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541 lines
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########## ########## ########## | PIONEER AWARDS 2.0
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########## ########## ########## | Call for Nominations
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#### #### #### |
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######## ######## ######## | EFF/AUSTIN: The First Chapter
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######## ######## ######## |
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#### #### #### | THE SETTLING OF THE INTERNET
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########## #### #### |
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########## #### #### | FTP.EFF.ORG:The Users' Site
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=====================================================================
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EFFector Online October 22, 1992 Issue 3.07
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A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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ISSN 1062-9424
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=====================================================================
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THE SECOND ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL EFF PIONEER AWARDS:
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CALL FOR NOMINATIONS
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Deadline: December 31,1992
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In every field of human endeavor,there are those dedicated to expanding
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knowledge,freedom,efficiency and utility. Along the electronic frontier,
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this is especially true. To recognize this,the Electronic Frontier
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Foundation has established the Pioneer Awards for deserving individuals
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and organizations.
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The Pioneer Awards are international and nominations are open to all.
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In March of 1992, the first EFF Pioneer Awards were given in Washington
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D.C. The winners were: Douglas C. Engelbart of Fremont, California;
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Robert Kahn of Reston, Virginia; Jim Warren of Woodside, California; Tom
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Jennings of San Francisco, California; and Andrzej Smereczynski of
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Warsaw, Poland.
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The Second Annual Pioneer Awards will be given in San Francisco,
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California at the 3rd Conference on Computers, Freedom, and Privacy
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in March of 1993.
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All valid nominations will be reviewed by a panel of impartial judges
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chosen for their knowledge of computer-based communications and the
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technical, legal, and social issues involved in networking.
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There are no specific categories for the Pioneer Awards, but the
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following guidelines apply:
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1) The nominees must have made a substantial contribution to the
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health, growth, accessibility, or freedom of computer-based
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communications.
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2) The contribution may be technical, social, economic or cultural.
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3) Nominations may be of individuals, systems, or organizations in
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the private or public sectors.
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4) Nominations are open to all, and you may nominate more than one
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recipient. You may nominate yourself or your organization.
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5) All nominations, to be valid, must contain your reasons, however
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brief, on why you are nominating the individual or organization,
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along with a means of contacting the nominee, and your own contact
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number. No anonymous nominations will be allowed.
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6) Every person or organization, with the single exception of EFF
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staff members, are eligible for Pioneer Awards.
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7) Persons or representatives of organizations receiving a Pioneer
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Award will be invited to attend the ceremony at the Foundation's
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expense.
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You may nominate as many as you wish, but please use one form per
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nomination. You may return the forms to us via email to
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pioneer@eff.org
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You may mail them to us at:
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Pioneer Awards, EFF,
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155 Second Street
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Cambridge MA 02141.
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You may FAX them to us at:
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+1 617 864 0866
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Just tell us the name of the nominee, the phone number or email address
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at which the nominee can be reached, and, most important, why you feel
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the nominee deserves the award. You may attach supporting
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documentation. Please include your own name, address, and phone number.
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We're looking for the Pioneers of the Electronic Frontier that have made
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and are making a difference. Thanks for helping us find them,
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The Electronic Frontier Foundation
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-------EFF Pioneer Awards Nomination Form------
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Please return to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
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via email to: pioneer@eff.org
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via surface mail to EFF 155 Second Street, Cambridge, MA 02141 USA;
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via FAX to +1 617 864 0866
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Nominee:
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Title:
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Company/Organization:
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Contact number or email address:
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Reason for nomination:
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Your name and contact information:
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Extra documentation attached:
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DEADLINE: ALL NOMINATIONS MUST BE RECEIVE BY THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER
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FOUNDATION BY MIDNIGHT, EASTERN STANDARD TIME U.S., DECEMBER 31,1992.
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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THE EFF/AUSTIN CHAPTER
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A Progress Report by John S. Quarterman
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President of Autsin EFF.
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As of July 1992, the official name of our group is EFF-Austin,
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and we are a Texas nonprofit corporation. Our goals, adapted from
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those of EFF-National, are given in our Articles of Incorporation:
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(a) to engage in and support educational activities that
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increase understanding of the opportunities and challenges posed
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by computing and telecommunications, and related civil liberties
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issues.
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(b) to foster a clearer social understanding of the issues
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underlying free and open telecommunications; and
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(c) to facilitate and encourage communication between
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individuals interested in computer and telecommunication
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technology and related social and legal issues.
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Among other activities in pursuit of these goals, we hold three
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distinct types of public meetings: member meetings; Public Forums; and
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Cyberdawgs.
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Member meetings consist of presentations by EFF-Austin directors and
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others on what EFF-Austin is doing, and questions and suggestions
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from the attendees.
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Our first general public meeting was held in May, at the Austin
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Technology Incubator. Close to sixty people attended to listen to
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what we had to say and to offer ideas. We are planning another member
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meeting for November.
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Public Forums have specific agendas and speakers, and both present
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information of interest to our members and the public, and invite
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discussion.
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Our most recent public forum was "The Net: What is It, Where is it,
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Who Uses It, and for What?", presented by John Quarterman and Smoot
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Carl-Mitchell of Texas Internet Consulting and Matrix Information
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and Directory Services, and Anna Couey, an art networker from
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San Francisco. This was held at MCC and included online demonstrations
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of Internet applications such as anonymous FTP, archie, and gopher,
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as well as TELNET to locations such as Moscow and the WELL.
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The next scheduled Public Forum is on October 29. Noted science
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fiction author Bruce Sterling will speak and sign copies concerning his
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latest work, the nonfiction book, The Hacker Crackdown, just published
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by Bantam. This meeting will be held at the University of Texas. We
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are inviting local law enforcement officers to attend, considering
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the subject matter of the book. Cliff Figallo, Director of the Cambridge
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Office of the Electronic Frontier Foundation will also attend.
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Ed Cavazos is currently organizing a panel discussion on Sysop Liability
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that will be given in January of next year.
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In contrast to the formal presentation of a Public Forum is a
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"Cyberdawg". These are informal networking mixers. (The name comes
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from a hot dog picnic held last year at the Steve Jackson Games office
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in Austin.) We have held two Cyberdawgs so far , in June and August,
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at the High Times Tea Bar and Brain Gym (a local establishment
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that serves intellectual games instead of alcohol), and at Europa Books.
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They were well-attended by a diverse mix of the Austin electronic
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community. All types of computer users met to talk, exchange
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information, make contacts, and simply have fun. We have scheduled the
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next Cyberdawg for November, and plan to have Tracy LaQuey Parker
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present to sign copies of her latest book, The Internet Companion,
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just published by Addison-Wesley.
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Another method of information distribution that we have employed is
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staffing tables at conventions. For example, we held a table at the
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Government and Technology Convention in February of 1992, and have
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plans to be present at the 1993 show as well. We had a meeting at
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the Armadillocon Science Fiction Convention 9-11 October.
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Since several of our members are frequent travelers to SF conventions,
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we have presented panels and distributed literature at many such events.
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We consider this worthwhile, since science fiction readers are likely
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to be interested in the way society evolves to handle evolving
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technology.
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At all of these events we have been passing out EFF literature that we
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possess at the time. We have created information of our own, as well.
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There is the Info Disk, which contains text files that serve as a
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primer to relevant issues in the use of computers and networks.
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September saw the first issue of our online newsletter, Word, which we
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plan to distribute monthly. EFF-Austin also sponsors a moderated
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newsgroup, austin.eff, linked bidirectionally with a mailing list,
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eff-austin@tic.com. That newsgroup and mailing list are about
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EFF-Austin and local concerns, but they are already widely
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distributed outside of Austin and on BBSes as well as through
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USENET, UUCP, and the Internet.
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This is all in addition to the meetings of the Board of Directors
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(fifteen in the last twelve months). We currently hold these meetings
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on the second Tuesday of each month.
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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CURRENT SITE @eff.org
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Where Users Come First.
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by Rita Rouvalis
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(rita@eff.org)
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Carefully assemble four Sparcstation II's, nine gigs of disk storage,
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a T1 and what do you get? One hopping Internet site and the Heart and
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Soul of the EFF. Traditionally, netiquette has required that most ftp
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transfers be done druing non-business or off-peak hours. The reason for
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the request is that most ftp machines are also used for other tasks by
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the local users. ftp.eff.org, however, is a dedicated ftp, gopher, and
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WAIS machine. This means that it is not at the staff's disposal, but
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yours. So pound away on it at any time of the day or night. That's the
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reason we built it.
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Services like WAIS, and GOPHER underscore our enthusiasm for better,
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easier-to-use technology for accessing the information stored on the
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Net. The wide variety of subject matter found in our anonymous FTP
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archives is a working testimony to our belief in the free and open flow
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of all kinds of information, not simply the official EFF positions and
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publications (these are found only in the EFF directory).
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And not only is our hardware the key distribution point for official EFF
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documents like EFFector Online and NewsNotes, but we're also the virtual
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home for other, similar-minded organizations like Carl Kadie's Computers
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and Academic Freedom, the Index on Censorship, the Boston Computer
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Society, the Massachusetts branch of Computer Professionals for Social
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Responsibility (CPSR), Beyond Dreams, and the Commercial Internet
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Exchange (CIX).
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Last month, an average of 1371 files *a day* were sucked down from our
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archives. Some of your favorites, according to our statistics, are
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File Downloads in September
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/pub/cud/phrack/phrack-40 454
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/pub/EFF/legal-issues/eff-fbi-analysis 230
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/pub/EFF/about-eff 197
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/pub/cud/cud/cud4.41 173
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/pub/internet-info/ftp.sites 101
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/pub/journals/CORE/core1.08 53
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/etc/passwd 39
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/pub/EFF/legal-issues/against-look-and-feel 39
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/pub/EFF/papers/crime-and-puzzlement 33
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/pub/journals/InterText/ITv2n4-ascii 29
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One of the best-kept secrets on ftp.eff.org is the relatively quiet
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little corner occupied by the /journals directory. One of the most
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selective news stands in Cyberspace, it contains a small number of
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excellent and widely varied electronic publications. Our two newest
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additions to the magazine rack are CurrentCites, which presents selected
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articles on information transfer, electronic publishing, expert systems
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and artificial intelligence, and more; and ScreamBaby, a tense, neurotic
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'zine that asks the all-consuming question "What the hell did *YOU* do
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today?"
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Other recent additions include a document on electronic communications
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from Human Right Watch (/pub/EFF/papers/electrifying-speech); the first
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edition of Word, the EFF-Austin chapter's newsletter (/pub/EFF/local-
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chapters/Austin_TX/Word1); and the EJournal Directory, an extensive list
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of electronic publications (/pub/journals/EJournal.Directory2.1).
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We are always looking for new files of interest to add to our ftp
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collection. If you know of anything appropriate, please drop us a note
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at eff@eff.org.
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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From the Univ of Wisconsin Microelectronics bulletin, Prof. F Cerrina
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as the author:
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"After the Microlithography '92 conference in Japan, we toured some
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of the leading electronics laboratories. Our visit to Hitachi's
|
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Central Research Lab included an amusing demonstration of the
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resolution of current lithography. On a four-inch wafer, they printed
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a map of the world that included the streets of London down to the
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smallest alleys. It's now possible to put a fully detailed map of
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the world on a six-inch wafer."
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Food for thought...
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(Submitted by Gary Delp <gdelp+@rchland.ibm.com> )
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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The Settling of the Internet
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by David Tyckson
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(DT673@ALBNYVMS.BITNET )
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It has been nearly three months since I sent my original "What's
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Going On Here?" message to PACS-L, which dealt with the migration from
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electronic to print format of some of my favorite network publications.
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While I expected some responses to this message, I did not expect the
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flood of material that came to me both privately and over the network.
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I am finally clearing my mailbox of old messages and would like to
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report to PACS-L on this topic.
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The vast majority of responses disagreed with me and indicated that
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print is an appropriate, if not preferred, publication medium. Many
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replies stressed the rights of authors to receive royalty payments for
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print publications, the fact that print gets wider distribution than
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electronic media, and that the author has every right to select the
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publication format. One particularly thoughtful response (sent on
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PACS-L by Czeslaw Jan Grycz) discussed the role of electronic
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publication in the scholarly communications process. Other responses
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moved into a variety of related topics, including copyright, the cost of
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the network, and even the global environment. It is clear that my
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original message struck a nerve among many network users.
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Some responses were predictable (the editors of PACS Review were
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not pleased with my attack on the print version of their publication),
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some were enlightening (Brendan Kehoe gave an excellent review of the
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evolution of Zen and the Art of the Internet), and some were surprising
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(I did not realize that Zen had been written by an undergraduate
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student). Perhaps the most surprising response of all was finding
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myself quoted in the Chronicle of Higher Education, a fact which I
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became aware of only when the Office of the President of my university
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called to find out more about my "article" in the Chronicle!
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After all of this discussion and publicity, what exactly is going
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on here? The Internet is not dying, as my initial message may have led
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some to believe, but is alive and very, very well. In fact, network
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resources comprise the biggest growth area in the information world at
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the moment. All of the training sessions, publications, and new network
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position advertisements clearly show that the Internet will be around
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for a long time to come. It is not death that we must worry about, but
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rapid growth.
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Because of this growth, something DID happen to the Internet last
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summer. The issues that I raised originally were not indicators of the
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end of the network, but were signs of its maturation. Whereas in the
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past the networks were the playthings (and workthings) of a few network
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elite, they have grown to encompass a much broader clientele. It is
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this volume of users that has resulted in the changes. Last summer, the
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number of network users passed the critical mass required to attract
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interest from commercial publishers and the press. While this attention
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will help the Internet to grow even further, it takes something away
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from the communal aspects of the early users.
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Like the telephone user who was required to move from a party line
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to a private line when he/she realized who else could be monitoring the
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calls, the presence of journalistic and commercial entities on the
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networks may change the nature of the information communicated over
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these networks. Information that has been given away freely in the past
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may now require some type of payment to a publisher. While the creators
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of information deserve credit (both intellectual and monetary) for their
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work, the formalization of this process will tend to discourage
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"skywriting" as we have known it in the past. In addition, authors who
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may formerly have spontaneously responded to other messages may now be
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cautious in what they say and how they say it. The numerous disclaimer
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statements at the end of author signatures are already a step in this
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direction.
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Last summer saw the passing of an era in networked resources.
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Before the summer, the network was populated primarily by pioneers, who
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explored its resources out of enthusiasm, interest, and a sense of
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exploration. Now it is being populated by settlers, who wish to mine
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the networks in some sort of production mode. The early users
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(pioneers) were able to explore and search in a somewhat unrestricted
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manner, creating their own rules as they went along. Some did it for
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the challenge, some in search of specific types of resources, and others
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just for the fun of seeing what was out there.
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The success of those pioneer efforts brought many more users onto
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the networks. However, these new users did not usually have the same
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motives for utilizing networked resources. Rather than exploring the
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network wilderness, the new users (settlers) want resources that they
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can use in their everyday lives. They also want guides to these
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resources and rules for their use. The commercial and journalistic
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presence in issues related to the network is a clear indication that we
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have evolved into the settler stage.
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Unfortunately, the cultures of pioneers and settlers do not always
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conform. Pioneers want freedom, while settlers want order. While some
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pioneers stake out an area and become leading settlers in an aspect of
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networked resources, others move on and continue to explore new areas.
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The pioneers laid the groundwork for the rest of us (I consider myself a
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very early settler) and we owe them our gratitude for making us aware of
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the capabilities of networked information. While we may lament the
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passing of the good old days of freewheeling information flow, we have
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moved on into an era in which more networked information will be
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available to more people than ever.
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Last summer saw the passing of the era of the wild, wild Internet.
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It is now up to those of us who have settled these new territories to
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develop rules, regulations, and guidebooks that will make information
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available equitably for everyone. I have faith that we, as information
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organizers, will be able to develop a culture that preserves democratic
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access to information resources. If not, we will have settled a land
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not worth inhabiting.
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David Tyckoson
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Head, Reference Department
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University Libraries
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University at Albany - SUNY
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(518) 442-3559
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DT673@ALBNYVMS
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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FROM THE MBOX
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From: "Thomas Leedy, Admin A-402, Ext 2410" <LEEDY@MICF.NIST.GOV>
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To: Electronic Frontier Foundation <eff@eff.org>
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Subject: Where Can I Get One of Those Bumper Stickers?
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Date: Thu, 15 Oct 92 09:46:31 EDT
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I saw a *great* bumper sticker on the Washington DC Beltway this morning
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and almost ran the poor guy off the road trying to read the Internet
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address ...so I hope that I have this right. It said "I'd rather be
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telecommuting. " Do you people make these available? If so how can I get
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one? (The only other way I know is to steal the fellow's bumper!) Would
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be interested in other material/positions that the Electronic Frontier
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Foundation makes available.
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Thanks!
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Best ... Tom
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leedy@micf.nist.gov
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[Editors note: Card-carrying members of the EFF can get one bumper
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sticker for free. Non-members can buy them for $2 each, pre-paid.
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Please include a self-addressed stamped business-sized envelope and
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specify whether you want:
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"I'd rather be telecommuting."
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"CYBERNAUT"
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"Highways in Cyberspace: 'Make it so.'"
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"My other car is a computer."
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Gifs of these can be viewed by ftp'ing to ftp.eff.org and cd'ing to
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/pub/EFF/eff-issues thanks to the generous volunteer work of Mark
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Sheenan (sheehan@indiana.edu).]
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-==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
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MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
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If you support our goals and our work, you can show that support by
|
|
becoming a member now. Members receive our bi-weekly electronic
|
|
newsletter, EFFector Online, the @eff.org newsletter
|
|
and special releases and other notices on our activities. But because
|
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we believe that support should be freely given, you can receive these
|
|
things even if you do not elect to become a member.
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Our memberships are $20.00 per year for students, $40.00 per year for
|
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regular members. You may, of course, donate more if you wish.
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Our privacy policy: The Electronic Frontier Foundation will never, under
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any circumstances, sell any part of its membership list. We will, from
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time to time, share this list with other non-profit organizations whose
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work we determine to be in line with our goals. If you do not grant
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explicit permission, we assume that you do not wish your membership
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disclosed to any group for any reason.
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---------------- EFF MEMBERSHIP FORM ---------------
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Mail to: The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.
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155 Second St. #37
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Cambridge, MA 02141
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I wish to become a member of the EFF I enclose:$__________
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This allows any organization to
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become a member of EFF. It allows
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such an organization, if it wishes
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to designate up to five individuals
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within the organization as members.)
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I enclose an additional donation of $
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State: Zip: Phone:( ) (optional)
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Please charge my membership in the amount of $
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Signature:
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Date:
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I hereby grant permission to the EFF to share my name with
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other non-profit groups from time to time as it deems
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appropriate [ ] .
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Initials:
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Your membership/donation is fully tax deductible.
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=====================================================================
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EFFector Online is published by
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The Electronic Frontier Foundation
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155 Second Street, Cambridge MA 02141
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Phone: +1 617 864 0665 FAX: +1 617 864 0866
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Internet Address: eff@eff.org
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Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged.
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Signed articles do not necessarily represent the view of the EFF.
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To reproduce signed articles individually,
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please contact the authors for their express permission.
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=====================================================================
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