847 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
847 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
Computer underground Digest Sun Aug 28, 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 77
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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
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Retiring Shadow Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
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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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Copylate Editor: John Holmes Shrudlu
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CONTENTS, #6.77 (Sun, Aug 28, 1994)
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File 1--Static in Cyberspace (The Nation reprint) (fwd)
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File 2--The Internet and the Anti-net
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File 3--GovAccess.044: changing GovAccess, ballot info, civicnet policies
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File 4--EPIC Statement on Wiretap Telephony Bill
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File 5--Cu Digest Header Information (unchanged since 28 Aug '94)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 19 Jul 1994 20:46:29 -0500 (CDT)
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From: Charles Stanford <cstanfor@BIGCAT.MISSOURI.EDU>
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Subject: File 1--Static in Cyberspace (The Nation reprint) (fwd)
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This article is reprinted with permission from the June 13, 1994
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issue of The Nation magazine. (c) 1994 The Nation Company, Inc.
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Special offer to new subscribers: 24 weekly issues for just $13.95
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(a savings of $40.05 off the newsstand price). Box CP, 72 Fifth
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Avenue, New York, NY 10011.
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For more information, e-mail:
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nation-info@igc.apc.org
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Jon Wiener, a contributing editor of The Nation, teaches history at
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the University of California, Irvine.
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STATIC IN CYBERSPACE
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Free Speech on the Internet
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JON WIENER
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At a time when Paramount Communications and Time Warner and
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Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation have achieved near-total
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domination over all hitherto existing media, many people have come
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to view the Internet--the computer network linking millions of
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users in a hundred countries--as a free space where critical and
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independent voices can communicate, liberated from the mainstream
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media's obsession with profits and hostility to the unpopular. It's
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"the most universal and indispensable network on the planet," The
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New York Times Magazine recently proclaimed, because, at a time
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when the "giant information empires own everything else," the
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Internet is "anarchic. But also democratic." Harper's Magazine
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joined the utopian talk: The Internet marks "not the beginning of
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authority but its end." Computer networks create "a country of
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decentralized nodes of governance and thought," in which "the
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non-dogmatic--the experimental idea" and "the global perspective"
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all work to undermine centralized power and official opinion. U.S.
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News & World Report declared in January that, on the Internet,
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"everyone has a virtually unlimited right to express and seek
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information on any subject."
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The "Net" is a free space, the argument continues, because
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no one controls it and no one owns it; it has no center. Instead,
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it has thousands of nodes, each of which permits those with
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access to a computer, a modem and a modest budget to send and
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receive messages and to read, copy and distribute documents,
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manifestoes, essays and exposs. No one is excluded because of
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race, ethnicity, creed or gender. And it's growing like kudzu: The
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Internet Society reported last year that 1.7 million host computers
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provided gateways for 17 million users to enter the Infobahn.
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Those who operate computer bulletin board systems ("bbs"),
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newsgroups and mailing lists are mainly volunteers working for
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free. According to Harley Hahn and Rick Stout, authors of The
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Internet Complete Reference, the Net provides "living proof that
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human beings who are able to communicate freely and conveniently
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will choose to be social and selfless."
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It all sounds great. But despite the claims made for the Net,
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its freedoms are restricted in familiar ways; it reproduces many
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problems and obstacles found outside cyberspace, in what the
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hackers disparagingly term "real life."
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The largest collection of news and discussion groups on the
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Net is Usenet, which involves millions of people reading and
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posting messages on more than 5,000 topics, ranging from "artifi-
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cial intelligence" (comp.ai) to "Japanese animation" (rec.arts.anime).
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Usenet bulletin boards recently dramatized the power of the
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Internet as a weapon to fight government censorship. The Canadi-
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an government has been trying to prevent Canadians from learn-
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ing about the sensational sex-torture-murder trial of Karla Homol-
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ka and her husband/accomplice, Paul Bernardo. Homolka pleaded
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guilty in July 1993 after confessing gruesome details of two
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murders and naming her husband as the instigator. The Ontario
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court imposed a gag order on the media, seeking to prevent
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potential jurors in her husband's separate trial from learning
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about the case. None of the Canadian media challenged the ban,
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but industrious computer networkers in Toronto set up a Usenet
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newsgroup, alt.fan.karla-homolka, on which they posted daily news
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of the trial. (Putting it in the "alternative-fan" area was a maca-
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bre touch.)
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Then "the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (R.C.M.P.) showed
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up in the newsgroup and said we were all going to jail," recalled
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Joel Furr, a Usenet moderator responsible for editing messages on
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some bulletin boards. "They said they were recording our names
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and contacting our site administrators." Most Canadian institutions
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on the Net, including all universities, shut down local access to
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the bulletin board. Undeterred, the hackers started a new one,
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"alt.pub-ban.homolka," on which they continued to post news of
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the trial. "It took the R.C.M.P. about a month to find that hiding
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place," Furr said. When that one was shut down, they started
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posting Karla Homolka information on still other bulletin boards.
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The gag order remains in effect, since jury selection in
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Bernardo's trial won't begin until fall. But as a result of the
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postings on computer bulletin boards, Stephen Kimber wrote in the
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Halifax Daily News, "the ban has become a joke." Global communi-
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cations systems "are now beyond the short arms of narrow-minded
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Ontario judicial regulators." Kimber, a journalism professor at the
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University of King's College in Halifax, got the banned information
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"through an electronic labyrinth from a double-blind anonymous
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posting service based, I believe, in Finland--a service often used
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by those who discreetly post adult personal classified messages on
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the Internet." Every effort by court authorities to prevent trial
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news from reaching the public "has simply led individuals to find
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more innovative ways to distribute it." (I got the grisly story by
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e-mail from a gentleman in Texas with the address abdul@io.com. A
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lot of what was posted included rumors, hearsay and people
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indulging their taste for bizarre news, which is an inevitable
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consequence of such an open forum.)
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When Wired magazine did a short piece on the story in its
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April issue, the Canadian government banned the issue and confis-
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cated copies from distributors. Wired fought back in cyberspace,
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making the text of the banned article available on the Internet
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through their own "infobot"--a software program that provides
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information on demand--and on networks accessible to any Canadi-
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an with a modem.
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Fighting the Mounties presents the Net at its best, and
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shows how people could obtain other more significant information
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their governments might want to keep secret. But the same strate-
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gy for resisting government authority is available to more malevo-
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lent forces. A news item on the "SN GrapeVine" bulletin board,
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datelined Munich and headlined "Nazis Online," reports that
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German neo-Nazis have established their own bulletin boards on
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which users can "exchange ideas on how to rid Germany of for-
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eigners, coordinate illegal rallies and swap bomb-making recipes."
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The "Thule Network," named after a 1920s proto-Nazi group,
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consists of a dozen bulletin boards in three states, access to
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which is protected by passwords. Neo-Nazis are using the network
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to avoid detection by police who are not yet familiar with the new
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technology.
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For everyone from neo-Nazis to anti-censorship activists, cyber-
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space does indeed provide a free space. But how free is the
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speech on the Internet? Most of the Usenet bulletin boards are
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completely open to anyone with any message--a rich information
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anarchy, limited only by self-regulation, that can't be found in
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any other medium. But this utopian ideal is abandoned in bulletin
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boards that are "moderated" by volunteer system operators who
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have the power to edit or refuse to post messages they consider
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irrelevant or objectionable.
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To see what an unmoderated bulletin board looks like,
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I checked the Usenet Bosnia discussion group (soc.culture.bosna-
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herzgvna). The first posting read, "Serbs in world wars? O yes, I
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remember.... Russians come and liberated Belgrade. Serbs were so
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grateful that they did not mind, let say, missbehaviour of Russian
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soldiers towards local women. Or was raping a kind of a sign of
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frendship." It was signed by Damir Sokcevic, Department for
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Theoretical Physics, Rudjer Boskovic Institute, Zagreb, Croatia.
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The next message read, "Why should we let you `holy
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Armenian crooks' get away with the Muslim Holocaust's cover-up?...
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The ex-Soviet Armenian government got away with the genocide of
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2.5 million Muslim men, women and children and is enjoying the
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fruits of that genocide." It had been posted by "Serdar Argic."
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This is the ugly side of freedom of speech. Garbage postings like
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these can devastate regions of cyberspace. The Usenet discussion
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group soc.history "has been absolutely destroyed by Serdar
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Argic," Usenet moderator Joel Furr wrote in April on an internal
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news bulletin board. "Upon reading the group today, I found 200+
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active articles, of which 175 were from Serdar Argic and 20 were
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complaining about him." That group has now been replaced by one
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with a moderator who censors Serdar Argic. (His 175 messages on
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soc.history were all different, but all had the same nutty theme:
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Turks didn't kill Armenians in 1915, it was the other way around.)
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I e-mailed Joel Furr for more details, and he replied with a
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startlingly archaic suggestion: I should telephone him, so we could
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"talk." On the phone, he explained that "`Serdar Argic' seems to
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be several people, anti-Armenian Turks, with software that scans
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bulletin boards for keywords and automatically generates respons-
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es out of a database of megabytes of messages. Several universi-
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ties have kicked him off their networks, but he's currently got
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access through a firm called UUNet in Virginia. There's nothing
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we can do about him from a legal standpoint." Other
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Usenet groups have had problems with freedom of electronic
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speech: The "guns" discussion group (rec.guns), which is moder-
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ated, "flat out prohibits ANY discussion on gun control," reports
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Usenet moderator Cindy Tittle Moore, "because they know from
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experience that's just one long flame war." (To "flame" is to hurl
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abuse on-line.) If you are against guns, you are not allowed to
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tell it to the Usenet "guns" discussion group. And the gun nuts
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have virtually taken over the Mother Jones Usenet bulletin board
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(alt.motherjones), swamping it with pro-gun diatribes cross-listed
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from talk.politics.guns and alt.fan.rush-limbaugh. The energy of
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these people is astounding: The unmoderated group
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talk.politics.guns had 2,096 new postings in the week I checked-
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-300 a day.
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The underlying problem, Furr says, is that "the Internet is
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expanding at logarithmic rates. A million new users will bring a
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few sociopaths. Until recently we had complete anarchy with self-
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regulation. Now some human will have to look at everything and
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decide what to post. It's unfortunate."
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But it's not necessarily censorship. The moderated bulletin
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board or newsgroup is edited like a magazine letters-to-the-editor
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page: Relevant material is posted, objectionable or useless or loony
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stuff is kept out. In this respect communication in cyberspace is
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closer to ordinary publishing than to a new realm of freedom. (On
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the other hand, the extent of communication possible is far richer
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and freer than in any letters page.)
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Commercial advertising presents a different threat to the
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freedom of the Internet. Attorney Laurence Canter of Phoenix
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showed how to do it: In April he placed an ad for his services as
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a "green card" immigration lawyer on Usenet--not just on bulletin
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boards where it might be relevant, like misc.legal and alt.visa.us,
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or the "business" area, but on every one of more than 5,000
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discussion groups. It appeared on rec.arts.erotica and on the anti-
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Barney alt.tv-dinosaurs.barney.die.die.die. This ambulance chasing
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on the information superhighway resulted in "a nuclear level
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flame," Furr said. The network was bombarded with thousands of
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protest messages from outraged users. Despite his violation of
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"netiquette," Canter is unrepentant; he told The New York Times,
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"We will definitely advertise on the Internet again."
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There's no good way to stop him. "These things that are
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written into the Internet culture are not written into the law,"
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said James Gleick, who runs a commercial Internet gateway in
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Manhattan called the Pipeline. Usenet groups could be swamped
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with advertisements that would drown out noncommercial speech,
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and the rich discussion of common interests that now takes place
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would wither away.
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In real life, freedom of speech is also limited by libel laws. But is
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there libel in cyberspace? A federal court ruled in 1991 that
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CompuServe couldn't be sued for libel for a message it transmit-
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ted. That case (Cubby v. CompuServe) set a vital precedent for
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free speech in the electronic age: U.S. District Court Judge Peter
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Leisure of New York ruled that, since computer networks do not
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exercise editorial control over the messages they transmit, they
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are not liable for defamation.
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Individuals, however, are still responsible for their
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own words communicated through cyberspace. The first trial for
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libel by e-mail--held in Australia--concluded with a substantial
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fine being imposed on the offending e-mailer. In that case, an
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anthropologist fired by the University of Western Australia sued
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another anthropologist, claiming he had been defamed in a comput-
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er bulletin board message. The case went to the West Australian
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Supreme Court, which ruled in April that libel in cyberspace is
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actionable. David Rindos, who has a doctorate from Cornell Univer-
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sity, was dismissed last June because of insufficient productivity.
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A supporter of Rindos posted news of the firing on the DIALx
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science anthropology international computer bulletin board; many
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colleagues e-mailed their support for him, but Gil Hardwick, an
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anthropologist working in the field in Western Australia, posted a
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message criticizing Rindos. According to Justice David Ipp, it
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declared that Rindos's career was based not on academic achieve-
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ment "but on his ability to berate and bully all and sundry." The
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message also contained "allegations of pedophilia," in the words of
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Rindos's lawyer, and falsely implied that sexual misconduct had
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some bearing on his firing by the university.
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Twenty-three thousand people around the world have access
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to the bulletin board on which Mr. Hardwick's message appeared,
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and most of them are professional anthropologists and anthropolo-
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gy students. "The defamation caused serious harm to Dr. Rindos's
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personal and professional reputation," Justice Ipp declared. "The
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publication of these remarks will make it more difficult for him to
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obtain appropriate employment.... The damages award must compen-
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sate him for all these matters and vindicate his reputation to the
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public."
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Although it's easier to win a libel case in Australia than in
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the United States, the same circumstances here would produce the
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same result, according to Martin Garbus, an attorney and a libel
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law authority. The Internet is not a free space when it comes to
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libel; it is subject to the same libel law as any publication.
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In the Australian case, the libelous message had been posted
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on a bulletin board available to thousands; but even individual e-
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mail messages can cause legal problems. The day is not too distant
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when an e-mailer will find himself or herself in court, perhaps in
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an employment discrimination suit, for a statement uttered only in
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a single e-mail message. E-mail messages, like other written
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communications, are discoverable in legal proceedings, according to
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William Parker, director of the office of academic computing at the
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University of California, Irvine--they can be subpoenaed and
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presented as evidence in court. And that's only the beginning: It
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turns out that your old e-mail is not necessarily gone just be-
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cause you deleted it. At my campus of the University of California,
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and probably at most universities as well as private corporations,
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backup copies of most e-mail messages are retained on tape as
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part of the nightly backup of the main computer. Ollie North was
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unable to destroy evidence of the Iran/contra cover-up because
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the White House maintained a backup copy of the e-mail system on
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which he had plotted his crimes. Erasing his hard drive and
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shredding his paper copies didn't help. Most e-mailers are as
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vulnerable today as North was. Parker's advice: "You should not
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say anything via e-mail that you would not say publicly."
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Those who see the Internet as a free space neglect another
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important limitation to that freedom: Cyberspace is still a male
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space. Despite the universal access and non-discrimination on the
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Internet, despite the fact that physical appearances and attributes
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are absent, the great majority of users are men, and women's
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voices tend to get drowned out in cyberspace. Even in feminist
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discussion groups, says Ellen Broidy, history bibliographer at the
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U Cal, Irvine, library, "two or three men will get on and dominate
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the conversation--either by being provocative, or by flooding the
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system with comments on everything. It's like talk radio, only
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worse." Cindy Tittle Moore, a moderator on Usenet's soc.feminism,
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says, "It should be mandatory for every male on the Net to
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seriously pretend being female for two weeks to see the differ-
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ence." They will get sexually explicit invitations from other men,
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she says, "some polite, some gross." And the styles of disagree-
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ment are different. When a man disagrees with another man on a
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bulletin board, "he's likely to go for a point by point argument
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and pretty much stay on topic," Moore says. "With a female, he's
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likely to call her a bull-dyke bitch and leave it at that." Cyber-
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space, concludes Katherine Hayles, who teaches English at U.C.L.A.,
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will not "free us from the straitjacket of physically marked
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categories such as race, class and gender."
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The Internet has demonstrated its effectiveness as a weapon
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against government censorship and as a means of communication
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untrammeled by corporate control. It makes available immense
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information resources on an unprecedented scale. It makes instan-
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taneous communication easy, which could strengthen democracy.
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It's also fun. But it's not a new world of freedom, significantly
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different from our own; in terms of free speech and censorship,
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libel and defamation, gender and social hierarchies, not to mention
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advertising and commerce, the moral of this story seems to be, in
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cybertalk, "VR mirrors RL"--virtual reality hasn't escaped the
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bounds of real life.
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** End of text from cdp:media.issues **
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***************************************************************************
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This material came from PeaceNet, a non-profit progressive networking
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service. For more information, send a message to peacenet-info@igc.apc.org
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 03 Aug 1994 14:28:08 -0800
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From: nicka@mccmedia.com (Nick Arnett)
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Subject: File 2--The Internet and the Anti-net
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THE INTERNET AND THE ANTI-NET
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Two public internetworks are better than one
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BY NICK ARNETT
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Networking policy debates tend to paint a future monolithic
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internetwork that will follow consistent policies despite a number of
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independent operators. Although that's how the interstate highway and
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telephone systems -- favorite metaphors for network futurists --
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operate, historical comparisons suggest that it is probably not what
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the future holds. Two distinct, interconnected publicly accessible
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digital internetworks are likely to emerge, which is surely better
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than just one.
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One of the future internetworks will grow out of today's Internet,
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whose roots are in the technology and scientific/academic communities,
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funded by government, institutions and increasingly, corporate and
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individual users. Although the Internet will support commercial
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services, they rarely will depend on advertising. The other great
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internetwork will grow out of the technology and mass communications
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industries, especially cable and broadcast industries. The "Anti-net"
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will rely on advertising revenue to recoup the cost of the
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infrastructure necessary to create cheap, high-speed bandwidth. (I
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call this second network the Anti-net not to be a demagogue but to
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make a historical allusion, explained shortly.) All three communities
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-- technology, science and academia, and mass media -- will
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participate in many joint projects. The most successful new ventures
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often will arise from three-way collaborations; skills of each are
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essential to create and deliver network-based information products and
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services.
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The Internet community reacts with profound anger and resentment at
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Anti-net behavior on the Internet -- in net-speak, "spamming"
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advertising messages into hundreds of discussions. The outrage is
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based in part on the idealistic traditions of academic and scientific
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freedom of thought and debate, but there's more behind it. Anger and
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resentment fueled by the world's love-hate relationship with the mass
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media, particularly television, surface in many other contexts. Nearly
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everyone in the modern world and large segments of the third world
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watches television; nearly all think broadcast television is stupid,
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offering a homogenized, sensationalized point of view that serves
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advertising interests above all others. In competition with
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television's hypnotic powers, or perhaps simply due to the high cost
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of distribution, other mass media have followed suit.
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Idealistic defenders of the Internet's purity believe they are waging
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a humanitarian or even a holy war that pits a democracy of ideas
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against the mass media's empty promises and indulgences. Television
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and its kin offer the false idols and communities of soaps, sitcoms
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and sports. The mass media tantalize with suggestions of healing,
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wealth, popularity and advertising's other blessings and temptations.
|
|
Internet idealists even question the U.S. administration's unclear
|
|
proposal of an "information superhighway," suspecting that the masses
|
|
will be taxed only to further expand the Anti-net's stranglehold on
|
|
information.
|
|
|
|
The same kind of stage was set 500 years ago. The convergence of
|
|
inexpensive printing and inexpensive paper began to loosen the Roman
|
|
Catholic church's centuries-old stranglehold on cultural information.
|
|
The church's rise to power centuries earlier had followed the arrival
|
|
of the Dark Ages, caused in Marshall McLuhan's analysis by the loss of
|
|
papyrus supplies. The church quickly became the best customer of many
|
|
of the early printer-publishers, but not to disseminate information,
|
|
only to make money. The earliest dated publication of Johann Gutenberg
|
|
himself was a "papal indulgence" to raise money for the church's
|
|
defense against the Turk invasions. Indulgences were papers sold to
|
|
the common folk to pay for the Pope's remission of their sins, a sort
|
|
of insurance against the wrath of God. Indulgences had been sold by
|
|
the church since the 11th century, but shortly after the arrival of
|
|
printing, the pope expanded the market considerably by extending
|
|
indulgences to include souls in purgatory. Indulgence revenue was
|
|
shared with government officials, becoming almost a form of state and
|
|
holy taxation. The money financed the church's holy wars, as well as
|
|
church officials' luxurious lifestyles.
|
|
|
|
Jumping on the new technology for corrupt purposes, the church had
|
|
sown the seeds of its own undoing. The church had the same sort of
|
|
love-hate relationship with common people and government that the mass
|
|
media have today. The spark for the 15th-century "flame war," in
|
|
net-speak, was a monk, Martin Luther. Outraged by the depth of the
|
|
church's corruption, Luther wrote a series of short theses in 1517,
|
|
questioning indulgences, papal infallibility, Latin-only Bibles and
|
|
services, and other authoritarian, self-serving church practices.
|
|
Although Luther had previously written similar theses, something
|
|
different happened to the 95 that he nailed to the church door in
|
|
Wittenburg. Printers -- the "hackers" of their day, poking about the
|
|
geographic network of church doors and libraries -- found Luther's
|
|
theses.
|
|
|
|
As an academic, Luther enjoyed a certain amount of freedom to raise
|
|
potentially heretical arguments against church practice. Nailing his
|
|
theses to the Wittenburg door was a standard way to distribute
|
|
information to his academic community for discussion, much like
|
|
putting a research paper on an Internet server today. In Luther's
|
|
time, intellectual property laws hadn't even been contemplated, so his
|
|
papers were fair game for publication (as today's Internet postings
|
|
often seem to be, to the dismay of many). Luther's ideas quickly
|
|
became the talk of Europe. Heresy sells, especially when the
|
|
questioned authority is corrupt. But the speed of printing technology
|
|
caught many by surprise. Even Luther, defending himself before the
|
|
pope, was at a loss to explain how so many had been influenced so
|
|
fast.
|
|
|
|
Luther's initial goal was to reform the church. But his ideas were
|
|
rejected and he was excommunicated by his order, the pope and the
|
|
emperor, convincing Luther that the Antichrist was in charge in Rome.
|
|
Abandoning attempts at reform, but accepting Biblical prophecy, Luther
|
|
resisted the utopian goal of removing the Antichrist from the papacy.
|
|
Instead, as a pacifist, he focused on teaching and preaching his views
|
|
of true Christianity. Luther believed that he could make the world a
|
|
better place by countering the angst and insecurity caused by the
|
|
Antichrist, not that he could save it by his own powers.
|
|
|
|
Luther's philosophy would serve the Internet's utopians well,
|
|
especially those who believe that the Internet's economy of ideas
|
|
untainted by advertising must "win" over the mass media's Anti-net
|
|
ideas. The Internet's incredibly low cost of distribution almost
|
|
assures that it will remain free of advertising-based commerce.
|
|
Nonetheless, if lobbying by network idealists succeeds in derailing or
|
|
co-opting efforts to build an advertising-based internetwork, then
|
|
surely commercial interests will conspire with government officials to
|
|
destroy or perhaps worse, to take over the Internet by political and
|
|
economic means. Historians, instead of comparing the Internet to the
|
|
U.S. Interstate highway system's success, may compare it with the
|
|
near-destruction of the nation's railroad and trolley infrastructure
|
|
by corrupt businesses with interests in automobiles and trucking.
|
|
|
|
The printing press and cheap paper did not lead to widespread literacy
|
|
in Europe; that event awaited the wealth created by the Industrial
|
|
Revolution and the need for educated factory workers. Printing
|
|
technology's immediate and profound effect was the destruction of the
|
|
self-serving, homogenized point of view of a single institution.
|
|
Although today's mass media don't claim divine inspiration, they are
|
|
no less homogenized and at least as self-serving. The people drown in
|
|
information overload, but one point of view is barely discernable from
|
|
another, ironically encouraging polarization of issues.
|
|
|
|
Richard Butler, Australia's ambassador to the United Nations, draws
|
|
the most disturbing analogy of all. Butler, a leader in disarmament,
|
|
compares the church's actions to the nuclear weapons industry's
|
|
unwillingness to come under public scrutiny. Like the church and its
|
|
Bible, physicists argued that their subject was too difficult for lay
|
|
people. Medieval popes sold salvation; physicists sold destruction.
|
|
Neither was questioned until information began to move more freely.
|
|
The political power of nuclear weapons has begun to fall in part due
|
|
to the role of the Internet and fax communications in the dissolution
|
|
of the Soviet Union.
|
|
|
|
The truly influential and successful early publishers, such as Aldus
|
|
Manutius, were merchant technologists who formed collaborations with
|
|
the scientific/academic community and even the church, especially
|
|
those who dissented against Rome. Out of business needs for economies
|
|
of scale, they brought together people with diverse points of view and
|
|
created books that appealed to diverse communities. The Renaissance
|
|
was propelled in part by books that allowed geniuses such as
|
|
Copernicus to easily compare and contrast the many points of view of
|
|
his predecessors, reaching world-changing conclusions.
|
|
|
|
Today we are at a turning point. We are leaving behind a world
|
|
dominated by easy, audiovisual, sensational, advertising-based media,
|
|
beginning a future in which the mass media's power will be diluted by
|
|
the low cost of distribution of many other points of view. Using the
|
|
Internet is still something like trying to learn from the
|
|
pre-Gutenberg libraries, in which manuscripts were chained to tables
|
|
and there were no standards for organization and structure. But like
|
|
the mendicant scholars of those days, today's "mendicant sysops,"
|
|
especially on the Internet, are doing much of the work of organization
|
|
in exchange for free access to information.
|
|
|
|
Today, the great opportunity is not to make copies of theses on the
|
|
digital church doors. It is to build electronic magazines, newspapers,
|
|
books, newsletters, libraries and other collections that organize and
|
|
package the writings, photos, videos, sounds and other multimedia
|
|
information from diverse points of view on the networks. The Internet,
|
|
with one foot in technology and the other in science and academia,
|
|
needs only a bit of help from the mass media in order to show the
|
|
Anti-net how it's done.
|
|
|
|
|
|
_________________________________________________________________
|
|
|
|
Nick Arnett [nicka@mccmedia.com] is president of Multimedia Computing
|
|
Corporation, a strategic consulting and publishing company
|
|
established in 1988.
|
|
|
|
Comments about this article e-mailed to [antinet@mccmedia.com] will
|
|
be linked to a copy of this essay on Multimedia Computing Corp.'s
|
|
World-Wide Web server: <URL:http://asearch.mccmedia.com/>
|
|
|
|
Recommended reading: "The printing press as an agent of change:
|
|
Communications and cultural transformation in early-modern Europe,"
|
|
Vols. I and II. Elizabeth Eisenstein. Cambridge University Press,
|
|
1979.
|
|
|
|
Copyright (c) 1994, Multimedia Computing Corp., Campbell, Calif.,
|
|
U.S.A. This article is shareware; it may be distributed at no charge,
|
|
whole and unaltered, including this notice. If you enjoy reading it
|
|
and would like to encourage free distribution of more like it, please
|
|
send a contribution to Plugged In (1923 University Ave., East Palo
|
|
Alto, CA 94303), an after-school educational program for children in
|
|
under-served communities.
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
Multimedia Computing Corp. (strategic consulting)
|
|
Campbell, California
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------
|
|
"We are surrounded by insurmountable opportunity." -- Pogo
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Mon, 22 Aug 1994 15:39:23 -0700
|
|
From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
|
|
Subject: File 3--GovAccess.044: changing GovAccess, ballot info, civicnet polici
|
|
es
|
|
|
|
Aug.22, 1994
|
|
|
|
GOVACCESS WILL CHANGE FORMAT FOR FUTURE NOTICES
|
|
|
|
I will be changing the format/style of GovAccess postings after this
|
|
"issue." Hereafter, I will simply transmit or echo items of
|
|
information mostly one at a time, mo'less as I get 'em, rather than
|
|
combining multiple [often-unrelated] items into uniformly-formatted
|
|
'newsletters' like this one.
|
|
|
|
MORE MESSAGES; SHORTER MESSAGES
|
|
This means that you will be getting more separate messages, but each of
|
|
them will be shorter and concern only a single topic.
|
|
|
|
This GovAccess.044 will be the last numbered GovAccess distribution.
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are several reasons for this change:
|
|
|
|
1. I'm gettin' cooked. I think this is a [very] valuable service, and am
|
|
happy to be doin' it, but it's pro bono [contentedly so], and I'm doin' it
|
|
alone ... and it's a real time-suckah!
|
|
This change will help reduce that "sound of time sucking." :-)
|
|
|
|
2. Collecting and formatting multiple goodies for un-periodic newsletter-
|
|
format retransmission is delay-prone, and some of this stuff is highly
|
|
time-sensitive. There have been multiple instances in the past half-year
|
|
when I simply coudn't/didn't distribute information as fast as was needed.
|
|
Firing msgs off with minimal diddling will fire 'em faster.
|
|
|
|
3. Many may find it more useful for items to arrive singly, rather than in
|
|
the unrelated globollas of my current and past GovAccess postings. That way,
|
|
ya can save whatcha find interesting without having to cut-n-paste, and flush
|
|
what you find boring, easily and quickly.
|
|
Electrons are *so* easy to recycle. :-)
|
|
|
|
4. For some years, Dave Farber [farber@cis.upenn.edu] has been distributing
|
|
several-or-more messages per day about whatever varied topics interest him to
|
|
his large "interesting-people" list (which could more-accurately be called
|
|
"interested-people").
|
|
It has proven easy, fast and useful to those who receive it.
|
|
|
|
(Most of Farber's traffic concerns net issues, expecially net-related policy
|
|
issues - but he often includes wildly-random exotic items of interest. He's
|
|
an outstanding self-inflicted net-surfing Editor Extraordinare!. If you have
|
|
the time to try it out for a bit, ask him to add you to his distrib list.)
|
|
|
|
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
|
|
|
|
CALIFORNIA BALLOT "PAMPHLET" NOW AVAILABLE ONLINE
|
|
|
|
As what may be another net 'first,' California's acting Secretary of State,
|
|
Tony Miller, has arranged to make the volumous content of the state's
|
|
ballot pamphlet available online. His Deputy SoS just called this morn to
|
|
say that it is now available to anyone who can use Internet ftp or gopher
|
|
at secstate.public.ca.gov .
|
|
Yet another advantage of *modern* mass information-access: The pre-landfill
|
|
*paper* ballot pamphlets won't arrive in voters' snailmail boxes until late
|
|
September.
|
|
Check id oudt! - and send your comments to Miller and his staff at
|
|
comments@secstate.public.ca.gov . [And it it is in any iota imperfect,
|
|
let him know gently and give him a chance to improve it. Miller *is*
|
|
*strongly* dedicated to opening up his records to online public access.]
|
|
|
|
[Do you know of any other state jurisdiction that has done this, via the
|
|
*public* nets, i.e. the Internet? If so, please tell jwarren@well.com .]
|
|
|
|
&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
|
|
|
|
CONTROLLING COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION IN COMMUNITY/CIVIC NETWORKS
|
|
|
|
[I recently transmitted this to a number of folks who are planning how
|
|
best to create/implement a civic network for the communities of Palo Alto,
|
|
Calif. The question had been raised of whether a discussion group or
|
|
listserv that would be open to public commentary by community members
|
|
should be moderated. Sez I -- ]
|
|
|
|
The experience in Santa Monica's PEN system (the oldest city-run civic net
|
|
in the nation) was that unmoderated community-discussions were soon
|
|
dominated by a small minority who had lots of time, fast fingers and a
|
|
tenacious willingness to vigorously trash anyone who dared to disagree with
|
|
them - a result that is predictable to anyone who has spent much time
|
|
online. The PEN folks said it chased *lots* of people out of their
|
|
"immoderate" discussions.
|
|
|
|
I've suggested that the most appropriate approach - particularly for
|
|
city-operated or egalitarian systems, that have at-least implicit mandates
|
|
of free speech and free assembly - is to offer *both* an unmoderated area
|
|
or list (sort of an electronic Hyde Park where any luminary or looney can
|
|
spout forth, unfettered) AND moderated areas/lists of two types --
|
|
1. A "auto-moderated" list where anyone can say anything, but only for
|
|
a limited number of bytes and only once per time-period (day? week?), and
|
|
2. A *set* of fully-moderated lists, absolutely-controlled by each list's
|
|
moderator -- but where any person who desires to set up such a list and be
|
|
its moderator can do so.
|
|
|
|
The auto-moderated list is analogous to a city-council meeting in which all
|
|
members of the public have an opportunity to speak, but are given only a
|
|
limited amount of time. It has the advantage of not needing a human
|
|
moderator, if the appropriate software is available to auto-truncate
|
|
over-long postings and auto-reject (*with* explanation!) postings in excess
|
|
of the specified time-period. [But, do be wary of SMOP - Simple Matter of
|
|
Programming. The sofware may or may not be available, and *does* have some
|
|
design complexities.]
|
|
|
|
The set of automatically self-created, moderated lists is analogous to
|
|
permitting any community group to convene its own private meeting in an
|
|
open public meeting facility, but nonetheless fully control and chair its
|
|
own meeting. Those that are "good" or "interesting" meetings that are
|
|
fairly moderated will be well-attended. Those that are space-case
|
|
dictatorships (eye of the beholders) will have a membership of not-many, but
|
|
nonetheless meet the democratic mandate of equal *opportunity* for access.
|
|
|
|
Oh -- and now that I've mentioned the "a" word -- "access" -- just one
|
|
observation: *THE* most serious access barriers and inequities - BY FAR! -
|
|
are (1) the inability to read and/or communicate in writing, and (2) the
|
|
inability to type. *ALL* other access inequities *pale* in comparison.
|
|
(I ain't sayin' that the cost and availability access problems shouldn't be
|
|
addressed. I'm just pointing out the *real* access problems.)
|
|
|
|
Apologies for the length. [but, those who know me, know this *is* brief :-) ]
|
|
--jim
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Mon, 22 Aug 1994 15:29:43 -0700
|
|
From: email list server <listserv@SUNNYSIDE.COM>
|
|
Subject: File 4--EPIC Statement on Wiretap Telephony Bill
|
|
|
|
EPIC Statement on Wiretap Bill
|
|
|
|
|
|
*DISTRIBUTE WIDELY*
|
|
|
|
EPIC Statement on Digital Telephony Wiretap Bill
|
|
|
|
The digital telephony bill recently introduced in Congress is the
|
|
culmination of a process that began more than two years ago, when the
|
|
Federal Bureau of Investigation first sought legislation to ensure its
|
|
ability to conduct electronic surveillance through mandated design
|
|
changes in the nation's information infrastructure. We have monitored
|
|
that process closely and have scrutinized the FBI's claims that
|
|
remedial legislation is necessary. We have sponsored conferences at
|
|
which the need for legislation was debated with the participation of
|
|
the law enforcement community, the telecommunications industry and
|
|
privacy advocates. We have sought the disclosure of all relevant
|
|
information through a series of requests under the Freedom of
|
|
Information Act. Having thus examined the issue, EPIC remains
|
|
unconvinced of the necessity or advisability of the pending bill.
|
|
|
|
As a threshold matter, we do not believe that a compelling case
|
|
has been made that new communications technologies hamper the ability
|
|
of law enforcement agencies to execute court orders for electronic
|
|
surveillance. For more than two years, we have sought the public
|
|
disclosure of any FBI records that might document such a problem. To
|
|
date, no such documentation has been released. Without public scrutiny
|
|
of factual information on the nature and extent of the alleged
|
|
technological impediments to surveillance, the FBI's claims remain
|
|
anecdotal and speculative. Indeed, the telecommunications industry
|
|
has consistently maintained that it is unaware of any instances in
|
|
which a communications carrier has been unable to comply with law
|
|
enforcement's requirements. Under these circumstances, the nation
|
|
should not embark upon a costly and potentially dangerous re-design of
|
|
its telecommunications network solely to protect the viability of fewer
|
|
than 1000 annual surveillances against wholly speculative impediments.
|
|
|
|
We also believe that the proposed legislation would establish a
|
|
dangerous precedent for the future. While the FBI claims that the
|
|
legislation would not enhance its surveillance powers beyond those
|
|
contained in existing law, the pending bill represents a fundamental
|
|
change in the law's approach to electronic surveillance and police
|
|
powers generally. The legislation would, for the first time, mandate
|
|
that our means of communications must be designed to facilitate
|
|
government interception. While we as a society have always recognized
|
|
law enforcement's need to obtain investigative information upon
|
|
presentation of a judicial warrant, we have never accepted the notion
|
|
that the success of such a search must be guaranteed. By mandating the
|
|
success of police searches through the re-design of the telephone
|
|
network, the proposed legislation breaks troubling new ground. The
|
|
principle underlying the bill could easily be applied to all emerging
|
|
information technologies and be incorporated into the design of the
|
|
National Information Infrastructure. It could also lead to the
|
|
prohibition of encryption techniques other than government-designed
|
|
"key escrow" or "Clipper" type systems.
|
|
|
|
In short, EPIC believes that the proposed digital telephony bill
|
|
raises substantial civil liberties and privacy concerns. The present
|
|
need for the legislation has not been established and its future
|
|
implications are frightening. We therefore call upon all concerned
|
|
individuals and organizations to express their views on the legislation
|
|
to their Congressional representatives. We also urge you to contact
|
|
Rep. Jack Brooks, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, to share
|
|
your opinions:
|
|
|
|
Rep. Jack Brooks
|
|
Chair, House Judiciary Committee
|
|
2138 Rayburn House Office Bldg.
|
|
Washington, DC 20515
|
|
(202) 225-3951 (voice)
|
|
(202) 225-1958 (fax)
|
|
|
|
The bill number is H.R. 4922 in the House and S. 2375 in the Senate. It
|
|
can be referred to as the "FBI Wiretap Bill" in correspondence.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Electronic Privacy Information Center
|
|
666 Pennsylvania Avenue, S.E.
|
|
Suite 301 Washington, DC 20003
|
|
(202) 544-9240 (voice)
|
|
(202) 547-5482 (fax)
|
|
<info@epic.org>
|
|
|
|
EPIC is a project of the Fund for Constitutional Government and Computer
|
|
Professionals for Social Responsibility.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Thu, 13 Aug 1994 22:51:01 CDT
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 5--Cu Digest Header Information (unchanged)
|
|
|
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
|
available at no cost electronically.
|
|
|
|
CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
|
|
|
|
Or, to subscribe, send a one-line message: SUB CUDIGEST your name
|
|
Send it to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET or LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
|
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302)
|
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
|
60115, USA.
|
|
|
|
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 DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
|
|
libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
|
|
the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
|
|
On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
|
|
on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
|
|
and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (203) 832-8441.
|
|
CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
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|
1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
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|
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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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In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32.69.45.51.77 (ringdown)
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UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/
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ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD
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uceng.uc.edu in /pub/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
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wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
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EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud/ (Finland)
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ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
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JAPAN: ftp.glocom.ac.jp /mirror/ftp.eff.org/
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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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End of Computer Underground Digest #6.77
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