912 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
912 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
Computer underground Digest Thu Jan 06 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 03
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe (BEST WISHES, BK)
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Copy Rarifier: Ayn Stein
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CONTENTS, #6.03 (Jan 06 1994)
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File 1--Article from local paper on Brendan's Accident
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File 2--Brendan Kehoe hospitalization update
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File 3-- Re: Brendan Kehoe Seriously Hurt in Car Accident
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File 4--The Internet Explosion (Network News Roundup)
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File 5--BBS Sysops who rape handicapped people
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File 6--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #3
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File 7--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #2
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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available at no cost electronically from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The
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editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
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or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
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60115.
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
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LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
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libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
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On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
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on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210; and on: Rune Stone BBS (IIRG
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WHQ) (203) 832-8441 NUP:Conspiracy; RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020
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CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from 1:11/70; unlisted
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nodes and points welcome.
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EUROPE: from the ComNet in LUXEMBOURG BBS (++352) 466893;
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In ITALY: Bits against the Empire BBS: +39-461-980493
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ANONYMOUS FTP SITES:
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AUSTRALIA: ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2) in /pub/text/CuD.
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EUROPE: ftp.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud. (Finland)
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UNITED STATES:
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aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud
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etext.archive.umich.edu (141.211.164.18) in /pub/CuD/cud
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ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/CuD
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halcyon.com( 202.135.191.2) in mirror2/cud
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud (United Kingdom)
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KOREA: ftp: cair.kaist.ac.kr in /doc/eff/cud
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
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they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
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non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
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specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
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relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
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preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
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unless absolutely necessary.
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DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
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the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
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responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
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violate copyright protections.
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 6 Jan 94 0:47:17 EST
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From: Bob Kupiec <kupiec@JVNC.NET>
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Subject: File 1--Article from local paper on Brendan's Accident
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: In a previous CuD, a typo named the town at
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"Newton," not "Newtown." The Newtown police gave us the spelling of
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"Rightstown" instead of "Wrightstown." The following article
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corrects the errors)).
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I've included an article, below, that contains mostly info that is
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already known, but I just thought you'd might like to see it anyway.
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Bob
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==============================================
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Here is an article from today's (1/5/94) Bucks County Courier Times:
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"California man hospitalized after crash
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Upper Makefield, PA - A California man remained hospitalized yesterday
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for injuries sustained in a two-car crash at Eagle and Wrightstown
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roads.
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Brendan, Kehoe, 23, of Palo Alto, Calif., was in fair condition
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yesterday in the University of Pennsylvania Hospital, where he was
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flown by MedEvac helicopter Friday.
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A passenger, Sven Heinicke, 24, of Eagle Road in the township, was
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treated at Saint Mary Hospital in Middletown and released Saturday.
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The driver of the other vehicle, Cory Stanton, 32 of Lawrenceville,
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N.J., also was treated at Saint Mary Hospital and released.
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Police said Kehoe, who was headed south on Eagle Road, will be cited
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for failing to observe a stop sign."
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------------------------------
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Date: 5 Jan 1994 16:59:25 -0500
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From: mech@eff.org (Stanton McCandlish)
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Subject: File 2--Brendan Kehoe hospitalization update
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: Although posted on 5 Jan (Weds), the following is
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the latest update (as of Thurs, 17:50) from cygnus. Updates can be
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obtained with the finger command:
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finger brendan-news@cygnus.com)
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Latest update! Good news for once, too.
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PS: in case of net.difficulty getting to the finger address below, try
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finger brendan@eff.org, which should have the same info.
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-S.McC <mech@eff.org
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Forwarded message:
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From--Dan Brown <brown@eff.org
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Forwarded message:
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From--"Pat McGregor" <pat@cygnus.com
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(brendan-news@cygnus.com)
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Date--Wed, 05 Jan 1994 13:35:02 -0800
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updated 5 January 1994 1:00pm PST
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Brendan Kehoe, author of ZEN AND THE ART OF THE INTERNET, and a Cygnus
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Support engineer, was critically injured in an automobile accident in
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Pennsylvania on Friday, 31 December, 1993. The full extent of his
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injuries cannot be assessed for another two weeks or so, according to
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his doctors. Brendan was moved out of the ICU Monday, and is
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improving rapidly.
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Jeff Osier, Brendan's housemate and a co-worker, who is with the
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family said:
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We went over to the hospital late this morning, around lunchtime, and
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found Brendan sitting up, feeding himself solid food. This is a HUGE
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step even from yesterday, when the nurse was feeding him jell-o for
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the first time. He recognized me and remembered that I was there even
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when he looked away for a moment.. another huge step for someone whose
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attention span was about 2 seconds yesterday morning. He's been
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talking occasinally as well; last night he said my name when he saw
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me, and today said "hey, dude". His mom leaned down to kiss him ad
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said "I love you," and he said "I love you, too," and kissed her back.
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This is something of a miracle.. many thanks to those of you who are
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praying! Keep it up, it works.
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We can only hope that most of his incredible intellect returns to him
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so that he can continue to share it with all of us. I want to say
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thanks to all of you for your help and support; to quote Brendan (from
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Zen), I'm proud to call you my friends. His family is very, very
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grateful as well.
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Cards and other items may be sent to him at:
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Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
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Founders' Building, Room 579
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3400 Spruce St.
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Philadelphia, PA 19104
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The CuD folks are collating email messages for Brendan: instructions
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are: We urge readers to send him a card. We will be collecting the
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notes that come in wishing him well via e-mail, and send them to him
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in about two weeks. So, if you want to send him an E-note, send it to
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us (tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu) with the subject header: TO BRENDAN
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A fund to help with the expected medical expenses is being
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established; watch this space for information on how to contribute.
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++++++++++++++++++++++++
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(MODERATOR COMMENT: The Cu Digest editors are encouraging netfolk to
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send electronic messages to him that include a joke, funny story, or a
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"get-well" recipe. The editors will accecpt e-mail contributions
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until about January 19. Then, we'll print the responses on rag-bond
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paper, bind them, and send them to him as a "net anthology."
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Send notes to: tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu with the subject header:
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TO BRENDAN
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Jim Thomas / Gordon Meyer CuD Editors
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------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 6 Jan 94 12:08:55 EST
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From: Carl Moore <cmoore@BRL.MIL>
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Subject: File 3-- Re: Brendan Kehoe Seriously Hurt in Car Accident
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Some of you may remember reading that Jan Berry (singer, and the
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"Jan" of Jan and Dean) was seriously injured, with brain damage,
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in a 1966 automobile accident not far from "Dead Man's Curve".
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He had go through long therapy, and I have personally seen him
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twice in concert with Dean in the last 13 years.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 4 Jan 1994 19:20:34 -0600 (CST)
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From: Czar Donic <czar@BIGCAT.MISSOURI.EDU>
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Subject: File 4--The Internet Explosion (Network News Roundup)
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From--VAX1::MCDONALD "Gary Lee McDonald" 4-JAN-1994 14:26:51.36
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To--MCDONALD
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CC--MCDONALD
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Subj-- 1993 Network news roundup
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The Uniform Resource Locator for this document is:
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http://nearnet.gnn.com/gnn/news/current/Net_roundup.html
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3 January 1994
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Internet Explosion
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The explosive growth of the Internet, both in services and
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subscribers, was probably the single biggest Net story of 1993.
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Growing pains included traffic jams, commercialism on the Net,
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changing government and business roles, and a culture clash
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between the Net anarchists and pragmatists. The Internet
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widened its scope to include government documents such the
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Clinton Health Care Plan, National Public Radio, and an
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exclusive release of a new Stephen King book.
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And now, the stories...
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JUNK MAIL, ONLINE STYLE. A Wall Street Journal article
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sideswiped advertising on the Internet in an article headlined
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"Internet to Get Hit with Ad Clutter." Tim O'Reilly of the
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Global Network Navigator, a new online publication funded by
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ad revenue, responded, "The point is that with GNN, what
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information a customer retrieves is entirely under his or her
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control. With hypertext technology, you follow the links you're
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interested in, and only the articles you want to read are
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actually transferred over the Net from the server to your
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WWW client. People on the Net don't want unsolicited
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advertising, but they do want to be able to retrieve information
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that they are looking for -- and that includes commercial
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information as well as free information."
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YOU CAN'T SAY THAT ON THE INTERNET. Censorship
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has hit the Internet, where battles over free speech are being
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waged on several fronts. Colleges in Canada have banned all
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electronic discussions of sex, and controversy is raging stateside
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over a program that automatically wipes out anonymous
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messages and about the suspension of a California professor
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who ran a BBS that carried messages harassing a female
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student. Congress has even gone so far as to order a study of
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whether bulletin boards, on-line services and cable TV are
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being used to encourage "crimes of hate." (Wall Street Journal
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5/24/93 B1)
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NSF RELEASES PLAN FOR INTERNET. The National
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Science Foundation released its long-awaited plan for Internet
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restructuring. Under the proposal, the government will phase
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out regional network subsidies and direct those funds to colleges
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to pay network fees. The backbone of the system, which will
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be three times faster than what exists today, will be privately
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managed under federal contract. Following the government's
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announcement of plans to change the way it subsidizes Internet
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users, eight regional networks formed a for-profit company, the
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Corporation for Regional and Enterprise Networking (CoREN).
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(Chronicle of Higher Education 5/26/93, 6/9/93)
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NPR ON THE INTERNET. NPR's "Talk of the Nation" show
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debuted over the Internet May 21. Some 400 computer
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listeners queued up to talk back to host Ira Flatow, and
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hundreds of others sent e-mail. Carl Malamud, Flatow's guest
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and founder of Internet Multicasting Corp., also distributes his
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own show, "Geek of the Week", the independently produced
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"TechNation", National Press Club luncheon speeches, and
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"Internet Town Hall." (Current 5/31/93 p.1)
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RURAL DATAFICATION. CICNet Inc., provider of Internet
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access and services in the Upper Midwest, received a $1.3
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million National Science Foundation (NSF) grant award that
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they will use to launch the "CICNet Rural Datafication
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Project." This ambitious, non-profit undertaking will bring the
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Internet to rural areas and under-served communities where
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expertise and money are often in short supply, but enthusiasm
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and interest are not. (GNN News 12/20)
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GLOBAL NETWORK NAVIGATOR. The Global Network
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Navigator (GNN) is a free Internet-based information center
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that is initially available as a quarterly offered by O'Reilly
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Publishing. GNN consists of a regular news service, an online
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magazine, The Whole Internet Interactive Catalog, and a global
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marketplace containing information about products and services.
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To subscribe send mail to: info@gnn.com.
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INTERNET GETS SCARY. A short story from a new
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collection by horror writer Stephen King is available through
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the Internet, the first time a commercial book publisher has
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published an electronic first serial. It appears through the
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Online Bookstore (508-546-7346); users can search, browse, or
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read the story on their screens or download a copy for a fee
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of $5/hour or $5/download. (Publishers Weekly, 9/27, p. 12)
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The Internet Index: Facts and Figures for '93
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Compiled by Win Treese (treese@crl.dec.com)
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Annual rate of growth for Gopher traffic: 997%
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Annual rate of growth for World-Wide Web traffic: 341,634%
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Average time between new networks connecting to the Internet:
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10 minutes
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Number of newspaper and magazine articles about the Internet
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during the first nine months of 1993: over 2300
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Number of on-line coffeehouses in San Francisco: 18. Cost
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for four minutes of Internet time at those coffeehouses: $0.25
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Date of first known Internet mail message sent by a head of
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state: 2 March 1993 (Sent by Bill Clinton, President of the
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United States)
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Date on which first Stephen King short story published via the
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Internet before print publication: 19 Sept 1993
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Number of mail messages carried by IBM's Internet gateways in
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January, 1993: about 340,000
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Number of mail messages carried by Digital's Internet gateways
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in June, 1993: over 700,000
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Advertised network numbers in July, 1993: 13,293; Advertised
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network numbers in July, 1992: 5,739
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Date after which more than half the registered networks were
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commercial: August, 1991
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Number of Internet hosts in Norway, per 1000 population: 5
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Number of Internet hosts in United States, per 1000 population:
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4
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Number of Internet hosts in July, 1993: 1,776,000
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Round-trip time from Digital CRL to mcmvax.mcmurdo.gov in
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McMurdo, Antartica: 640 milliseconds
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Number of hops: 18
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Number of USENET articles posted on a typical day in
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February, 1993: 35,000
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Number of megabytes posted: 44
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Number of users posting: 80,000
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Number of sites represented: 25,000
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Number of Silicon Valley real estate agencies advertising with
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Internet mail addresses: 1
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Terabytes carried by the NSFnet backbone in February, 1993: 5
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Number of countries reachable by electronic mail: 137 (approx.)
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Number of countries not reachable by electronic mail: 99
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(approx.)
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Number of countries on the Internet: 60
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Amount of time it takes for Supreme Court decisions to
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become available on the Internet: less than one day.
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Date of first National Public Radio program broadcast
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simultaneously on the Internet: 21 May 1993
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Percent of Boardwatch Top 100 BBS systems with Internet
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Connectivity: 21
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Number of people on the Internet who know you're a dog: 0
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Keywords: Internet, roundup
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to 1993 News Roundup.
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 5 Jan 1994 00:01:16 -0600
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From: TELECOM Moderator <telecom@DELTA.EECS.NWU.EDU>
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Subject: File 5--BBS Sysops who rape handicapped people
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So after a hiatus of several months of not reading CuD, I get back on
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the mailing list and find little gems like this one:
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> The UPI wire service reported that Medford, Massechusetts resident
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> Alden L. Baker Jr. was indicted Wednesday for distributing child
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> pornography from his computer bulletin board, "Boston's Eagle's Nest."
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...
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> US Attorney Donald K. Stern said, "The use of computerized 'bulletin
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> board' systems which distribute pornographic images to members
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> throughout the country are particularly deserving of our vigorous
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> prosecution."
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Please note the selective editing by someone here ... AUSA Stern's
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comment was " ... which distribute pornographic images of children
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^^^^^^^^^^^
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throughout the country ... "
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Who left out the 'of children' part?
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Then this comment followed from Bob Chatelle:
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> From--kip@world.std.com (Bob B Chatelle)
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> Subject--Feds Bust Boston-area Gay BBS
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> Date--Thu, 16 Dec 1993 22:17:56 GMT
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> According to today's Boston Herald, Federal prosecutors have arrested
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> the sysop of a local gay BBS called the Boston Eagle's Nest and
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> charged him with distributing child pornography. The sysop is facing
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> ten years in prison and a $100,000 fine.
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> Busting gay boards is SOP for the Feds here in the Boston area.
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Since when is child pornography and/or child molestation automatically
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associated with being 'gay' or having a 'gay BBS' ?
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That's not to say one can't be gay and a pedophile at the same time;
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there are such people but the two don't automatically go together and
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I don't think the federal government is trying to say that they do.
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Either Mr. Baker did what he is accused of or he did not; a judge and/
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or jury -- his option -- will make the decision. Judging however from
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his previous conviction for raping the handicapped person, it seems
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reasonable to assume that perhaps there is some truth to the latest
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allegations against him.
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> During the summer of 1992, they busted a very fine board called Doug's
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> Den, which I very much miss. Doug's Den was busted on the usual bogus
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> kiddie-porn charges. (I downloaded enough porn from Doug's Den to
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> know that the charges were false.)
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> I'm sure that the charges against the Eagle's Nest are just as phony
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> as the charges against Doug's Den.
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Why? What makes you so sure? Are you aware of the allegations of the
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police that when they searched Baker's home they found explicit examples
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of child pornography? Surely you know that possession of child porn
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is in and of itself a violation of the law. The Supreme Court has
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ruled that child pornography has no First Amendment protections.
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> The intent is to close down the boards and discourage other boards
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> from operating -- or at least from exercising their First Amendment
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> rights.
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Child pornography has no First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court
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has so stated.
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> I'm curious about how many gay boards all over the country Janet Reno
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> and her stormtroopers are shutting down. Any info will be greatly
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> appreciated.
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I'm curious about how so many gay people all over the USA were tricked
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into voting for the worthless and decietful Bill Clinton to begin with.
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Remember how when I put up messages before his election saying people
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should not vote for him I (and lots of other folks) were accused of
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being 'homophobic' ... god, I *loved* that word, it was such a gas ...
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too bad I have not heard it much lately ... but aside from the fact
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that Clinton is the worst disaster ever in the White House and by
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extension that entire hot team of his/hers is not much good either,
|
|
I don't think he or Janet Reno is so stupid they assume 'gay' = 'pedophile'.
|
|
You can leave that equation to Pat Robertson and the far right.
|
|
|
|
Then 'anonymous by request' (isn't it great to see a person who has
|
|
the courage to sign his name to his beliefs?) passes along a message
|
|
by someone who posted in comp.org.eff.talk 'where a discussion is
|
|
in progress' ...
|
|
|
|
(there followed then a report from the Boston Globe).
|
|
|
|
Of particular interest from that report:
|
|
|
|
> Alden J. Baker Jr, 44, who is serving a 6- 10 year term in Gardner
|
|
> State prison for raping his limousine driver, now faces a 187-count
|
|
> indictment for sexual exploitation of minors.
|
|
|
|
> [ 10 paragraphs of stuff about how BBS's are trucking porno on the
|
|
> information highway, and advertising and selling memberships,
|
|
> deleted]
|
|
|
|
Admittedly probably a lot of nonsense. Probably some truth mixed with
|
|
a lot of false stuff.
|
|
|
|
> Medford police began to investigate Baker about three years ago,
|
|
> when a 31-year-old, emotionally handicapped man walked into the police
|
|
> station and charged that Baker had raped him.
|
|
|
|
I imagine it took a lot of courage for this fellow to come forward and
|
|
say what had happened.
|
|
|
|
Well, I know the fact that a discussion is going on in comp.org.eff.talk
|
|
is not indicative of what position EFF may or may not take or whether or
|
|
not they will choose to provide counsel to the defendant, but I certainly
|
|
hope they wash their hands of this case and do not get involved. I've
|
|
a feeling though they will get right in the middle of it and try to make
|
|
it into a free speech/First Amendment thing. That's the way they are;
|
|
they are so much like the ACLU it is pathetic. Two peas in a pod, and
|
|
all that.
|
|
|
|
PAT
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Tue, 7 Dec 1993 07:45:20 -0700 (MST)
|
|
From: Tokind <tokind@ACCA.NMSU.EDU>
|
|
Subject: File 6--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #3
|
|
|
|
((MODERATORS' COMMENT: This general topic has degenerated into
|
|
frivolousness on a few other newsgroups. There are, however,
|
|
some serious issues in the net/anarchy topic. CuD will run
|
|
serious responses. Flames, alt.wierdness, and ravings will
|
|
be ignored)).
|
|
|
|
A response to L. Detweiler's "Anarchy Gone Awry"
|
|
|
|
It is clear that there are a lot of variations in the definition of the
|
|
word "Anarchy" on the net. I like the definition that you quoted from
|
|
author Bruce Sterling. It is exactly this undefined and unregimented
|
|
quality that makes the net such a productive environment for the exchange
|
|
of ideas. These same qualities are important for the practical development
|
|
of such ideas, and the net has unparalleled value as a tool for education
|
|
and reference.
|
|
|
|
> In my view, to the contrary the Internet is largely
|
|
> held together with the glue of social cohesion and human
|
|
> civility, and ingredients that are destructive to that
|
|
> order are likewise toxic to Cyberspace, and that,
|
|
> conversely, virtually all of the excruciating poison in
|
|
> the bloodstream today can be traced to violations and
|
|
> perversions of that trust.
|
|
|
|
The definition of Anarchy that I subscribe to is very well defined by the
|
|
first part of your sentence. People are basically good, and all they need
|
|
to remain good is a seat in a "community" of some sort. Communities that
|
|
do not require basic standards of courtesy and respect do not last very
|
|
long; they fold in on themselves as members destroy relationships and head
|
|
off in other directions. Likewise, communities that are too strictly
|
|
regimented drive off members who find the costs to their individuality and
|
|
self-esteem too high to tolerate.
|
|
|
|
We have all participated in newsgroups or mailing lists that took an ugly
|
|
turn. It can be very disappointing when this happens, but if you stick
|
|
around, things usually return to center--or the facility goes away. You
|
|
can even locate sympathetic former members who will help console you in
|
|
your disappointment.
|
|
|
|
Likewise, each node on the Internet is a community. Each has certain
|
|
standards of behavior and those standards are further informed by the
|
|
relationship between the node and it's carrier. All of these
|
|
relationships are formal at a "local" level, but are quite informal in a
|
|
hierarchical sense. This is part of a definition of Anarchy that is not
|
|
generally accepted in this country; I submit that the anarchy I am
|
|
promoting is defined by an absence of formal, imposed, hierarchy.
|
|
|
|
> ...the Internet has been over-promoted as `anarchic' by
|
|
> certain subversive, quasi-criminal segments that have
|
|
> found a tenacious hold there, namely extremist
|
|
> libertarians and `Cryptoanarchists'.
|
|
|
|
My interests are not criminal. Nor are they extremist. Yes, there are
|
|
"antisocial" elements here, as there are anywhere else. The question of
|
|
how we deal with criminal or antisocial acts, as individuals and as
|
|
communities, is a very important one. As the communities of the Internet
|
|
are working through these issues there are a number of other concerns,
|
|
such as:
|
|
o how can a 'network' guard against takeover
|
|
by an overzealous government or criminal
|
|
organization,
|
|
o how can we insure an emergency communications
|
|
capability in the case of a political or
|
|
natural crisis,
|
|
o how can resources best be applied to education,
|
|
public or otherwise.
|
|
|
|
Once upon a time the communications systems that we now refer to as "The
|
|
Media" were a public system. The FCC defines the airwaves as a public
|
|
trust, granted by license from the people, in exchange for a promise to
|
|
uphold certain standards of wholesomeness and to practice generally in the
|
|
"public interest". Mr. Detweiler, when I monitor my television and radio,
|
|
I do not see what I consider a reasonable rendition of "the public trust"
|
|
being exercised. With the possible exception of NPR, PBS and CSPAN, the
|
|
communications being carried out on these systems are very narrowly
|
|
limited to commercial objectives. It is obvious without much reflection
|
|
that the result of this narrowly defined regulation is bland programming,
|
|
the suppression of challenging ideas, and the loss of a diversity of
|
|
representation. The whole system is designed around a "comfort factor".
|
|
They hesitate to introduce any material that might be offensive to viewers
|
|
in general.
|
|
|
|
In the anarchy of the net I see a great potential for a new media that is
|
|
truly democratic, truly interactive, and truly productive. Where each
|
|
member is a "participant" rather than a mere "viewer".
|
|
|
|
> While some of us have glimpsed various hideous
|
|
> corners of Cyberspatial Hell, those who subscribe
|
|
> to the Liberating Religion of Anarchy are in
|
|
> their Paradise on the Internet As We Know It.
|
|
> I call their Utopia a Ticking Time Bomb and a
|
|
> Recipe for an Apocalypse.
|
|
> I have come to these (admittedly melodramatic)
|
|
> conclusions after ~10 months and ~3500 messages
|
|
> of generally unpleasant and at times
|
|
> excruciatingly troubling and painful reading
|
|
> and participation on the Cypherpunks list and
|
|
> many personal communications with the Cypherpunk
|
|
> leaders...
|
|
|
|
I applaud your concern and your interest in learning about what is going
|
|
on in those "hideous corners". But I think that you should ask, in all
|
|
honesty, if your explorations would have been possible on a centrally
|
|
controlled "Internet". Social activism of the kind that you are practicing
|
|
does not take place in an environment where a central authority--be it an
|
|
agency, board, commission, president--whatever, regulates the activities
|
|
and even the "exposure" of members.
|
|
|
|
I like your idea for a Ratings server. But I probably like the idea for
|
|
entirely different reasons than you do. I see this as a very effective
|
|
tool for individuals and communities to fine-tune access to their
|
|
interests. A teacher could use this mechanism to locate specific materials
|
|
for teaching. A student could use it to track down research materials. A
|
|
service provider could monitor the Ratings server for references that
|
|
would be of interest to clients. A sysop could check for references to a
|
|
service provided on his or her system in response to complaints from the
|
|
community or in response to a request for a special service. Likewise,
|
|
agencies or individuals who are investigating potential criminal activity
|
|
could use the server to gather information.
|
|
|
|
> The fantastic possibilities of this system are
|
|
> evident upon some reflection and consideration.
|
|
> We could establish arbitrary new groups that have
|
|
> *formal* requirements that are matched by Ratings
|
|
> servers. [...] We could require that membership in
|
|
> certain groups requires a certain amount of
|
|
> collateral peer approval, with automatic suspen-
|
|
> sion or expulsion as the consequences for
|
|
> violating it! ... We could restrict the influence
|
|
> of troublemakers! ...
|
|
|
|
I support your conclusions--to a point! I am frustrated with the signal to
|
|
noise ration on the television set. I only have three controls at my
|
|
disposal: MUTE, CHANNEL, and OFF. On the internet, the controls available
|
|
to me are almost infinite. I can even craft my own! The important
|
|
distinction is that I am a _participant_. I can make my own choices about
|
|
what I see, and the choices available are not established by consensus but
|
|
by interest. I can create or contribute to a program that interests me. I
|
|
don't want ANY "automatic" controls whatsoever!
|
|
|
|
> Note that there is no centralized authority or
|
|
> unfair influence in this system, unless people
|
|
> corrupt their servers.
|
|
|
|
While you are certainly correct in the sense that the server would not be
|
|
physically centralized, you do not address the question of the Ratings
|
|
server becoming an Ideologically central control on participation. The
|
|
second part of your statement is ignored by your argument--but could have
|
|
dire implications for individual liberties at a community level. De-facto
|
|
Majority rule has every bit as much potential for injustice as
|
|
"dictatorship". I refer you to the history of the Third Reich.
|
|
(That was my final and only melodramatic contribution |:-} ) I would urge
|
|
you and readers of your essay to consider whether the right questions are
|
|
being asked. Again, I support the idea of a Ratings server, although the
|
|
name could stand some work. At present the net is being molded by a number
|
|
of new influences. Businesses, both large and small are moving in. Many of
|
|
these are interested in the net as common carrier. Government is moving
|
|
towards a VERY active role in the regulation and development of the
|
|
Internet. And people are pouring onto the net in numbers that could not
|
|
have been anticipated just two years ago. There are other influences, but
|
|
these are the most visible right now. What are the potential influences of
|
|
these interests? Could any or all of them have the effect of stifling
|
|
freedom on the net? Business might like to limit competition for bandwidth
|
|
by exercising a right to "filter" in the "Public interest". Government
|
|
would almost certainly like to keep a tight grip on any activity that
|
|
might be considered criminal or subversive. And the people; well, many
|
|
will be confused for a time. There will be some stumbling around and a
|
|
decreased signal-to-noise ratio for obvious reasons. That famous vocal
|
|
minority will also be there, looking to sanitize the net. This will only
|
|
encourage the arguments of business and government to regulate activities
|
|
and participation on the net.
|
|
|
|
> I fervently hope that the glorifications and
|
|
> manipulations of Internet Anarchy by mouth-
|
|
> frothing libertarian extremists, Cryptoanarchists,
|
|
> and sympathizers can be adequately controlled and
|
|
> minimized in the future, and some harmonious
|
|
> systems and effective countermeasures along the
|
|
> lines of the Rating server can be established by
|
|
> visionaries and tinkerers, but in any case, for
|
|
> the sake of humanity's integrity, sanity, and
|
|
> well-being, I pray that Future Cyberspace is far
|
|
> less Anarchic than the Current Internet.
|
|
|
|
Many "visionaries" start out their careers as "mouth-frothing
|
|
extremists", at least as far as their "peer review groups" are concerned.
|
|
Only the perspective of hindsight can define what has value and what is
|
|
noise. Harmonious systems are boring and static. They have a tendency to
|
|
aim for the lowest common denominator. We have quite enough of this in our
|
|
other "established" media systems.
|
|
|
|
I think that the question you should be asking is, how can we preserve
|
|
the individual voice--the free exchange of ideas--in an environment that
|
|
is quickly evolving into an important domain for "The Big Boys?"
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: 7 Dec 1993 16:39:52 GMT
|
|
From: sdw@MEADDATA.COM(Stephen Williams)
|
|
Subject: File 7--Anarchy Gone Awry (Re: CuD 5.91) #2
|
|
|
|
doner@engrhub.ucsb.edu wrote:
|
|
: I would like to say only that Mr. L. Detweiler lacks subtlety in his methods
|
|
: of meme propagation. His long winded advertisement for what he calls
|
|
: " our *own* cyberspace government" serves only to aggravate the opinions of
|
|
: those who he attacks, and probably will have little effect on the opinions of
|
|
: those yet uninformed of these matters, or those who have no strong opinions
|
|
: as yet.
|
|
|
|
And for that, we can be glad.
|
|
|
|
: Cyberspace is a medium of information.
|
|
: governing information is called "Censorship"(can you say censorship, boys and
|
|
girls?)
|
|
: therefore, a government in cyberspace can only result in censorship.
|
|
: This is a Bad Thing(tm).
|
|
|
|
: Signing off and Heading for the Tub,
|
|
: doner@engrhub.ucsb.edu
|
|
|
|
I agree with you, but I did 'post' the following to cypherpunks and
|
|
cypherwonks yesterday. Recasting his totalitarian version of an idea
|
|
I had independantly a few months ago might be worth something.
|
|
|
|
Please forgive the quoting and slight flaming as this is meant to be a
|
|
complete meme. Note that I will be implementing this shortly.
|
|
|
|
|
|
I'm not sure, yet, if I want to agree with this guy to any amount, but
|
|
this idea, recast into a safe form that doesn't get out of control,
|
|
might be a good idea. I thought of it as a way to get K-12
|
|
students/schools connected 'safely'.
|
|
|
|
See below:
|
|
|
|
> Computer underground Digest Sun Dec 5 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 91
|
|
> ISSN 1004-042X
|
|
> Date: Thu, 02 Dec 93 04:36:10 -0700
|
|
> From: "L. Detweiler" <ld231782@LONGS.LANCE.COLOSTATE.EDU>
|
|
> Subject--File 1--Anarchy Gone Awry
|
|
>
|
|
> Mr. Leichter raises some extremely pivotal issues in CUD #5.90 related
|
|
> to the `anarchy' of the Internet. B.Sterling is the author of one of
|
|
> the most brilliantly colorful characterizations and metaphors of the
|
|
> Internet as `anarchic', comparing its evolution and development to that
|
|
> of the English language:
|
|
....
|
|
> I think that many people have mistaken the word `anarchic,' implying no
|
|
> overseeing authority or order (which the Internet is less) with the
|
|
> word `decentralized' (which the Internet is more). Again, the
|
|
> Internet has many regulatory and self-governing systems and orders.
|
|
> For example, connecting sites are required to implement a certain
|
|
> minimum set of software standards and prevent or even root out
|
|
> corruptions in their local sites and software. We have centralized
|
|
> databases that require the registration of domains for fees. A complex
|
|
> network of agreements and policies governs interconnectivity and
|
|
> communication, and a complicated interplay of elements affects basic
|
|
> content such as `commercial vs. academic.' Lack of some of these
|
|
> regulations and protocols would be disastrous.
|
|
>
|
|
> Leichter:
|
|
> >Most of the Internet, in fact, is
|
|
> >better described as self-governing. There are a variety of social
|
|
> >norms concerning network use and interactions. One doesn't post
|
|
> >messages to unrelated groups. One doesn't evade moderation
|
|
> >restrictions. One maintains a certain (rather limited, it must be
|
|
> >admitted) degree of restraint in how one describes other network
|
|
> >participants. There are few effective mechanisms for enforcing these
|
|
> >norms, and they are certainly broken on an all-too-regular basis; but
|
|
> >the network continues to function because social pressure *can* be
|
|
> >applied to those who become too annoying; and in the most outrageous
|
|
> >cases, it's possible to remove the offenders' access to the net.
|
|
>
|
|
> I advocate that we build new formal mechanisms to enforce this order!
|
|
> We have for too long pretended that a central element of the Internet
|
|
> is not integral to it, namely that of the `degree of restraint over
|
|
> network participants' exerted through `social pressure'. Let us codify
|
|
> and formalize these `norms concerning network use and interactions' and
|
|
> develop systems that enforce them! I believe such systems can be
|
|
> developed that do not stray from the sacred Internet tradition of
|
|
> decentralization of control and freedom from censorship. Why should we
|
|
> continue to subject ourselves to the torture of `few effective
|
|
> mechanisms for enforcing these norms broken on an all-too-regular basis'?
|
|
>
|
|
> One of my most enduring Cyberspatial hallucinations is that of a
|
|
> Ratings server. A Ratings server would be a massive distributed network
|
|
> for the propagation of information similar to Usenet, and could
|
|
> conceivably be built upon it. But the Ratings server is not
|
|
> Information, as Usenet is, it is Information about Information. Anyone
|
|
> can post an arbitrary message to the Ratings server that refers to
|
|
> Information somewhere else in Cyberspace. It is in a sense a Rating of
|
|
> that Information. The Information could be *anything* -- a mailing
|
|
> list, a person, a particular Usenet posting, an FTP site. But postings
|
|
> on the Ratings server can be perused by anyone, and anyone can
|
|
> contribute Ratings to the server or indicate their own opinion on the
|
|
> existing Ratings. Different mechanisms exist such that some Ratings are
|
|
> `local' and some are updated globally.
|
|
|
|
I had a similar idea, but knowing how hard it is to get everyone using
|
|
new software and data streams, I wanted to piggyback onto News. My
|
|
original reason for thinking about it was for Internet systems that
|
|
would like to give access to News, etc. to K-12 students and schools.
|
|
A big problem is material that parents and teachers would object to.
|
|
I have absolutely no desire to censor anything or prevent adults from
|
|
running into or getting anything (quite the opposite, actually), but
|
|
there is no getting around the desired restrictions on info flow to
|
|
minors.
|
|
|
|
Basically, I suggested that special messages be standardized that
|
|
would endorse messages for certain distributions. Old (existing...)
|
|
news software would just pass the messages like others, but news
|
|
systems that wanted to rate or hide improper messages could pay
|
|
attention to them. My software would probably take the form of
|
|
patches to INN and tin, etc. There would be positive and negative
|
|
endorsements, of course with the possibility of signature keys, etc.
|
|
|
|
You could configure certain users or the system to be sensitive to any
|
|
combination of endorsements: The idea is that the administrator or
|
|
user could determine who they would pay attention to. Other things
|
|
like voting, number of endorsements, etc. could easily be done.
|
|
|
|
One senario is that teachers or organizations worldwide could
|
|
'register' to each other and share the responsibility of endorsing
|
|
messages in certain groups. If there needed to be culpability, the
|
|
endorsers could be tracked down if needed.
|
|
|
|
This would be totally optional on an adult's account and mandatory on
|
|
a minor's account, unless proper permission was obtained. It might,
|
|
in certain situations, also reduce the signal-to-noise ratio. Another
|
|
interesting use is to change the nature of moderated groups: the group
|
|
could be unmoderated in the current sense, but users could choose
|
|
moderators who would agree to endorse messages that had good content.
|
|
You could have several 'competing' moderators in the same group,
|
|
almost like news organizations.
|
|
|
|
'alt.best.of.internet' is a limited capability version of this idea.
|
|
|
|
> The fantastic possibilities of this system are evident upon some
|
|
> reflection and consideration. We could establish arbitrary new groups
|
|
> that have *formal* requirements that are matched by Ratings servers.
|
|
> For example, we could require that new sites that enter the Internet be
|
|
> `trusted' by an existing site. We could require that membership in
|
|
> certain groups requires a certain amount of collateral peer approval,
|
|
> with automatic suspension or expulsion as the consequences for
|
|
> violating it! We could have *meaningful* polls on arbitrary issues. We
|
|
> could have news servers that automatically sort and archive articles
|
|
> according to their passing certain Ratings thresholds. We could
|
|
> restrict the influence of troublemakers! These are all examples of
|
|
> strengthening and formalizing the informal social orders that are, in
|
|
> my opinion, today just barely holding the Internet together. With a
|
|
> Ratings system, I think the civility of the Internet would increase to
|
|
> a fantastic degree. In short, we could have our *own* cyberspatial government!
|
|
>
|
|
> Note that there is no centralized authority or unfair influence in this
|
|
> system, unless people corrupt their servers. When everyone who has
|
|
> joined a group *individually* decides to screen their postings of
|
|
> messages that fail to meet a certain `quality' or posters who have a
|
|
> certain `reputation', that is not Orwellian Censorship but the
|
|
> beautiful Internet freedom and right of Bozo Filtering. When everyone
|
|
> who joins a group *agrees* to a charter that may bar troublemakers
|
|
> based on Ratings, no one can claim they are being unfairly oppressed.
|
|
|
|
My method, IMHO, is a positive version of the negative method espoused
|
|
here. I do not like a central 'ratings server' of any kind. There
|
|
should be multiple competing 'opinions' and you can ascribe to any
|
|
existing one or in combination or be independant.
|
|
|
|
> I fervently hope that the glorifications and manipulations of Internet
|
|
> Anarchy by mouth-frothing libertarian extremists, Cryptoanarchists,
|
|
> and sympathizers can be adequately controlled and minimized in the
|
|
> future, and some harmonious systems and effective countermeasures
|
|
> along the lines of the Rating server can be established by visionaries
|
|
> and tinkerers, but in any case, for the sake of humanity's integrity,
|
|
> sanity, and well-being, I pray that Future Cyberspace is far less
|
|
> Anarchic than the Current Internet.
|
|
|
|
So how does our current society hold together? Where is that central
|
|
'ratings server'? (Nielsons dosn't count :-))
|
|
|
|
We should stay decentralized, especially, on the net. When some of us
|
|
think of an anarchic system, we are making the assumption that some
|
|
good stability and structure will be created organically. Probably it
|
|
will be better than that designed with preconceived opinions.
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And, I feel compelled to add, you are the only mouth-frothing person
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I've run across recently.
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------------------------------
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End of Computer Underground Digest #6.03
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************************************
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