904 lines
41 KiB
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904 lines
41 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Tue Dec 12, 1996 Volume 7 : Issue 96
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: 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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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #7.96 (Tue, Dec 12, 1996)
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File 1--Re: Mike Godwin on Internet censorship. (fwd)
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File 2--NYT: Steele Op-Ed on Scientology and Internet Censorship
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File 3--Muzzling the Internet (TIME/Julian Dibbell)
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File 4--E-mail addresses of U.S. Senators
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File 5--Child Pornography and Beastiality
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File 6--French email directory soonly available
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File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 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: Tue, 12 Dec 1995 18:33:43 -0800 (PST)
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From: Mike Godwin <mnemonic@sun.soci.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 1--Re: Mike Godwin on Internet censorship. (fwd)
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Speech at San Francisco Rally
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By Mike Godwin
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Listen. Take a moment now and listen. (Sound of ripping paper.) That's the
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sound of what the United States Congress has been doing to the
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Constitution in the last few months, all in the name of protecting our
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children.
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But do they really care about our children? I doubt it.
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What they really care about is getting votes, getting good publicity,
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getting called "pro-family". And since the religious right has seized
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much of the high ground of pro-children-and-family rhetoric, guess who
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they're afraid of. The religious-right folks hope to use
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family-and-children rhetoric to scare Congress into making sexual content
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on the Net more difficult for *everybody* to create, to send, or to find
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-- not just children.
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When the highest lawmaking body in the land meets to consider new
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legislation, we require them to inform themselves and to act in accordance
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with the Constitution. We elect people to Congress because we hope that
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they will be able to act rationally and intelligently. But were their
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votes on this so-called "indecency" legislation grounded in an intelligent
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appraisal of the technology and functions of the Net? Were they based on
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knowledge and reflection? The short answer to these questions is "No." The
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votes of our Senators and Representatives were driven, for the most part,
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by fear and ignorance.
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Although I first became a lawyer in Texas, last Thursday I was sworn in as
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a member of the state bar of California. Like all the other new admittees,
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I echoed the words of the attorney at the front of the auditorium. In
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unison, we all swore to dedicate ourselves to upholding the United States
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Constitution.
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This oath is not terribly different in wording or philosophy from that
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taken by each member of the United States House of Representatives, or
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each member of the United States Senate, or the Governor of any state, or
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the President of the United States. We have all sworn to uphold the
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Constitution.
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Part of the Constitution is the First Amendment. And whenever you think
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about the First Amendment, the first thing you should remember is that it
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was designed by the Framers of the Constitution to protect offensive
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speech and offensive speakers. After all, no one ever tries to ban Mister
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Rogers.
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And this was what I was thinking about as I stood in that auditorium and
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took my oath -- that I was once again swearing to uphold the First
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Amendment and the Constitution of which it is a part.
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But where are all the Representatives and Senators who have sworn to
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uphold the First Amendment, I asked myself? Now that we face the greatest
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attack on the freedom of speech of the common man that this nation has
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ever seen, where are the other defenders of the Constitution? Are they
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educating themselves about the new medium of the Net? Have they read a
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word of Howard Rheingold's book on virtual communities? Have they logged
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in themselves? Have they surfed the Web? Have made a friend on the Net? Or
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are they satisfied with doing something that doesn't require any online
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time at all -- passing bad laws?
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One senator from my state, Dianne Feinstein, is ready to ban information
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from the Net that is legal in every library -- perhaps because she's under
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the impression that her measure will convince voters that she's helped
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prevent another Oklahoma City bombing without costing her anything. But
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it cost *us* something -- it costs us the freedom that our forefathers
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shed their blood to bequeath to us. Here's the sound of what Senator
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Feinstein is ready to do to the First Amendment. (Sound of ripping paper.)
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And what about Senator Jim Exon from Nebraska? Is it any surprise that
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Senator Exon gets all nervous and antsy when interviewers ask him -- the
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man who authored sweeping anti-net, pro-censorship legislation -- whether
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he personally has logged on? Is it any surprise that, for Senator Exon,
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the Net is just another place to make an obscene phone call? Here's the
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sound of what Senator Exon is ready to do to the First Amendment. (Sound
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of ripping paper.)
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And the issue of shutting down free speech on the Net is hardly one that
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divides liberals and conservatives. Here's the sound of what Rep. Pat
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Schroeder, a liberal Democrat, and Senator Orrin Hatch, a conservative
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Republican, have already voted to do to the First Amendment. (Sound of
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ripping paper.)
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We may also hear, of course, the occasional voice of someone to whom the
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Constitution still has meaning. Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont and Speaker
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of the House Newt Gingrich have gone on record as opposing any broad ban
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of "indecency" on the Net. Which goes to show you: the cause of freedom of
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speech is not a partisan issue either.
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For the most part, the issue is one of ignorance of the Constitution and
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what it protects. The First Amendment, so the courts tell us, does not
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protect "obscenity" -- and the word "obscenity" has a special legal
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meaning. It doesn't mean profane language. It doesn't mean Playboy
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magazine. According to the Supreme Court, it has something to with
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community standards, with "prurient interest," and with a lack of any
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"serious" literary, artistic, scientific, or political value. What is the
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sound of obscenity? I'm not sure, but I'm told that if you dial up a
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certain 900 number you just might hear some of it.
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But Congress isn't even trying to outlaw "obscenity" on the Net -- they're
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banning something called "indecency," which is a far broader, far vaguer
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concept. Unlike "obscenity," indecency is protected by the First
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Amendment, according to the Supreme Court. But that same Court has never
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defined the term, and Congress hasn't done so either.
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Still, we have some notion of what the sounds of indecency are. Thanks to
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George Carlin and a Supreme Court case involving Pacifica Radio, we know
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that sometimes indecency sounds like the "seven dirty words."
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Now, this isn't the politest language in the world -- on that point I
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agree with the Christian Coalition. But I must say, as the father of a
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little girl, that I lose no sleep over the prospect that Ariel will
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encounter any of these words on the Net -- she is certain to encounter
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them in the real world, no matter how or where she is raised. What causes
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me to wake up in the middle of the night, white-knuckled in fear, is the
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prospect that, thanks to Senator Exon and the Christian Coalition, my
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little girl will never be able to speak freely on the Net, for fear that
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some bureaucrat somewhere won't think her language is polite enough --
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that it's "patently offensive" or "indecent." And I'm equally afraid that
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the very text of FCC v. Pacifica Foundation -- a Supreme Court opinion in
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which those seven "dirty" words appear -- will be banned from the Net,
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barring my child from even understanding what this debate is all about.
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What is the sound of the indecent speech? Thanks to my friend Harvey
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Silverglate, a lawyer in Boston, we know part of the answer. Harvey wrote
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the following last week:
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'As a result of the FCC's ban on "broadcast indecency", Pacifica Radio has
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ceased its broadcasts each year, on the anniversary of the publication of
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Allen's Ginsberg's classic poem, "Howl", of a reading of Ginsberg's poem
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by the poet. Pacifica and Ginsberg and others have sued the FCC, and
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while they won a small modicum of relief in the Court of Appeals, they
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have petitioned the U S Supreme Court for review. The Supreme Court
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should act within the month. Meanwhile, high school kids read "Howl" in
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their English poetry anthologies, but it cannot be read on the radio!'
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What is it that the FCC thought was indecent? Try the sound of these
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words:
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"I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving
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hysterical naked, /dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn
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looking for an angry fix/angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient
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heavenly connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night."
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Should we be thanking Senator Exon for sparing our children from this?
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And if they found Allen Ginsberg indecent, is there any doubt they'd come
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to the same opinion about James Joyce's ULYSSES, whose character Molly
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Bloom closes one of the most sexually charged monologues in the English
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language with this passage?
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"... and how he kissed me under the Moorish wall and I thought well as
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well him as another and then I asked him with my eyes to ask again yes and
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then asked would I yes to say yes my mountain flower and first I put my
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arms around him yes and drew him down to me so he could feel my breasts
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all perfume yes and his heart was going like mad and yes I said yes I will
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Yes."
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That's the sound of indecency for you. And it's a measure of the climate
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of fear created by Congress that America Online might have banned that
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very language from my user profile if I'd included it there. You see, a
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couple of weeks ago AOL felt impelled to delete all user profiles that
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include the word "breast" in them -- much to the dismay of countless
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breast-cancer survivors. Now I ask you, don't be mad at America Online,
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whose management has already apologized for this gaffe -- be angry at
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Congress, whose crazy actions have created a world in which the word
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"breast" is something to be afraid of.
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Now at this point the proponents of this legislation will cavil -- they'll
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say "Look, we're not trying to ban artists or literary geniuses or
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brilliant comedians. We're just trying to protect our children."
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To which I have two answers:
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First, if you really want to protect our children, find a better way to do
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it than to force all of us who engage in public speech and expression to
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speak at the level of children. There are laws already on the books that
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prevent the exposure to children of obscene speech, and that prohibit
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child abuse -- before you start passing new laws, make sure you understand
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what the old laws do. It may be that no new legislation is required at
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all.
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Second, remember that freedom of expression isn't just for artists or
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literary geniuses or brilliant comedians. It's for all of us -- it
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provides a space for each citizen to find his own artistry, his own
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genius, his own comedy, and to share it with others. It also provides a
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space in which we can choose -- and sometimes must choose -- to say things
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that others might find "patently offensive." And the First Amendment
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protects that space most. Don't pass laws that undercut the very
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foundation of a free society -- the ability to speak freely, even when
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others are offended by what we have to say.
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I'm speaking now to you, Congress. If you pass a telecommunications bill
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with this "indecency" language in it, we will remember. And we will
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organize against you and vote you out.
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This isn't single-issue politics -- it's politics about the framework in
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which *all* issues are discussed, and in which even offensive thoughts
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are expressed. And you, Congress, are threatening to destroy the framework
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of freedom of speech on the Net, the first medium in the history of
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mankind that holds the promise of mass communications out to each
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individual citizen.
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At this point, Congress, I'm not afraid of sexual speech on the Net. And
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I'm not afraid that my little girl will encounter sexual speech on the
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Net. What scares me is what you will do to the First Amendment on the Net
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if we don't stop you. That's more of a perversion than any citizen of the
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United States should have to witness.
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And I'm telling you now, Representatives and Senators, we stand ready to
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stop you. Listen to us now, or soon you will be listening to this sound:
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(Sound of ripping paper.) That's the sound of what we will do to your
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political future if you forget the oaths you swore.
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Long live the First Amendment and the Constitution. And long live freedom
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of speech on the Net.
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------------------------------
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Date: Sat, 9 Dec 1995 20:01:35 -0800 (PST)
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From: Declan McCullagh <declan@EFF.ORG>
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Subject: File 2--NYT: Steele Op-Ed on Scientology and Internet Censorship
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The New York Times
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December 9, 1995
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Op-Ed
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Congress vs. the Internet
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The courts have upheld free speech. Why won't
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legislators?
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By Shari Steele (EFF staff counsel)
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San Francisco. While the courts continue to uphold the
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freedom of speech on the Internet, the First Amendment is under attack
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on Capitol Hill. On Wednesday, House members of a House-Senate
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conference committee said they would support a stringent new measure
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that would not only bar words and ideas on the worldwide computer
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network that one might hear on TV or read in this newspaper, but would
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make criminals out of anyone transmitting these materials
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electronically, including on-line servces.
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This measure goes against the spirit of three sensible court decisions
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on copyright law handed down in recent weeks, all involving the Church
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of Scientology.
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The first decision, issued by a Federal judge in California last
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month, held that Internet service providers, the gatekeepers to the
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information highway, cannot be held liable for copyright infringement
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when they have no knowledge of the content of their users' messages.
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This decision is important, because, like the telephone company, the
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system's providers merely offer a conduit for communications. If they
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can be held liable for the content of messages, they are more likely
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to monitor those messages and censor any that include language that
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might get them in trouble.
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Just as we don't want the phone company censoring our telephone calls,
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we should be very troubled by any copyright law interpretation that
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would assign liability to those who provide Internet service.
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The second and third decisions were issued last week by a Federal
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judge in northern Virginia. In those cases, the judge, Leonie M.
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Brinkema, admonished the Church of Scientology for using lawsuits to
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silence its on-line critics. After two of its former members posted
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electronic criticism of Church of Scientology writings, the church
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brought charges against them, their Internet service providers and The
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Washington Post for including two sentences from church documents in
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an article on the case.
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Judge Brinkema dismissed The Washington Post and two of its reporters
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from the suit and held the Church of Scientology and its affiliate
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responsible for the newspaper's legal fees. "Although the Religious
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Technology Center brought the complaint under traditional secular
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concepts of copyright and trade secret law, it has become clear that a
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much broader motivation prevailed -- the stifling of criticism and
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dissent of the religious practices of Scientology and the destruction
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of its opponents," the judge wrote. The judge called this motivation
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"reprehensible."
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While the results of these preliminary decisions are encouraging, they
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provide little solace to the larger threat of on-line censorship.
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Court decisions in the copyright realm, as these are, do not address
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the damage Congress is doing to the First Amendment h the name of
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protecting children from obscenity, which remains ill-defind.
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These early court victories are important, and the on-line world
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breathed a collective sigh of relief over the wise judgments.
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But not all battles can be won in court. If Congress presses forward
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with its attempt to criminalize constitutionally protected speech, I
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fear that the First Amendment will be left behind as more and more of
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what we say is in the form of on-line communications.
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------------------------------
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Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 09:54:43 -0500
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From: ped@WELL.COM(Philip Elmer-DeWitt)
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Subject: File 3--Muzzling the Internet (TIME/Julian Dibbell)
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[The following is copyright material from the 12/18/95 issue of TIME
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Magazine, posted with permission. For permission to repost, e-mail
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ped@well.com.]
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technology
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MUZZLING THE INTERNET
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Can this Congress find a way to preserve civil liberties while curbing
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cyberporn? So far, no
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BY JULIAN DIBBELL
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Pornography in cyberspace? Sure, it's out there, although there is not
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as much of the hard-core stuff as most people seem to think. But what
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you can find if you look for it is enough to give thoughtful parents
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pause before letting their children roam freely on the Internet. It's
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also enough, evidently, to ensure congressional passage of a bill that
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would impose fines as high as $100,000 and prison sentences of up to
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two years on anyone who knowingly exposes minors to "indecency"
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online. It may even be enough to make the proposed legislation seem,
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at first glance, like a fair and reasonable approach.
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But a closer look at the measure--all but approved last week by a
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conference committee in the rush to pass the giant
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telecommunications-reform bill before Christmas--suggests it may be a
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bigger problem than the one it aims to solve. For one thing, it does
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little about the kind of sexual material that has stirred up the
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strongest public anxieties (images of bestiality, pedophilia and the
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like). Such material is already flatly banned by federal statutes on
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obscenity and child pornography. The Justice Department has made it
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clear that it has all the laws it needs to police the Net for child
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molesters.
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What is new in the bill is the idea of criminalizing the online
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transmission of words and images that may fall short of the Supreme
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Court tests of obscenity (lacking literary merit, violating community
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standards, etc.), but that someone, somewhere in cyberspace might find
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offensive.
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The key word is indecency. Free speech, even indecent speech, is
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guaranteed by the First Amendment. The right of Americans to say and
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write what they please, in whatever way they please, has been affirmed
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by a long series of judicial decisions. The courts have also ruled,
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however, that in broadcast media like radio and TV, some forms of
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expression (George Carlin's famous seven dirty words, for example) may
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be unsuitable for part or all of the broadcast day.
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The courts have not yet ruled on whether the Internet is a print
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medium like a newspaper, protected from government censorship, or a
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broadcast medium like TV, whose content is closely regulated by the
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Federal Communications Commission. Thoughtful members of Congress, led
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by Washington Republican Rick White, had sought to clarify the matter.
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A compromise proposed by White would have ruled out FCC oversight of
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the Internet; it also would have replaced the problematic word
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indecency with the phrase harmful to minors, a more narrowly defined
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standard that keeps magazines like Penthouse shrink-wrapped in
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convenience stores.
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Early last week, it looked as if White's sensible alternative would
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prevail. But conservative groups, led by the Christian Coalition,
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lobbied hard for a tougher measure. And on Wednesday, in a 40-minute
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closed-door session, the conferees voted 17 to 16 to reinstate
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indecency.
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That vote may yet come to naught. President Clinton has already
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threatened to veto the bill for other reasons. The American Civil
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Liberties Union has promised to mount vigorous challenges should the
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bill become law, and many experts believe the Supreme Court would find
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such a law unconstitutional. The Congressmen who took a public stand
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against online indecency may have
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known that it would not survive a court test. But they had a chance last
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week to show that they understood how to apply civil rights to new media,
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and they failed.
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With reporting by John F. Dickerson/Washington
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Copyright 1995 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
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---------------------------------------------------------
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Philip Elmer-DeWitt ped@well.com
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TIME Magazine http://www.pathfinder.com/
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------------------------------
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Date: Tue, 12 Dec 1995 22:51:01 CST
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From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
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Subject: File 4--E-mail addresses of U.S. Senators
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following was obtained from:
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http://thomas.loc.gov))
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Senators with Constituent E-Mail Addresses
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Below you will find a listing of those U.S. Senate offices which have
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published Internet addresses on the Senate's Internet server. If you
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wish to inquire about any other Senate office's use of electronic
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mail, you MUST place your inquiry directly with the office in
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question. You can direct correspondence to your Senator or to other
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U.S. Senate offices at the following address:
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For Member inquiries:
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Office of Senator (Name)
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United States Senate
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Washington, D.C. 20510
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For Committee inquiries:
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(Name of Committee)
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United States Senate
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Washington, D.C. 20510
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Alternatively, you may phone the United States Capitol switchboard at
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(202) 224-3121. A switchboard operator will connect you directly with
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AR Bumpers, Dale senator@bumpers.senate.gov
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AZ Kyl, Jon info@kyl.senate.gov
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MA Kennedy, Edward M. senator@kennedy.senate.gov
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MD Mikulski, Barbara A. senator@mikulski.senate.gov
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MD Sarbanes, Paul S. senator@sarbanes.senate.gov
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ME Cohen, William S. billcohen@cohen.senate.gov
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MI Abraham, Spencer michigan@abraham.senate.gov
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MO Ashcroft, John john_ashcroft@ashcroft.senate.gov
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MS Cochran, Thad senator@cochran.senate.gov
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MT Baucus, Max max@baucus.senate.gov
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MT Burns, Conrad conrad_burns@burns.senate.gov
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NC Faircloth, Lauch senator@faircloth.senate.gov
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ND Dorgan, Byron L. senator@dorgan.senate.gov
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NE Kerrey, J. Robert bob@kerrey.senate.gov
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NH Gregg, Judd mailbox@gregg.senate.gov
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NH Smith, Bob opinion@smith.senate.gov
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NJ Bradley, Bill senator@bradley.senate.gov
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NM Bingaman, Jeff senator_bingaman@bingaman.senate.gov
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NM Domenici, Pete V. senator_domenici@domenici.senate.gov
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NV Reid, Harry senator_reid@reid.senate.gov
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NY Moynihan, Daniel Patrick senator@dpm.senate.gov
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OH DeWine, Mike senator_dewine@dewine.senate.gov
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PA Santorum, Rick senator@santorum.senate.gov
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PA Specter, Arlen senator_specter@specter.senate.gov
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RI Chafee, John H. senator_chafee@chafee.senate.gov
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SC Hollings, Ernest F. senator@hollings.senate.gov
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SD Daschle, Thomas A. tom_daschle@daschle.senate.gov
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SD Pressler, Larry larry_pressler@pressler.senate.gov
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TN Frist, Bill senator_frist@frist.senate.gov
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WI Feingold, Russell D. senator@feingold.senate.gov
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WV Rockefeller IV, John D. senator@rockefeller.senate.gov
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WY Simpson, Alan K. senator@simpson.senate.gov
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OTHER SENATE E-MAIL ADDRESSES LISTED ON THE SENATE INTERNET SERVER
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Return to the United States Senate Home Page
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Last modified November 21, 1995
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------------------------------
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Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 13:29:04 -0500 (EST)
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From: ptownson@LCS.MIT.EDU(Patrick A. Townson)
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Subject: File 5--Child Pornography and Beastiality
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Howard Gobioff <hgobioff@GS207.SP.CS.CMU.EDU> wrote in File
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4--Re: Cu Digest, #7.93:
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> From--Dave++ Ljung <dxl@HPESDXL.FC.HP.COM>
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> Subject--File 7--Re--Cyberangels
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>> One of the items I pointed out to Gabriel was that I didn't see how his
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>> list of 'crimes to be monitored' would include child pornography but not
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>> bestiality, but he pointed out that this was an oversight.
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> I just wanted to point out that while "child pornography" is illegal
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> that bestiality is not. Under federal obscenity law, child pornography
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> is obscene and therefore illegal. However, bestiality is not immediately
|
|
> deemed obscene and must be subject to the Miller test. Due to this
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|
> distinction, I am doubtful that the Cyberangel, despite good intentions,
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> should be seeking out bestiality on the network. They are not the courts
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> and it is not their decision if something is obscene or illegal.
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First of all, any citizen who witnesses an act of questionable legality
|
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is not making a 'decision if something is obscene or illegal'. They
|
|
are simply reporting something to the authorities on which they feel
|
|
the authorities *should make that decision*. Carrying your comment to
|
|
its logical conclusion, no one should ever call the police to report
|
|
an event we witnessed which we *think* is a crime since we are not
|
|
lawyers and cannot precisely show in the statutes where it is listed
|
|
and because we do not know for sure if the court is going to find the
|
|
person guilty or not. Therefore we should not be on the look-out for
|
|
actions in our neighborhood which might be crimes since there is no
|
|
telling at that point how it will all wind up later on. Police should
|
|
not really be watching for events either (i.e. a proactive response
|
|
in the community rather than a purely reactive one) since after all,
|
|
they are not lawyers or judges either.
|
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|
|
It was very thoughtful and nice of you to try and lighten the very
|
|
heavy burden the cyberangels would be under by making these reports,
|
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but that really isn't what you meant was it? <chortle>
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Your second error comes in your comment on beastiality, which *is*
|
|
illegal in every state. Something being illegal does not of necessity
|
|
make the same thing obscene as you point out. In every state,
|
|
beastiality is illegal via that state's various laws pertaining to
|
|
cruelty to animals and/or the required humane treatment of animals.
|
|
Rape or sexual assault of an animal (I doubt it gave its consent)
|
|
would be considered cruel and inhumane to the animal. There are also
|
|
federal laws pertaining to animal welfare which would transcend
|
|
individual state boundary lines. It is true that animals never do
|
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'give consent' to sex; unlike humans, the only animals I am aware
|
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of who use sex both for pleasure and procreation, other animals simply
|
|
respond according to their natural instincts to preserve their species.
|
|
They do it when it is time to do it. They have no control over the
|
|
matter or erotic desire or interest in what they are doing. By your
|
|
placing the animal in (what for it) is an unnatural environment and
|
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situation, you are being cruel to it. You may be causing it physical
|
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harm as well. In those places where it is also considered obscene,
|
|
then perhaps a double offense has occured.
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Please note that there are exceptions to laws pertaining to 'animal
|
|
cruelty and welfare': If we sacrifice an animal as a means to our own
|
|
survival (that is, the animal becomes our food or the animal becomes a
|
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protective covering for our bodies as our coat, shoes, etc; OR if the
|
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animal is a danger to the community; i.e. a wild bear has come into
|
|
the village and has harmed or killed a human) there is no violation.
|
|
Even then, laws address the question of humane treatment of the animal
|
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during its lifetime, and slaughtering it in a humane way when our
|
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needs require it to be done. Our sexual desire is not included in the
|
|
list. You can kill an animal as needed, you may not torture/abuse it.
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|
|
Although beastiality is, as you point out 'not immediatly deemed
|
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obscene and is subject to the Miller test', my belief is that would
|
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usually be a moot point since we would, after all, be dealing with
|
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a human being in a state of sexual excitement, and it is pretty
|
|
hard to get any of that past Miller, although not impossible I
|
|
guess. I suppose an ACLU lawyer somewhere could do it.
|
|
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|
So to summarize, the *act* of beastialty is illegal everywhere,
|
|
via cruelty to animals laws although some state forbid it on its
|
|
face as well, as a forbidden act of human behavior without specific
|
|
regard to the treatment of the animals involved.
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|
|
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The *photographic depiction* of beastiality is illegal in places
|
|
where it is ajudicated obscene.
|
|
|
|
There are no laws (or enforceable laws, let's say) against discussing
|
|
it in writing, via articles, fictional accounts of it happening,
|
|
drawings and/or non-photographic illustrations, etc. All that comes
|
|
under Freedom of Speech although I prefer the term License of Speech
|
|
as a more realistic way of describing it. I guess this shows my bias
|
|
in the matter, or my blind spots.
|
|
|
|
The solution to the problem of child pornography available for public
|
|
display on computer networks will come when a sufficient number of
|
|
system administrators refuse to display it. Email is a different
|
|
matter entirely and admins should not tamper with it. Where 'news'
|
|
groups and public displays are concerned, all an admin has to do is
|
|
refuse to allow that sort of posting to originate at his site, and
|
|
refuse to accept known feeds of that nature from other sites. In
|
|
other words the admin says to his users, "We don't have (for example)
|
|
the newsgroup 'alt.sex.pedophilia' and 'alt.sex.beastiality' at this
|
|
site. Your posting to that newsgroup does not get propogated from
|
|
here." Lacking any propogation, the newsgroup in essence does not
|
|
exist.
|
|
|
|
And before you try to tell me that sites which carry news have to
|
|
carry all newsgroups, stop and think what the informal rules and
|
|
gentlemen's agreements on the net actually say:
|
|
|
|
If it is a Usenet group and you carry Usenet, then you
|
|
carry the group.
|
|
|
|
If it is altnet, then whether you carry it or not is your
|
|
choice.
|
|
|
|
That is the way it has always been arranged since years ago when
|
|
certain people began 'alt' in protest to the existing structure
|
|
of Usenet. The trouble is, that was long ago relative to the
|
|
age of computer networks, and a lot of people have forgotten the
|
|
second part of the agreement above, if they ever knew it existed.
|
|
|
|
No sysadmin is required to carry any alt group not of his (or his
|
|
employer's) liking. No explanation required, it simply does not
|
|
appear on his news spool. Some sites don't carry ANY alt groups
|
|
period. Some sites have even violated the (long-ago) gentlemen's
|
|
agreement of Usenet that for widest possible propogation, each
|
|
site carry all groups, i.e. as a courtesy I display messages from
|
|
your users and in return you display messages from my users.
|
|
|
|
So if the sysadmin at your site carries alt.sex.whatever.variations
|
|
on his spool, it is because he *wants* to carry it there. It
|
|
might be a business decision (lots of subscribers paying good money
|
|
to have this available to read) or a personal decision (he wants
|
|
to read it himself). Don't believe him if he rationalizes it
|
|
by claiming 'we have to carry all newsgroups'. He can make the
|
|
needed changes in the system .newsrc file, and that, as they say,
|
|
will be that. It is doubtful these days he has to carry all of
|
|
the Usenet groups and he never was required to carry alt groups.
|
|
|
|
If you do NOT want to have such a newsgroup, then you tell your
|
|
syadmin about it. You tell him in your opinion it cheapens and
|
|
harms the reputation of his site by having those groups available.
|
|
You ask him to remove them (or not make them available for public
|
|
reading) and perhaps you offer to take your business elsewhere
|
|
to a site you feel is better operated, or with higher quality.
|
|
If the sysadmin gets enough comments on a newsgroup, he will take
|
|
action on that group.
|
|
|
|
After all, there are people who read {The New York Times} specifically
|
|
because they do not fill up their pages with the likes of columnists
|
|
like Ann Slanders or her sister Scabby Van Buren, and I believe
|
|
sites which carry only a limited subset of the news, picking the
|
|
groups which meet their taste requirements have a place also.
|
|
|
|
Just because 'child porn may be legal in some countries in Europe' (I
|
|
hear that one a lot) and just because the {New York Times} is sold and
|
|
distributed regularly in Europe and a lot of the readers are European
|
|
there still is no requirement that the {New York Times} print child
|
|
porn under some vaugely thought out line of reasoning which says 'well
|
|
it came here on our newsfeed from someplace in Europe where it is
|
|
legal so how can the authorities here punish us for printing it?' ...
|
|
Very easily ... that is what editors are for. If you carry
|
|
Usenet/altnet/*net news on your site, then the sysadmin becomes an
|
|
editor by default.
|
|
|
|
Remember, a 'news' group without any news spools to sit on really
|
|
doesn't exist. Self-censorship is the best censorship of all ... it
|
|
works, is far more effective than anything the government tries to
|
|
legislate, and even the ACLU has not yet been able to figure out
|
|
how to force people to like it who in reality are totally opposed to
|
|
the actual/perceived or encouraged abuse of children/animals in this way.
|
|
|
|
So sysadmins, start acting more like responsible publishers/editors.
|
|
If you want that garbage at your site, hey -- just say so and
|
|
carry it. If you don't, then get rid of it and block it out of
|
|
your accepted newsfeed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Patrick A. Townson
|
|
(the only person I know whose three initials of their full name
|
|
wind up spelling their first name. i.e. PAT).
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
From: JeanBernard_Condat@EMAIL.FRANCENET.FR(JeanBernard Condat)
|
|
Subject: File 6--French email directory soonly available
|
|
Date: 21 Nov 1995 08:49:06 GMT
|
|
|
|
French email directory soonly available
|
|
|
|
Decembre 8th, France Telecom test a new service. The possibility for
|
|
all phone owner to have the mention of the private email address
|
|
available freely on the videotex phone directory (and in the print
|
|
edition, too). Normally the only mention with the address will be the
|
|
"telefax," "Numeris" (for ISDN access) or "Minicom" (an old Minitel
|
|
specific email application not linked with Internet nor X.400 and
|
|
available through the 3612 Minitel access for a low cost).
|
|
|
|
The first person that have the chance to be cite WITH the own electronic
|
|
address is Pierre GRENET, a France Telecom ingenieur. When you look at
|
|
Pierre GRENET in Champigny/Marne (94500), you found the right phone
|
|
number (1) 48 81 35 05... and an uncredible 31-digit email address on five
|
|
lines: grenet@mvp.dc.france-telecom.fr. This ingenieur work on the new
|
|
applications of France Telecom electronic book, the first in the world. how
|
|
to link the cited email address for a direct sending by Minitel of an
|
|
email...
|
|
it's a new forthcoming service!
|
|
|
|
Some problems will occur with companies sending fax to all owner
|
|
indicated in the "11" (electronic repertory). In some months, it will
|
|
be possible to do some electronic mailing directly from the "11". The
|
|
sending of the fax number is availbale by 3614 MARKETIS, a new France
|
|
Telecom service. Perhaps, the email address will permit the control of
|
|
all the Internet Service Providers in France by the French secret
|
|
services, like the DST, and hurge email mailings...
|
|
|
|
But I have five email address... and don't known the first that I can
|
|
give to the "11"... the long one, or the short? The "12", phone answer
|
|
for having a phone number canot understand the @... that can be read
|
|
as an "(a)" or an "(at)" on the Minitel screen. France Telecom must
|
|
learn to all "Mademoiselle" on the phone answering service what is
|
|
Internet and an Internet email address :->)
|
|
|
|
Bon courage...
|
|
|
|
-- Jean-Bernard Condat
|
|
Computer Security and Phone Fraud Expert
|
|
JeanBernard_Condat@eMail.FarnceNet.FR
|
|
(Paris, France)
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 22:51:01 CDT
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 1995)
|
|
|
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
|
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
|
|
Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
|
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|
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DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
|
|
|
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
|
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60115, USA.
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|
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To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CUDIGEST
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Send it to LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU
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(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
|
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LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
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the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
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On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
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on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
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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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EUROPE: In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
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UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~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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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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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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End of Computer Underground Digest #7.96
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