891 lines
34 KiB
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891 lines
34 KiB
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Computer underground Digest Wed Mar 29, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 25
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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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Semi-retiring Shadow Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
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Intelligent Agent: David Smith
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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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Monster Editor: Loch Nesshrdlu
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CONTENTS, #7.25 (Wed, Mar 29, 1995)
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File 1--About the CuD Web Homepage
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File 2--Contact your provider on the Communications Decency Act
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File 3--"Hackers Sentences in Telephone Fraud"
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File 4--writing project on Pacific Northwest hackers
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File 5--MISC>cybercafe @ skip
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File 6--Call for Participants in WWW Interdisc. Mailing List
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File 7-- CMC Magazine March Issue
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File 8--WWW> THE NEW COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY LEGAL NET HOME PAGE (fwd)
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File 9--Announce: Telepoetics UK-Chicago event
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File 10--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Mar, 1995)
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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: Wed, 29 Mar, 1995 22:19:43 CST
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From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
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Subject: File 1--About the CuD Web Homepage
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For those inquiring about the CuD homepage: Yes, it's up. You can
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get the back issues of CuD, as well as access to other resources,
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including links to EFF, CPSR, Jim Warren's Goverment Access bulletins,
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Ripco's Homepage, and other links.
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We're still under construction, and we'll be slowing building it up as
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time, space, suggestions, and interests allow.
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Address http://www.soci.niu.edu:80/~cudigest
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Below is a sample from the opening menu:
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===========================
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General CuD Information
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* CuD Indexes
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* CuD Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
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Back Issues of CuD
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* CuDs, Volume 7
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* CuDs, Volume 6
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* CuDs, Volume 5
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* CuDs, Volume 4
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* CuDs, Volume 3
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* CuDs, Volume 2
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* CuDs, Volume 1
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_________________________________________________________________
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Cyber Resource Links
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* NIU Sociology WEB SITE
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* EFF'S WWW Site
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* CPSR's WWW Site
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* NetWork Newsletter
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* Phil Zimmerman Info
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* Information on Jake Baker Case
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* Information on SB 314 (Exon's Senate decency act)
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* Steve Jackon Games Secret Service page & links
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E-Zines and Such
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* John Labovitz's complete E-Zine resource list
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* Jim Warren's GovAcesss
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* Crypt Newsletter
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General information and Resources
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* Background and Analysis of Italian BBS Busts (by Peter Ludlow)
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* Laypersons' Guide to the Freedom of Information Act
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* Background on Church of Scientology and the Net
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Home Pages worth Looking at
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* Voidmstrs Graphic Homepage
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* Mark Atwood's Cyber homepage (info resources)
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Cyber-Publishers' Corner
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* O'Reilly Publishers homepage
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* Computer Manuals Online Bookstore
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 29 Mar 1995 16:34:34 -0500
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From: Stephen Sutton <steve@ODIN.CC.PDX.EDU>
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Subject: File 2--Contact your provider on the Communications Decency Act
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A Cyber Liberties Alert
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from the ACLU
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Urge Your Online Service Providers to Fight the Modified Exon/Gorton
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Amendment!
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As you know from our previous Cyber Liberties Alerts, Congress is moving to
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dramatically restrict the free speech and privacy rights of online users.
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On March 23, 1995, the Senate Commerce Committee approved the Exon/Gorton
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bill (the so-called "Communications Decency Act", also known as S.314) as
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an amendment to the Telecommunications Competition and Deregulation Act of
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1995.
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While the proposed legislation was modified to include some defenses from
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criminal liability for online service providers, users are still very much
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at risk of both massive fines and imprisonment.
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The ACLU has written an open letter to online providers, copied below, that
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urges them to wage a full-scale fight for the rights of online users. Some
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providers are still actively standing up for your rights while others may
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not be. There are still opportunities to fight the legislation in both
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House and Senate, but the fight will not succeed without the concerted
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efforts of online users, civil libertarians, and online service providers.
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Remember that the Senate Commerce Committee approved the Exon/Gorton
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amendment despite opposition letters and petition signatures from over
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100,000 online users.
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ACT NOW:
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Write to your online service providers and ask them to make a public
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declaration against the Exon/Gorton amendment and to push aggressively for
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the greatest amount of free speech and privacy for online users. (A sample
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letter is attached.)
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Please copy your letter to the following e-mail address: infoaclu@aclu.org.
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In addition, continue to voice your opposition to the Exon/Gorton Amendment
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to members of the Senate Commerce Committee and your own senators. See our
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previous ACLU Cyber Liberties Alerts for instructions on how to reach the
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Senate: gopher://aclu.org:6601.
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-------------------------------------------------------
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[COPY]
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An Open Letter to Online Providers Regarding the Exon/Gorton
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Amendment
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March 28, 1995
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On March 23, 1995, the Senate Commerce Committee voted to violate the civil
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liberties of every present and future member of the online community. The
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so-called "Communications Decency Act" was modified to include some
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defenses from criminal liability -- but these are available only to online
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service providers. In fact, other modifications made the legislation worse
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for users. The Exon/Gorton amendment remains a blatant violation of the
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free speech and privacy guarantees of the Constitution.
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We therefore urge all online providers to continue (or, if necessary, to
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begin) a full-scale fight for the rights of online users against the
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government interference embodied in the Exon/Gorton amendment.
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The Exon/Gorton amendment subjects online users to surveillance and imposes
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criminal penalties for messages deemed by some government official to be
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"indecent, lewd, lascivious or filthy" -- all communications protected by
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the First Amendment. By criminalizing the content of private messages, it
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would invite active interference in the basic speech of everyone using a
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telecommunications device.
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The amendment was attached to the Telecommunications Competitionand
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Deregulation Act of 1995, which was approved by the Commerce Committee and
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is being sent for consideration to the Senate floor. There are still
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opportunities to fight the legislation in both House and Senate, but the
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fight will not succeed without the concerted efforts of online users, civil
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libertarians, and online service providers.
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Sexual expression has been a fundamental part of human communication from
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the beginning of recorded history. The online community is no different.
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There is no question that talk about sex and the exchange of sexual images
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has contributed to the vibrant quality of online communications, and an
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increasing number of online subscribers. And Congress need not ban
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constitutionally protected forms of speech in order to protect children
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from sexually explicit materials.
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Interactive technologies allow users -- including concerned parents -- to
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have more control over content than any previous communications medium.
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Many of the traditional arguments for restricting sexually expressive
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material, such as radio/TV's assault on unwilling listeners or the fear
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that a child will wander into an adult bookstore, simply do not apply to
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interactive technologies.
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Moreover, the Exon/Gorton amendment's censorial sweep encompasses content
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that has nothing to do with sex -- anything deemed "indecent" or "filthy"
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-- subjective terms that could apply to any message outside the mainstream.
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The amendment would make the online community one of the most censored
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segments of communications media when logic dictates that it should be the
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least censored.
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The Exon/Gorton amendment also subjects an industry that has blossomed
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without government control to an unprecedented amount of interference and
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intrusion.
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We applaud those online providers who have both publicly declared their
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opposition to the Exon/Gorton amendment and who continue to fight for the
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constitutional rights of their subscribers. These providers recognize that
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no one in the online community will benefit from an amendment that
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seriously threatens the free flow of information and the diversity of
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content transmitted over online networks.
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To achieve the liberating potential of the information superhighway,
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Congress must ensure that interactive technologies enhance rather than
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stifle democratic values like user choice.
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We therefore call upon ALL online service providers to join online users
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and civil libertarians in the fight against the Exon/Gorton amendment. We
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urge online service providers to make a public declaration against the
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amendment and to push aggressively for the greatest amount of free speech
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and privacy for online users.
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American Civil Liberties Union
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"Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty"
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------------------------------------------------
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SAMPLE LETTER
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Dear [name of each of your online service providers]:
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I am writing, as a user of your service, to urge you to make a public
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declaration against the Exon/Gorton amendment to the Telecommunications
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Competition and Deregulation Act of 1995. While providing defenses from
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criminal liability for online providers, the Exon proposal leaves online
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users at risk of large fines and imprisonment for constitutionally
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protected speech.
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I urge you to:
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*Make a public declaration against the Exon proposal.
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*Aggressively lobby the Senate to vote against the Exon proposal, and
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aggressively lobby to prevent similar proposals in the House version of the
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telecommunications reform legislation.
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*Continue to push for the greatest amount of free speech and privacy for
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online users.
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Sincerely,
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[name]
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-----------------------------------------------
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The American Civil Liberties Union is a nationwide, nonpartisan
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organization of over 275,000 members. Now in its 75th year, the ACLU is
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devoted exclusively to protecting the civil liberties guaranteed by the
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Constitution and the Bill of Rights, whereever these liberties are at risk
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-- in a bookstore, in school, on the street, in cyberspace, wherever. The
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ACLU does this through legislative action, public education and litigation.
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--
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ACLU Free Reading Room | American Civil Liberties Union
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gopher://aclu.org:6601 | 132 W. 43rd Street, NY, NY 10036
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mailto:infoaclu@aclu.org| "Eternal vigilance is the
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ftp://ftp.pipeline.com | price of liberty"
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--
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ACLU Free Reading Room | American Civil Liberties Union
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gopher://aclu.org:6601 | 132 W. 43rd Street, NY, NY 10036
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mailto:infoaclu@aclu.org| "Eternal vigilance is the
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ftp://ftp.pipeline.com | price of liberty"
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------------------------------
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Date: Sun, 26 Mar 1995 21:33:24 -0600
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From: jthomas@SUN.SOCI.NIU.EDU(Jim Thomas)
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Subject: File 3--"Hackers Sentences in Telephone Fraud"
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From: Chicago Tribune, 26 March, 1995: Section 1: p. 12
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WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.--Two computer hackers have been sentenced to
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federal prison for a scheme that defrauded long-distance telephone
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carriers of more than $28 million. Ivey James Lay, 29, and Frank
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Ronald Stanton, 22, were part of a ring that stole credit card numbers
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from MCI, where Lay was an employee, the government said. Lay was
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sentenced Friday to 3 years and 2 months in prison; Stanton was
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sentenced to one year. The credit-card numbers were used to charge
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long-distance calls to computer bulletin-board systems and computer
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chat lines. They were part of a group that bought and sold at least
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50,000 numbers from 1992 until the summer of 1994.
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------------------------------
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Date: Mon, 27 Mar 1995 15:00:43 -0800
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From: leej@ELWHA.EVERGREEN.EDU
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Subject: File 4--writing project on Pacific Northwest hackers
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Dear Editors,
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I'm a fourth year student at Evergreen State College and am looking
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for hackers who would like to participate in an ethnography or oral
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interview project. The program I'm in is called "True Stories and how
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they are told" and the project is worth 8 quarter credit hours.
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I'm currently looking to interview 4 to 8 people who live in Western
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Washington and are accessible by bus (obviously, I don't have a car).
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I'm interested in those who do not identify themselves with the media
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stereotype of the teenage (Elvira skinned) boy who is allergic to
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sunlight.
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The interviews can last from one to four hours and I can sign
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anominity forms if desired. As a woman, I'd like to interview at
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least one woman hacker but realize that the overwhelming majority are
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male. Originally, I had written editor Emmanuel Goldstein (at "2600")
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for help but his spring issue has already gone out and I was unable to
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put in a reader ad for my project.
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Participants may talk about anything of concern to them including
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their families, philosphy, privacy, and favorite color.
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If you know of anyone who would be interested (and who is a regular
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reader of "2600"), please let me know how I can contact them, or you
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may give them my e-mail address at "leej@elwha.evergreen.edu".
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If you have any questions or know of other groups (including BBS) that
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I can contact, please let me know.
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Thank you,
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Joomi Lee
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 28 Mar 1995 16:31:19 +0000
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From: heath@CYBERCAFE.ORG(heath bunting)
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Subject: File 5--MISC>cybercafe @ skip
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cybercafe @ skip
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technology access centre
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in an attempt to combat corporate organised irrationality
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cybercafe have opened a disorganised ration centre,
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located in central london just off the information superhighway.
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people will be able to drop by and either upload or download
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hardware/firmware/software into/from the skip
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people will not be charged for the time they spend
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routing around in the rubbish or for anything they may find
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if you cannot make it in person please post items to:
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British Telecom Skip
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Bankside
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London SE1
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UK
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details of the latest skip contents will be
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available on cybercafe bbs 44 171 439 3998
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heath
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cybercafe aims to promote/create spaces/situations in which
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people can create/behave/express/experience
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in ways unavailable in currently existing places
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Domains of activity radio/tv/telephones/fax/
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mailart/flyposting/performance/computer.
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=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= uphold dignity/creativity =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
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heath@cybercafe.org vox 44 171 437 8584
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http://www.cybercafe.org/cybercafe/ mbl 44 374 823 840
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flat 4, 116 shaftesbury ave bbs 44 171 439 3998
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london w1v 7dj UK vms 44 171 437 8584
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 28 Mar 1995 12:31:46 -0600
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From: Gerald Anderson <gander@HARVEY.COX.SMU.EDU>
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Subject: File 6--Call for Participants in WWW Interdisc. Mailing List
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WANTED: Participants for a mailing list. 20-30 individuals who enjoy
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trouble shooting issues for the sake of doing it. Specifically I would
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like to find individuals interested in Government, Sociology, Politics,
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Law, Economics, and Business. These are just interest areas, you do not
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have to be an expert in these fields (I'm not). Just be a 'thinker' and have
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an interest in what we are trying to accomplish.
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PROJECT: To debate, discuss and author a document to be published on the
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WWW. This document will be a more or less academic project to create a
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Constitution for governing a country in todays cultural, technical,
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economic, etc environment, with the goal of creating a Constitution that
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would have staying power far into the future. All participants will be
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given credit for authoring and it will (should) be a fun project.
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Finally, this is a study, not a revolutionary document in any way. I am
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not interested in anybody who would use this project to
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forward any political agenda. When/if the project is complete I think it
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would be fun to run some case studies based on real news events to test
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practicality and to generally see how good of job we did.
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SCOPE: This document will primarily be philosophical. I want to start
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out at the most fundamental definitions of what government should be. As
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interest and our whims take us we could cover Criminal Law, Business Law,
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Cultural issues, Trade, External Relations, ad infinitum.
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INTERESTED?: Please send an email to gander@mail.cox.smu.edu (if you see
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this on a usenet newsgroup I WILL NOT be checking these groups for
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responses YOU MUST EMAIL ME). In this email please include your name,
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email address, why you are interested in this project, and how your
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interests apply to this project. I am planning to begin list serving the
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first week of April with the question what should be the fundamental goal
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of government, and verification of and additions to (?) the inalienable
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rights as currently documented. Once this forum is started it will be a
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closed discussion with new members added by invitation only. If you are
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interested respond NOW.
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ME: As an avid science fiction fan and trouble shooter I have always been
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interested in how s/f writers handled the governments of the future.
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During some recent studies I have been wondering how our government will
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apply our current constitution to current technological trends in
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communications (ie, the net). History has shown (IMHO) that major changes
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in communication have always proven significant to government. I am
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interested in discussion on how much our current government (and the
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government of the near future) is equiped via our Constitution and current
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policies to deal with this new communication medium where a very real
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culture is being formed and laws cannot be so readily enforcable due
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to cultural/legal differences.
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IF THIS SOUNDS INTERESTING TO YOU PLEASE RESPOND, I THINK THIS COULD BE A
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LOT OF FUN AND MAY EVEN BE ABLE VIA OUR TEXT TO OPEN SOME EYES TO ISSUES
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THAT WILL BE FORTHCOMING IN OUR EVOLUTION AS A TECHNO SOCIETY/CULTURE. IF YOU
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HAVE ANY MORE QUESTIONS DON'T HESITATE TO EMAIL ME AT gander@mail.cox.smu.edu.
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Thanks for your time,
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Gerald D. Anderson
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------------------------------------------------------------
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Gerald D. Anderson
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Assistant Director, Computing Services
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Edwin L. Cox School of Business
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Southern Methodist University
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(214)-768-3250 gander@mail.cox.smu.edu
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**** This message represents the views of Gerald D. Anderson and unless
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explicitly stated does not represent the views of my colleagues or the
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policies and views of Southern Methodist University.
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------------------------------
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Date: Wed, 1 Mar 1995 06:28:08 -0500
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From: Kevin Douglas Hunt <huntk@RPI.EDU>
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Subject: File 7-- CMC Magazine March Issue
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The March Issue of COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION MAGAZINE
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has hit the Web. Look for it here:
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http://sunsite.unc.edu/cmc/mag/current/toc.html
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Here's a look at what's inside the March issue:
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COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION MAGAZINE
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ISSN 1076-027X / Volume 2, Number 3 / March 1, 1995
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___________________________________________________________________
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Editor's Page
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COVER STORY
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E-Literacies: Politexts, Hypertexts, and Other Cultural
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Formations in the Late Age of Print
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In her novel Pintamento, Lillian Hellman advises her best
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friend Julia to "Take Chances!!" Now, it's your turn. Writer,
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educator, artist, and hypertext theorist Nancy Kaplan presents us
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with an intriguing challenge to explore the creative
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possibilities of hypertext.
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CMC NEWS
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Are You Decent?
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Senator James Exon's new Senate Bill, the Communications Decency
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Act of 1995, is causing an uproar in the online community. Some
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netizens are calling it the greatest challenge yet to the First
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Amendment. Kirsten Cooke's news report sheds light on the issue
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and the varied responses to it.
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The Cutting Edge: News in Brief
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Chief Correspondent Chris Lapham rounds up the latest in CMC
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News: the seizure of a Finnish Postnews server by Interpol, the
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resurrection of the WebAnts project, and the first G7
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International Communications Policy conference.
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FEATURES
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Book Excerpt:
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Computer-Mediated Communication and Community
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We are creating new worlds, and our imaginations and thoughts
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will be the forces that colonize the electronic frontier: Steve
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Jones's romantic vision of a wired society is artfully presented
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in this introductory chapter from his new book of essays,
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CyberSociety: Computer-Mediated Communication and Community.
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Book Excerpt:
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Computer-Mediated Communication and the Online Classroom in
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Higher Education
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A look at the introduction to the second of three volumes by Zane
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Berge and Mauri Collins, which examines computers in the
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educational environment.
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Well-Constructed Gophers: Is Your Gopher Golden?
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The Internet Gopher has proven to be a popular tool for
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delivering information, but how do you make a "golden" Gopher?
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Jeff Kosokoff presents a schema for appraising and improving
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Gopher servers.
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Electronic Feedback: CMC Magazine Visits The Netoric Cafe
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You are cordially invited to "eavesdrop" on the virtual debates
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that followed our January special issue, "Previews, Predictions,
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Prognostications." Various "technorhetoricians" met in MOOspace
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to discuss pedagogical issues with Netoric founders Tari
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Fanderclai and Greg Siering.
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REVIEW
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Cybersmith: Tales of the First Coffee Shop on the Infobahn
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CMC Magazine Graphics Editor Jason Teague reviews what he calls
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"the latest evolution of cyberspace," a coffee-klatch
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establishment in Cambridge, Mass. called "Cybersmith." It's a
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place where technojunkies go to combine the two C's which keep
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them all moving -- computers and coffee, but in a public space
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rather than a basement apartment.
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DEPARTMENTS
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From the Nets . . .
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Women on the Web by Lisa Schmeiser
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Of Style and Substance by Lisa Schmeiser
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Mbox
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Vic Moberg responds to Laura Gurak's February Last Link.
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The Last Link:
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Ubiquitous Computing vs. Radical Privacy: A Reconsideration of
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the Future
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Consider Porush's Law: "Participating in the newest
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communications technologies becomes compulsory if you want to
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remain part of the culture." David Porush embarks on a Talmudic
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journey toward understanding "future culture" in his response to
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Steve Doheny-Farina's October, 1994 Last Link.
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_______________________________________________________
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Kevin Hunt (huntk@rpi.edu)
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Assistant Editor, *Computer-Mediated Communication Magazine*
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Date: Fri, 24 Mar 1995 00:17:31 -0600 (CST)
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From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM>
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Subject: File 8--WWW> THE NEW COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY LEGAL NET HOME PAGE (fwd)
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
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From--lstreet@atl1.america.net (Larry Street)
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Date--Thu, 16 Mar 1995 17:11:27 -0500
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ANNOUNCING THE NEW COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY LEGAL NET HOME PAGE
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==========================================================
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Morris, Manning & Martin announces the Computer Technology Legal Net home
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page on the World Wide Web.
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Morris, Manning & Martin is an Atlanta, Georgia law firm that represents
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many computer and technology companies.
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The Computer Technology Legal Net home page should be interesting to anyone
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interested in the quickly changing area of computer law.
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The Web URL address is: http://www.com/mmm/mmmhome.html
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The Computer Technology Legal Net home page includes the following information:
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1. Computer Law Articles and Recent Case Summaries
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2. Free Computer Law Email Updates
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3. List of Available Computer & Technology Jobs and Resumes
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Since the home page is new we do not have any jobs or resumes listed but
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the home page now provides an easy method to send by email job and resume
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information for inclusion on the new List. We expect to have some jobs and
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resumes listed soon.
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The first edition of the Computer Law Email Updates is scheduled to go out
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within the next two weeks. Anyone who would like to subscribe should send
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an email to lstreet@america.net with their name, company name, mailing
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address, and internet email address.
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The Computer Technology Legal Net now contains the following articles
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written by Morris, Manning & Martin attorneys:
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DISCLOSURE IN TECHNOLOGY FINANCE TRANSACTIONS
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BY JOHN C. YATES, ESQ. AND MARK V. BENVENISTE, ESQ.
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HIDDEN PITFALLS IN COLLECTING INFORMATION
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THE FINE LINE BETWEEN FAIR COMPETITION AND BREAKING THE LAW
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BY LAUREEN E. MCGURK
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HOW TO BUILD THE INFOBAHN:
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FORM A STRATEGIC ALLIANCE
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By EVELYN ASHLEY
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IMPORTANT PROVISIONS OF PROFESSIONAL SERVICES AGREEMENTS
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By LARRY STREET
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EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION - PRACTICAL LEGAL POINTERS
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By JOHN C. YATES
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BOMBS AND BYTES
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By JOHN C. YATES and PAUL H. ARNE
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DOING BUSINESS IN THE UNITED STATES
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By CHARLES R. BEAUDROT, Jr. and EVELYN A. ASHLEY
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BUYING A COMPUTER SYSTEM:
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GETTING WHAT YOU NEED IN NEGOTIATIONS
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By RICHARD L. HAURY, Jr. and PAUL H. ARNE
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PUTTING DOWN THE COMPETITION
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BY JOHN C. YATES<p>
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ENVIRONMENTAL CONCERNS ASSOCIATED WITH
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FINANCING AND OWNING COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
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BY GERALD POUNCEY
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We have over thirty more articles and court decision descriptions that we
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are currently editing to place on the Computer Technology Legal Net soon.
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Please visit our Computer Technology Legal Net home page and send an email
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subscribing to the free Computer Law Email Updates.
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Thanks, Larry Street lstreet@america.net
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 28 Mar 1995 20:46:05 -0800
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From: sparky@ECAFE.ORG
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Subject: File 9--Announce: Telepoetics UK-Chicago event
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CAFELINK
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presents a TELEPOETICS event
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Sunday April 9th
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Hosted in Cambridge, UK, by Mark Cheverton,
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and in Chicago, USA, by Kurt Heintz.
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A live videophone linkup between the Underground Media Lab
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in Chicago and the CB1 cafe in Cambridge, England, as part of Chicago's
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fourth Poetry Video Festival, sponsored in Chicago by The Guild Complex. Poets
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at both ends will be performing to an audience on two continents, linking
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both venues and cultures.
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The event will commence at 7:30pm BST (1:30pm CDT, USA) on
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the 9th of April. If you intend to come along please drop us an EMail
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so we can keep track of numbers.
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Chicago will also be connecting with the Western Front arts
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space in Vancouver at 9:00pm CDT (7:00pm PDT), for more information
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contact the people involved.
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* What is Telepoetics?
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Telepoetics is a direct cultural link built upon low cost video
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conferencing technology. Poets and performers exchange their art between
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two distant sites to form an artistic communion across cultural and
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geographic borders.
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Although videophones are used regularly across the world, the
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technology is still expensive. The Telepoetics group use basic and
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cheap video technology to join sites for cultural exchanges,
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the quality may not be as good as the top of the range systems seen
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elsewhere, but it has the advantage of being within the reach of the
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poets who've built the Telepoetics events heretofore in Canada and
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the US, and in reach of the general public.
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For a deeper background on the Telepoetics movement, visit Kurt
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Heintz's homepage on the World Wide Web.
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http://WWW.tezcat.com/~malachit/deposit/
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* What is Cafelink?
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Cafelink is a recently formed organisation which brings
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together Internet cafes, video experts and anyone involved in
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communication worldwide. Our aim is to foster links with groups
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such as Telepoetics, using the Internet and other communication
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technologies to bring together these geographically diverse sites
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and encourage exposure to other cultures.
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Contact: sparky@ecafe.org
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* What is the Poetry Video Festival?
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Organized in Chicago in 1991, the National Poetry Video Festival
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has showcased poetry in electronic media on an ever-widening program. Each
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year poetry videos are gathered, juried, and screened before broader
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audiences. This year, the Festival will showcase numerous works of poets
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and media artists from the United States and Canada ( its first
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"international" screening ), and continues its commitment to literate
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video produced by and for young people. The Festival will afford local
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audiences a sneak preview of the series "The United States of Poetry",
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scheduled to debut nationally on PBS ( USA ) produced by poet and director
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Bob Holman of New York ( The NuYorican Poets' Cafe ).
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Telepoetics returns to this year's Festival with its first
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international connections to both Cambridge, England, ( the CB1 Cafe ) and
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Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, ( the Edgewise Cafe ) from Chicago.
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The Sites
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* U-lab Chicago:
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U-Lab is the guerilla media-arts operation of Kurt Heintz, a
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poet, videographer, and performance artist living in Chicago. U-Lab has
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co-hosted Telepoetics events with Los Angeles, Boston, and Asheville ( North
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Carolina, USA ). U-Lab is teamed with the Guild Complex, Chicago's
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premiere literary arts organization, to co-produce Telepoetics for the
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Poetry Video Festival. For directions and reservations to Telepoetics in
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Chicago, contact Guild Complex director Michael Warr at: 312-278-2210.
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Chicago venue:
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Zebra Crossing Theater
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4223 N Lincoln Ave
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Chicago IL 60618
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USA
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voice: 312-248-6401
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fax: 312-248-6315 ... fax line to be used for video
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Featured artists from Chicago for UK linkup:
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Greg Gillam - Words to Swallow Poets; contributor to
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Hyphen literary/arts magazine
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Lucy Anderton - Allen/Anderton Arts Action; poet; and
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Welsh-English American
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Dave Awl - Poet and 5-year veteran of the renowned "Too much
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light makes the baby go blind", a show of 30 plays in 60 minutes.
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Featured artists from Chicago for Vancouver linkup:
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Donna Marie Branton - performance poet
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Bryn Magnus - Jellyeye Performance Ensemble; writer;
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actor; performer
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Tyehimba Jess - winner of the Poem for Accra ( Ghana )
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competition
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Jeannine Deubel - poet, photographer
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* The Western Front, Vancouver:
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Edgewise Cafe at The Western Front ( host venue )
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2057 E First Ave
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Vancouver BC V5N 1B6
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Canada
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* CB1 Cambridge:
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CB1 is a second-hand bookshop and computer cafe in Cambridge,
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England. We have been open for two months, with Internet connections
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(via Cityscape) on three Next stations. We host regular poetry readings
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and discussion evenings; our aim is to provide a congenial space in which
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to explore the various forms of conversation between people - through
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books, through performances, through the electronic media, and face to face.
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CB1 Cafe, Daniel Sturdy - proprietor
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32 Mill Road,
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Cambridge,
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United Kingdom
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Our home page is at http://www.gold.net/cb1/
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--
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Mark Cheverton (sparky@ecafe.org)
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Cafelink Founder
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------------------------------
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------------------------------
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Date: Sun, 19 Mar 1995 22:51:01 CDT
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From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 10--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Mar, 1995)
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Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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available at no cost electronically.
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CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
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Or, to subscribe, send a one-line message: SUB CUDIGEST your name
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Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
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The 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, USA.
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To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB <your name>
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Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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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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and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (203) 832-8441.
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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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EUROPE: In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
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In ITALY: Bits against the Empire BBS: +39-464-435189
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In LUXEMBOURG: ComNet BBS: +352-466893
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UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/
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ftp://www.rcac.tdi.co.jp/pub/mirror/CuD
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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Cu Digest WWW site at:
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu:80/~cudigest
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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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End of Computer Underground Digest #7.25
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************************************
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