|
||
>10. Usenet is not a United States network.
|
||
|
||
A recent analysis of the top 1000 Usenet sites showed about 66% US
|
||
sites, 15% unknown, 10% Germany, 7% Canada, 2-3% each the UK, Japan,
|
||
Sweden, and Australia, and the rest mostly scattered around Europe.
|
||
You can read netnews on all seven continents, including Antarctica.
|
||
|
||
The state of California is the center of the net, with about 15% of
|
||
the mapped top sites there. Other states and provinces with
|
||
widespread news connectivity include Massachusetts, Texas, Ontario,
|
||
Ohio, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Oregon.
|
||
|
||
If you're looking for a somewhat less US-centered view of the world,
|
||
try reading regional newsgroups from various different states or
|
||
groups from various far-away places (which depending on where you are
|
||
at could be Japanese, German, Canadian, or Australian). There are a
|
||
lot of people out there who are different from you.
|
||
|
||
>11. Usenet is not a UNIX network.
|
||
|
||
Well...ok, if you don't have a UNIX machine, you can read news. In
|
||
fact, there are substantial sets of newsgroups (bit.*) which are
|
||
transported and gatewayed primarily through IBM VM systems, and a set
|
||
of newsgroups (vmsnet.*) which has major traffic through DEC VMS
|
||
systems. Reasonable news relay software runs on Macs (uAccess), Amiga
|
||
(a C news port), MS-DOS (Waffle), and no doubt quite a few more. I'm
|
||
typing on a DOS machine right now.
|
||
|
||
There is a certain culture about the net that has grown up on Unix
|
||
machines, which occasionally runs into fierce clashes with the culture
|
||
that has grown up on IBM machines (LISTSERV), Commodore 64's (BIFF IS
|
||
A K00L D00D), and MS-DOS Fidonet systems. If you are not running on a
|
||
Unix machine or if you don't have one handy there are things about the
|
||
net which are going to be puzzling or maddening, much as if you are
|
||
reading a BITNET list and you don't have a CMS system handy.
|
||
|
||
>12. Usenet is not an ASCII network.
|
||
|
||
There are reasonably standard ways to type Japanese, Russian, Swedish,
|
||
Finnish, Icelandic, and Vietnamese that use the ASCII character set to
|
||
encode your national character set. The fundamental assumption of
|
||
most netnews software is that you're dealing with something that looks
|
||
a lot like US ASCII, but if you're willing to work within those bounds
|
||
and be clever it's quite possible to use ASCII to discuss things in
|
||
any language.
|
||
|
||
>13. Usenet is not software.
|
||
|
||
Usenet software has gotten much better over time to cope with the ever
|
||
increasing aggregate flow of netnews and (in some cases) the extreme
|
||
volume that newsgroups generate. If you were reading news now with
|
||
the same news software that was running 10 years ago, you'd never be
|
||
able to keep up. Your system would choke and die and spend all of its
|
||
time either processing incoming news or expiring old news. Without
|
||
software and constant improvements to same, Usenet would not be here.
|
||
|
||
There is no "standard" Usenet software, but there are standards for
|
||
what Usenet articles look like, and what sites are expected to do with
|
||
them. It's possible to write a fairly simple minded news system
|
||
directly from the standards documents and be reasonably sure that it
|
||
will work with other systems, though thorough testing is necessary if
|
||
it's going to be used in the real world.
|
||
|
||
>WHAT USENET IS
|
||
>--------------
|
||
|
||
"Usenet is like Tetris for people who still remember
|
||
how to read." J.Heller
|
||
|
||
Usenet is mostly about people. There are people who are "on the
|
||
net", who read rec.humor.funny every so often, who know the same jokes
|
||
you do, who tell you stories about funny or stupid things they've
|
||
seen. Usenet is the set of people who know what Usenet is.
|
||
|
||
Usenet is a bunch of bits, lots of bits, millions of bits each day
|
||
full of nonsense, argument, reasonable technical discussion, scholarly
|
||
analysis, and naughty pictures.
|
||
|
||
Usenet (or netnews) is about newsgroups (or groups). Not bboards, not
|
||
LISTSERV, not mailing lists, they're groups. If someone calls them
|
||
something else they're not looking at things from a Usenet
|
||
perspective. That's not to say that they're "incorrect" -- who is to
|
||
say what is the right way of viewing the world? -- just that it's not
|
||
the Net Way. In particular, if they read Usenet news all mixed in
|
||
with their important every day mail (like reminders of who to go to
|
||
coffee with on Monday) they're not seeing netnews the way most people
|
||
see netnews. Some newsgroups are also (or "really") available on GENIE
|
||
(rec.humor.funny), BITNET LISTSERV groups (bit.listserv.pacs-l), or
|
||
linked with Fidonet (misc.handicap). So be prepared for some violent
|
||
culture clashes if someone refers to you favorite net.hangout as a
|
||
"board".
|
||
|
||
Newsgroups have names. These names are both very arbitrary and very
|
||
meaningful. People will fight for months or years about what to name
|
||
a newsgroup. If a newsgroup doesn't have a name (even a dumb one like
|
||
misc.misc) it's not a newsgroup. In particular newsgroup names have
|
||
dots in them, and people abbreviate them by taking the first letters
|
||
of the names (so alt.folklore.urban is afu, and soc.culture.china is
|
||
scc).
|
||
|
||
>DIVERSITY
|
||
>---------
|
||
|
||
There is nothing vague about Usenet. (Vague, vague, it's filling up
|
||
thousands of dollars worth of disk drives and you want to call it
|
||
vague? Sheesh!) It may be hard to pin down what is and isn't part of
|
||
usenet at the fringes, but netnews has tended to grow amoeba-like to
|
||
encompass more or less anything in its path, so you can be pretty sure
|
||
that if it isn't Usenet now it will be once it's been in contact with
|
||
Usenet for long enough.
|
||
|
||
There are a lot of systems that are part of Usenet. Chances are that
|
||
you don't have any clue where all your articles will end up going or
|
||
what news reading software will be used to look at them. Any message
|
||
of any appreciable size or with any substantial personal opinion in it
|
||
is probably in violation of some network use policy or local ordinance
|
||
in some state or municipality.
|
||
|
||
>CONTROL
|
||
>-------
|
||
1. Keep the processors up and running, and make sure there's
|
||
enough disk space for netnews.
|
||
2. Keep the network up and running so that the
|
||
newsfeed comes in.
|
||
3. Install new newsreaders, get more feeds of more
|
||
groups, test out the latest filtering code.
|
||
4. Plan for getting more disks so you can keep more
|
||
news and index it all.
|
||
5. Read news (if there's time).
|
||
|
||
Some people are control freaks. They want to present their opinion
|
||
of how things are, who runs what, what is OK and not OK to do,
|
||
which things are "good" and which are "bad". You will run across
|
||
them every so often. They might even cancel your article that you
|
||
spend hours composing if it suits their whims. They serve a useful
|
||
purpose; there's a lot of chaos inherent in a largely self-governing
|
||
system, and people with a strong sense of purpose and order can
|
||
make things a lot easier. Just don't believe everything they say.
|
||
In particular, don't believe them when they say "don't believe
|
||
everything they say", because if they post the same answers month
|
||
after month some other people are bound to believe them.
|
||
|
||
If you run a news system you can be a petty tyrant. You can decide
|
||
what groups to carry, who to kick off your system, how to expire old
|
||
news so that you keep 60 days worth of misc.petunias but expire
|
||
rec.pets.fish almost immediately. In the long run you will probably
|
||
be happiest if you make these decisions relatively even-handedly since
|
||
that's the posture least likely to get people to notice that you
|
||
actually do have control.
|
||
|
||
Your right to exercise control over netnews usually ends at your
|
||
neighbor's spool directory. Pleading, cajoling, appealing to good
|
||
nature, or paying your news feed will generally yield a better
|
||
response than flames on the net.
|
||
|
||
|
||
>PERIODIC POSTINGS
|
||
>-----------------
|
||
|
||
"I've already explained this once, but repetition is
|
||
the very soul of the net." (from alt.config)
|
||
|
||
One of the ways to exert control over the workings of the net is to
|
||
take the time to put together a relatively accurate set of answers to
|
||
some frequently asked questions and post it every month. If you do
|
||
this right, the article will be stored for months on sites around the
|
||
world, and you'll be able to tell people "idiot, don't ask this
|
||
question until you've read the FAQ, especially answer #42".
|
||
|
||
The periodic postings include several lists of newsgroups, along with
|
||
comments as to what the contents of the groups are supposed to be.
|
||
Anyone who has the time and energy can put together a list like this,
|
||
and if they post it for several months running they will get some
|
||
measure of net.recognition for themselves as being the "official"
|
||
keeper of the "official" list. But don't delude yourself into
|
||
thinking that anything on the net is official in any real way; the
|
||
lists serve to perpetuate common myths about who's talking about what
|
||
where, but that's no guarantee that things will actually work out that
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
There is an elaborate ritual associated with preparing a periodic posting
|
||
and having it appear in the newsgroup "news.answers". This ritual involves
|
||
intimate familiarity with the arcana of netnews headerology, proper
|
||
ordering of newsgroup names and accurate spelling of words that have both
|
||
British and American spellings.
|
||
|
||
PROPAGATION
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the olden days, when the net was young, and you could still read it
|
||
at 300 baud on a dumb terminal without a news reader and get work done
|
||
during the rest of the day...
|
||
|
||
In the olden days, news was sent out over UUCP and long-distance
|
||
dialup lines. A few people managed to sneak the horrendous phone
|
||
bills past their management, and they held a lot of power over which
|
||
newsgroups could be carried where. Those people called themselves
|
||
"the backbone cabal".
|
||
|
||
Things have changed. Nowadays, internet sites have plenty of
|
||
bandwidth, and it's generally disk space that's the limiting factor,
|
||
and the patience of news administrators to deal with odd newsgroups
|
||
appearing. New groups appearing and disappearing in the mainstream
|
||
news hierarchies are fairly well controlled, and newsgroup votes tend
|
||
to be accepted by most system managers. Netnews propagation has gotten
|
||
to the point that systems running the newest news software, INN, will
|
||
have articles sent out to remote sites all over the world within seconds
|
||
of them being posted.
|
||
|
||
There are many systems around the US which now sell a reliable
|
||
newsfeed for a few bucks a month. These folks will generally gladly
|
||
get you any group you want to read (to the best of their ability)
|
||
because, after all, you're paying for it.
|
||
|
||
NEWSGROUP CREATION
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
"If there are enough people who want to talk about
|
||
Joey and the Shralpers coming to you from East
|
||
Podunk, Ohio, and they vote and it passes, well,
|
||
dammit, they get a newsgroup." jamie@digex.com
|
||
|
||
It takes about two months, playing by the rules, to create a new
|
||
newsgroup. Pick a name, write a charter, circulate it for opinions,
|
||
and if after a month you don't have a raging flame-war in news.groups
|
||
call the vote. A month after you call the vote plow through your mail
|
||
box and count the results, if it meets the standards you're in. This
|
||
is all explained with a substantially greater amount of wind in a
|
||
document reverently called The Guidelines.
|
||
|
||
In order for your newsgroup to be propagated widely, it must show
|
||
promise. The name has to be good and consistent with other newsgroup
|
||
names; the charter should provide enough substance that people will
|
||
want to talk about those topics; and you have to figure out a way to
|
||
make it through a month of sniping by the news.groupies before you
|
||
call the question.
|
||
|
||
Chances are, some one is already talking about some of the stuff
|
||
you're interested in in one of the 2000-odd newsgroups and equally
|
||
many mailing lists there are out on the net. The purpose of all this
|
||
vote-gathering is to get the word out to them that there's some new
|
||
niche appearing to discuss things and if they want to get involved
|
||
here's the way to do it. If your proposed niche collides with someone
|
||
else's happy mail list or if it runs up too close to a hot newsgroup
|
||
argument be prepared for an unhappy vote-counting time.
|
||
|
||
IF YOU ARE UNHAPPY...
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
Take a walk in the park, go rent a good movie, take a nice long bath
|
||
by candlelight, or call up a relative you haven't talked to for a long
|
||
time. Spend some time away from the net. You deserve it.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Edward Vielmetti, vice president for research, MSEN Inc. emv@msen.com
|
||
MSEN, Inc. 628 Brooks Ann Arbor MI 48103 +1 313 998 4562
|
||
"Gigabits are not needed where rice is lacking!" Bob Sutterfield
|
||
|
||
------------------------------
|
||
|
||
End of Computer Underground Digest #4.38
|
||
************************************
|
||
|
||
|
||
|