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General Information About the Electronic Frontier Foundation
============================================================
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
1667 K St. NW, Suite 801
Washington DC 20006-1605 USA
+1 202 861 7700 (voice)
+1 202 861 1258 (fax)
+1 202 861 1223 (BBS - 16.8k ZyXEL)
+1 202 861 1224 (BBS - 14.4k V.32bis)
Internet: ask@eff.org
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) was founded in July of 1990
to ensure that the principles embodied in the Constitution and the Bill
of Rights are protected as new communications technologies emerge.
Since its inception, EFF has worked to shape our nation's communications
infrastructure and the policies that govern it in order to maintain and
enhance First Amendment, privacy and other democratic values. We believe
that our overriding public goal must be the creation of Electronic
Democracy, so our work focuses on the establishment of:
* new laws that protect citizens' basic Constitutional rights as they
use new communications technologies;
* a policy of common carriage requirements for all network providers
so that all speech, no matter how controversial, will be carried without
discrimination, and system operators are protected from liability for
users' actions;
* an information infrastruture where voice, data and video services are
accessible to all citizens on a non-discriminatory basis;
* a diversity of communities that enable all citizens to have a voice in
the information age.
Legal Services
--------------
EFF sponsors legal cases where users' online civil liberties have been
violated. The Steve Jackson Games case, decided in March of 1993,
established privacy protections for electronic mail and publications that
are kept online. EFF is also supporting the Bernstein v. Department of
State and NSA case, challenging the ITAR export restrictions on
cryptographic products - a major roadblock on the way to online privacy and
secure networks. Additionally, EFF submits amicus briefs and finds pro
bono counsel when possible for important legal cases. We continue to
monitor the online community for legal actions that merit EFF support.
EFF provides a free telephone hotline for members of the online community
who have questions regarding their legal rights.
Members of EFF's staff and board speak to law enforcement organizations,
state attorney bar associations, conferences and summits, and university
classes on the work that we do and how these groups can get involved.
Civil Liberties
---------------
EFF has been working to make sure that common carrier principles are
upheld in the information age. Common carrier principles require that
network providers carry all speech, regardless of its controversial content.
EFF supports a new common carriage system in which system operators are
shielded from liability for the actions of users, but without the
regulatory burden presently associated with common carriage. To this end,
EFF has opposed the Communications Decency Act, a bill to make system
administrators criminally liable for all network traffic, even if it
originated elsewhere and was impossible to monitor.
In 1992, the FBI introduced draft legislation to require communications
technologies to be certified as open to lawful government surveillance
before those technologies can be deployed. EFF organized a broad coalition
of 39 computer, telephone and public interest groups to oppose this measure.
In 1994, the FBI bill was passed by both houses of Congress, but EFF
played a major role in limiting the authority the bill aimed to grant to
the FBI, as well as assuring that new privacy protections were added to
the legislation. EFF remains committed to blocking all attempts to
appropriate funds to implement the bill's wiretapping provisions.
EFF is working to convince Congress that all measures that support broader
public access to information should be enacted into law. For example, the
law that establishes citizen access to information, the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA), does not require government agencies to turn over
the electronic version of information, which is often the most useful
version, or information stored only online. EFF supports an Electronic
Freedom of Information Act and other legislation to make information more
accessible to citizens.
EFF supports both legal and technical means to enhance privacy in
communications. We, therefore, advocate all measures that ensure the
public's right to use the most effective encryption technologies available,
and have testified before Congress as well as conducted online campaigns
against the NSA's "Clipper" initiative (a plan to retard the growth of
private-sector secure encryption and replace it with government-designed
cryptographic products will built-in "back doors" for intelligence and
police surveillance.
Community Building & Information Infrastructure
-----------------------------------------------
In order to foster community and openness, EFF works with local organizations
that support online communications issues. In January of 1993, EFF sponsored
a summit of groups from around the country to discuss common goals. We also
participate in an online mailing list for organizations that share our
interests. Since then, EFF has helped other "Electronic Frontiers"
organizations get started, in and advisory ally role, in Ireland, Canada,
Norway, Australia, New Hampshire and elsewhere around the world.
EFF, in conjunction with many other organizations, has formed and
participates in a number of coalitions and summits to bring together
thinkers from the non-profit/NGO world, communications and computing industry
leaders, government policymakers when appropriate, and grassroots advocates
in a nonpartisan setting to discuss communications policy goals and
strategies and to form balanced solutions to problems. EFF is committed to
continue advising and learning from others involved in the civil
liberties of networking. Such efforts to date have included the
Communications Policy Forum, the Digital Privacy and Security Working
Group, and the Intellectual Property Working Group (EFF-organized), as well
as the Interactive Working Group and the Stop S.314 Coalition (with EFF as
active participants.)
EFF supports an Open Platform model of the global information infrastructure,
providing non-discriminatory access, based on open, private-sector
standards, and free from burdensome regulation. EFF supports wider
implementation of ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network) technology.
ISDN makes it possible for the current telephone network to be used to
send voice, video and data at a low cost to consumers. EFF is also
exploring models of dispute resolution, online commercial transactions, and
other issues of cyberspatial sovereignty and community, and is preparing a
State of the Net report.
EFF is a participant in, and past funder and organizer of, the annual
Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference, where academics, civil
libertarians, law enforcement officials and computer users all meet to
discuss the privacy, security and intellectual freedom implications of
communicating online. Each year at the conference, EFF presents its
Pioneer Awards to individuals who have made significant contributions to
computer communications.
* Online Services
EFF publishes a frequent electronic newsletter, _EFFector_Online_, that is
sent to subscribers at their e-mail addresses and distributed via
Usenet's comp.org.eff.news group. We also publish a quarterly hardcopy
newsletter, _Networks_&_Policy_.
EFF maintains several communications forums on the Internet. We have our
own Internet node, eff.org, which houses our ftp (ftp.eff.org), gopher
(gopher.eff.org) and WWW (http://www.eff.org/) servers, as well as our
Internet "mailing list" conferences, including comp-org-eff-talk. EFF also
maintains online conferences on the Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (WELL),
CompuServe (CIS), and America On Line (AOL), GEnie, Byte Information
eXchange (BIX), the Spring, and elsewhere.
Outpost, the EFF BBS, started in March 1994, carries a wide selection of the
files available on our Internet server. The BBS can be reached at:
HOW TO FIND EFF ONLINE
======================
-=> Please note that WWW, FTP, gopher, WAIS and BBS services are still "under
construction", as are many of our forums on various online services, and that
new material is added frequently, so you may wish to check back periodically.
Internet and USENET
-------------------
* News Services and Forums for Discussion
If you receive any Usenet newsgroups, your site may carry the newsgroups
comp.org.eff.news and comp.org.eff.talk. The former is a moderated
newsgroup for announcements, newsletters, and other information; the latter
is an unmoderated discussion group for talk and debate on EFF and issues
relating to the electronic frontier and civil liberties. Also, Usenet's
alt.politics.datahighway may be of interest. This conference was started by
EFF in November of 1993, to provide a forum for discussion of the national
(or global) information infrastructure, from deployment plans to civil
liberties issues to debunking of hype.
For those unable to read the newsgroups, there are redistributions via
electronic mail, as well as other EFF mailing lists:
comp-org-eff-talk
Mail<-->news gate of newsgroup comp.org.eff.talk (high-traffic)
eff-activists
EFF alerts & campaign info, focused online activist/volunteer
discussion
effector-online
Distribution of EFFector Online, EFF's bi-weekly newsletter
(same as comp.org.eff.news newsgroup, minus some periodic
postings of documents.)
net-guide
Monthly updates to EFF's Guide to the Internet (previously Big Dummy's
Guide, pub'd. in hardcopy by MIT Press as Everybody's Guide.)
alt-politics-datahighway
Mail<-->news gateway of the newsgroup alt.politics.datahighway
civil-liberty-index
Indexes of "newsy" civil liberties articles from Usenet
comp-academic-freedom-talk
Discussion of Computers and Academic Freedom (non-digested/abstracted)
comp-academic-freedom-abstracts
Abstracts from comp-academic-freedom-news (1/wk)
comp-academic-freedom-batch
Discussion of Computers and Academic Freedom (batch version, 1/dy)
comp-academic-freedom-news
Best of the discussion on Computers and Academic Freedom (1/wk)
comp-gopher-diffs
Distribution and discussion of "bookmarks" to new Gopher material
For more detailed descriptions, send a message containing
the commands:
HELP
LONGINDEX
in the body of your message to listserv@eff.org.
Please note that comp-org-eff-talk can be high-volume at times, so you are
advised to use filtering.
Those in FidoNet and some other BBS networks can probably get the newsletter
and other low-traffic lists via gateway systems. Ask your network
coordinators for more information.
* File Archives
A document library containing all EFF news releases and other publications
of interest, including John Perry Barlow's history of EFF - "Crime and
Puzzlement," as well as recent and proposed legislation, materials for
online activists, archives of electronic publications, records of trials
and legal cases, information alerts, and other related documents & papers,
is available via anonymous FTP from ftp.eff.org. Send a note to
ftphelp@eff.org if you have difficulties or are unable to use FTP.
If you'd like information about getting FTP files from ftp.eff.org and other
FTP sites via email, please ask for a copy of the FTPmail help document.
If you have a full Internet connection, you can use your host's FTP
program to connect to ftp.eff.org (192.77.172.4). Login as "anonymous"
or "ftp" and use your e-mail address as the password.
This archive may also be accessed via Gopher and World Wide Web (Lynx,
Mosaic, Netscape, etc.) services, at gopher.eff.org and http://www.eff.org/,
respectively. These utilities present documents and other files in
hierarchical, easy-to-navigate menus, allowing you to read online, and save
what you want to disk on your own machine. If you don't have access to a
gopher client, but do have access to telnet, you can use another site's
gopher client by telnetting to consultant.micro.umn.edu, login: gopher.
From there, select "Other gopher servers", then "North America", "USA",
"Washington DC", "Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)". There are a
couple of new e-mail servers for accessing gopher sites - start
off by sending mail with a subject and message body of "help" (no quotes) to
gophermail@ncc.go.jp or gophermail@calvin.edu. SunSITE offers several
public services via telnet login. These include: gopher (login: gopher),
World Wide Web (login: lynx - select g http://www.eff.org/ to get to EFF),
WAIS - over 500 databases (login: swais).
When completed, Wide-Area Information Server (WAIS) database indexing of the
EFF archives will be available at wais.eff.org via Internet.
Outpost - EFF Online (the EFF BBS)
----------------------------------
The EFF bulletin board system, Outpost - EFF Online, begun in March 1994,
supports 300-14400bps connections (V.32bis, V.42bis, 8 bits, no parity,
1 stop-bit - 8N1) on it's dialup lines. When fully operational, the BBS
will support 4 lines at faster speeds, and will feature online conferences
from a variety of networks including FidoNet, Usenet/Internet, and more, as
well as the full selection of files available from EFF's FTP archive, EFF
membership materials, bulletins on the latest issues affecting civil
liberties in cyberspace, and other related files and services. The
data phone numbers for the system are +1 202 861 1223 (14400 V.32bis,
16800 ZyXEL) and +1 202 861 1224 (14400 V.32bis) Outpost's FidoNet address
is 1:109/1108. Access to the BBS is free (besides calling costs; at
present we do not have a toll-free number.) Other network addresses:
WishNet - 19:1202/101; StormNet - 181:193/1; IndraNet - 369:1011/2
The Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (WELL)
--------------------------------------
The WELL, based in the San Francisco area, is host to an active EFF
conference, as well as many other related conferences of interest to EFF
supporters. Modem access is available through the CompuServe Packet
Network. If you have an Internet connection, you can reach the WELL via
telnet at well.sf.ca.us. To subscribe to the WELL, contact WELL Customer
Support at +1 415 332 4335. To get to the EFF conference, type "g eff".
The Spring
----------
The Spring is a new conferencing system in Austin TX, hosting many conferences
including a new EFF forum. Spring can be reached via telnet at spring.com,
and has local dialup access as well. The EFF forum is accessible by
simply following the menus into the conferences area, and choosing the
Select Conference item, specifying the EFF conference. To subscribe to
the Spring, contact Spring Customer Support at +1 512 302 4000.
CompuServe (CIS)
----------------
Our forum on CompuServe is also open. GO EFFSIG to join. Many of the files
on ftp.eff.org, as well as other items of interest, are available in the
EFFSIG Libraries, and a lively debate and chat area exists with more
than 20 online message areas. CIS can be reached via telnet at
compuserve.com. To join CompuServe, contact CIS Customer Support at
1-800-524-3388 (US-only) or +1 614 529 1349 (elsewhere).
America Online (AOL)
--------------------
EFF has opened up a forum on America Online. Go to Keyword: EFF to join.
Some basic EFF files are available, as well as a large and diverse
discussion and debate area. In addition, EFF sponsors occasional
interactive discussions in the Auditoriums. To become a member of AOL,
contact AOL Customer Support at 1-800-827-6364 (US only; AOL does not
presently offer service outside the US.)
General Electric's Network for Information Exchange (GEnie)
-----------------------------------------------------------
The Public Forum * Non-Profit Connection RT hosts an EFF forum on GEnie,
including a stock of EFF newsletters and info in Library 13, and an EFF
discussion area (Category 7, Topic 17). Please support this volunteer
effort and add your thoughts to the forum. The Public Forum is keyword
PF (or page 545). To join GEnie, contact GEnie Customer Support at
1-800-638-9636 (US only), or +1 301 340 6415 (elsewhere). The sign-up code
(which will get you some free time online to check out the system) is
MHC524.
Byte Information eXchange (BIX)
-------------------------------
An EFF forum is available on BIX. The online EFF area is located at
topic "eff" in the "security" conference, and BIX can be reached via telnet
to x25.bix.com or bix.com. Like our area on GEnie, the BIX forum is a
volunteer activist effort - please participate, and help make this a great
virtual community of activism and discussion! To join BIX, call BIX
customer service at 1-800-695-4775 (US only) or +1 617 345 4137 (elsewhere).
Other Services, BBSs, and Networks:
-----------------------------------
From time to time, EFF-oriented resources may appear on other systems; for
instance, Illuminati Online's Metaverse service will feature an EFF
"virtual office", while FidoNet locally gates both comp.org.eff.talk and
comp.org.eff.news. If you have difficulty finding online material from the
listed sources, try shopping around and you may find what you are looking
for. All EFF materials are redistributable, and can be found on many BBS
systems around the country. System operators interested in carrying our
material should contact ask@eff.org (Internet) Stanton McCandlish at
1:109/1108 (FidoNet), or call +1 202 861 7700 and ask for Stanton McCandlish.
Why You Should Join the Electronic Frontier Foundation
======================================================
Every day decisions are being made that will affect your life online.
Decisions about what sorts of technology you can use to protect the
privacy of your communications. Decisions about what services you will
be able to get over the emerging national information infrastructure.
Decisions that are made before you even know that there are choices.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has been working since July 1990 to
ensure that the civil liberties guaranteed in the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights are applied to new communications technologies. Our
members join EFF to make sure that they are informed about the issues
and debates that will shape the future of electronic communications.
EFF members enjoy the following benefits:
* subscription to our quarterly hard copy newsletter,
_Networks_&_Policy_;
* subscription to our biweekly electronic newsletter,
_EFFector_Online_;
* online bulletins that will keep you informed about the key legal,
legislative and policy developments affecting your online
communications;
* an online response mechanism to make themselves heard on key issues.
EFF is a respected voice for the rights of users of online
technologies. We feel that the best way to protect your online rights
is to be fully informed and to make your opinions heard. EFF members
are informed, and are making a difference. Join EFF today!
--------------- cut here ---------------
MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
================================================
Print out in monospaced (non-proportional) font and mail or fax to:
Membership Coordinator - membership@eff.org
Electronic Frontier Foundation
1667 K St. NW, Suite 801, Washington DC 20006-1605 USA
+1 202 861 7700 (voice), +1 202 861 1258 (fax)
+1 202 861 1223 (BBS - 16.8k ZyXEL)
+1 202 861 1224 (BBS - 14.4k V.32bis)
Internet fax gate: remote-printer.EFF@8.5.2.1.1.6.8.2.0.2.1.tpc.int
SIGN ME UP!
-----------
I wish to become a member of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. I
enclose:
___ Fellow membership.......$500
___ Benefactor membership...$250
___ Pioneer membership......$100
___ Advocate membership.....$65
___ Regular membership......$40
___ Student membership......$20
___ SysOp membership........$10*
for my one-year membership.
* SysOp members are required to bring in 10 new members to renew
at the SysOp membership rate (otherwise Advocate rates apply).
Send queries to membership@eff.org for more info. NOTE: CIS,
AOL, etc. forum sysops and co-sysops ARE eligible for SysOp
membership.
Special Contribution
I wish to make an additional tax-deductible donation in the
amount of $__________ to further support the activities of EFF.
EFF/Aerosmith Virtual World Tour T-shirt
Commemorating the Aerosmith EFF benefit tour of Internet, AOL,
CompuServe, and Prodigy, Dec. 4-7, 1994, limited edition t-shirts
are available! All proceeds go to EFF. These shirts are
printed front and back in full color, on black cotton, and
must be seen to be believed! Shirts are available separately
for $20. Join EFF today and get yours for only $10!
I'd like ____ EFF/Aerosmith shirts at $10 each.
I'm not joining, but would like ____ shirts at $20 each.
EFF T-shirt
The classic EFF shirt, printed front (EFF logo) and back
(large artwork) in two colors on white cotton shirts.
Available for $10 to new and non-members; members who renew
at a higher rate (e.g. upgrade from regular to Advocate
membership) receive a free shirt!
I would like ___ shirts at $10 each.
___ I'm renewing at a higher rate and would like a free
shirt. My membership number is ___________________
PAYMENT METHOD:
---------------
___ Enclosed is a check or money order payable to
the Electronic Frontier Foundation. US funds only please.
___ Please charge my:
___ MasterCard ___ Visa ___ American Express
Card Number: _____________________________________________
Expiration Date: _________________________________________
Signature: _______________________________________________
NOTE: We do not recommend sending credit card information
via Internet email, unless it is encrypted! See end for
EFF's PGP encryption public key.
YOUR CONTACT INFORMATION:
-------------------------
Name: __________________________________________________________
Organization: __________________________________________________
Address: _______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
E-mail addresses: ______________________________________________
______________________________________________
Phone: _____________________ FAX: ___________________________
**** SYSOP MEMBERSHIP SECTION ***********************************
* *
* Ph.: ____________________ Modem Type: ___________________ *
* *
* ____________________ _______________________________ *
* *
* ____________________ _______________________________ *
* *
* Other access means: _________________________________________ *
* (e.g. for Internet *
* service, AOL/CIS _________________________________________ *
* forum, etc.) *
* *
* BBS Info: BBS/Service/Forum Name: __________________________ *
* *
* SysOps:___________________________________________ *
* *
* Voice/Support Phone: _____________________________ *
* *
* Network Addresses: _______________________________ *
* *
* _______________________________ *
* *
* BBS Notes: (OS, modem types/speeds, Internet connectivity, *
* access requirements, hours, fees, software, focus *
* or special interests, unique features, etc.) *
* *
* ___________________________________________________ *
* *
* ___________________________________________________ *
* *
* ___________________________________________________ *
* *
* EFF will maintain a publicly available list of BBSs and *
* similar services that support the efforts of the Electronic *
* Frontier Foundation. Members with BBSs who support EFF at *
* the Regular or Student or other rates can be listed as well. *
* *
* Include my BBS in the EFF Member BBS Directory _______ *
* *
*****************************************************************
PUBLICATIONS & SERVICES
-----------------------
Please send me:
___ EFFector Online - EFF's biweekly electronic newsletter
(back issues available from ftp.eff.org,
/pub/EFF/Newsletters/EFFector).
___ Online Bulletins - bulletins on key developments
affecting online communications,
plus newsletter.
NOTE: You may prefer to browse these resources in the
Usenet (NetNews) newsgroup comp.org.eff.news
Send a message body of "longindex" (without
"quotes") to listserv@eff.org for info on our
other internet forums. Send a message body of
"help" to listserv@eff.org for instructions on
subscribing to these other resources.
NOTE: Paper documents available upon request.
_Networks_&_Policy_ hardcopy EFF newsletter
(quarterly) automatically sent via postal mail.
PRIVACY POLICY
--------------
EFF occasionally shares our mailing list with other
organizations promoting similar goals. However, we respect
an individual's right to privacy and will not distribute your
name without explicit permission.
___ I grant permission for EFF to distribute my name and
contact information to organizations sharing similar goals.
[This form came from *.eff.org - please leave this line on the form!
If you found it elsewhere, please tell us where so we see how far
it goes. Sysop members should place their BBS name here instead
when posting this form to their systems.]
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is a U.S. nonprofit, 501(c)(3)
organization supported by contributions from individual members,
corporations and private foundations. Donations are tax-deductible.
Merchandise orders are not tax-deductible. EFF's tax exemption
number is 04-3091431.
--------------- cut here ---------------
INTERNET CONTACT ADDRESSES
==========================
Introductory EFF info: info@eff.org
EFF's Guide to the Internet: netguide@eff.org
Membership & donations: membership@eff.org
Legal services: ssteele@eff.org
Hardcopy publications: pubs@eff.org
Technical questions/problems, access to mailing lists: eff@eff.org
General EFF, legal, policy or online resources queries: ask@eff.org
Latest issue of _EFFector_ (EFF newsletter): effector-reflector@eff.org
EFF PGP PUBLIC KEY FOR ENCRYPTION
=================================
This is the ASCII-armored PGP 2.6us public key for the Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF). It is compatible with PGP vers. 2.2 - 2.7.
PGP is an ecryption (data security encoding) program, available for
DOS, OS/2, Unix, Macintosh and several other platforms. PGP is the
de facto Internet standard for encryption, and is available from many
BBSs, FTP sites, and other online services. (If you have trouble
locating PGP, see ftp.eff.org, /pub/Net_info/Tools/Crypto/README.Dist).
Note that mail sent with this key will be considered addressed to
EFF in general, not to a specific person, unless otherwise noted in
plaintext. To send encrypted personal mail to someone at EFF, for
whatever reason, please use that person's own key, or arrange some
other method of communication.
This key is provided principally for the sending of sensitive legal
information, and the transmission of credit card numbers over the
net securely when becoming a member of EFF. It takes us time and
effort to decrypt, so please don't use this key trivially.
Thank you. Please expect a delay, as the message will have to be
transferred to another system for decryption (we do not keep PGP
or our secret keys on our Internet systems for security reasons.)
To add this key to your public key ring, save the key as a file
called pgpkey.eff, then use the following DOS commandline,
in your PGP directory:
pgp -ka pgpkey.eff pubring.pgp
If your public key ring has another name, use that instead of
"pubring.pgp".
For MacPGP, click on Key | Add Key, select pgpkey.eff as
the file to get key from, and pubring.pgp (or whatever your
pubring is) for file to add key to.
To encrypt a message, please see the PGP documentation, and
remember that you will almost certainly need to generate the
result as an ASCII-armored file, so you can email it
(non-ASCII-armored PGP ciphertexts are binary, and will get
mangled if you try to email them.)
*** NOTE! PLEASE INCLUDE YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS *INSIDE* THE
ENCRYPTED MESSAGE any time you send us crypto-mail, else
we may not be able to reply, if the original email headers
are lost.
The key itself:
-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: 2.6
mQCPAy7QlNwAAAEEAKMNCpEGP2868gPmT+5ILWveARJEFRQius+CP8hHG331YAyw
beLmllnFUNLEKBKSlX9gyNL7/KKZXCaK1hbfaB7jC0f6KyK68dOeMR1jkpw73NqC
i6/U9RqMBDGzzMz5dnDoqz9s5f33xrYZC+qwTKmGyh0mcFaCzJ21/+6ZWS/tABEB
AAG0LEVsZWN0cm9uaWMgRnJvbnRpZXIgRm91bmRhdGlvbiA8ZWZmQGVmZi5vcmc+
iQCVAwUQLtCVljZAgYw09MRxAQHRLwP8CrE03giPMN0JVMR7aRxmn/XF9sQp9GtJ
mOZFxyvZnkyvW1hM2oMxRVmShWlewg0uphUsB2ayiACYgUhIK36mr7bDpSTqGR7r
J+VT+tVz802Q4GgdXUaVKnFb4bbZ9+xREXblDv5GgAjtqq9cdxxan+KeoqIEQlw9
iIKOzYGfAF+JAJMDBRAu0JVmnbX/7plZL+0BAQzQA/DyX64lOrLNvn0xDSFfMGVg
EueZjn1pGm0CBUGctzAHjRlrAeUUReh0JJTOaVcm6lnPZHgmZjFzzmeQbfpHd+6k
OkV2Yx1fouDJR8ewOMVE+VauC9Xe1YA4/VkAxVjRmlNUs+nyDNaqVwhdkOgalQGO
57UtUMy9mrFLNJW/eLW0JUVGRiA8ZWZmQHdlbGwuY29tLCBlZmZAd2VsbC5zZi5j
YS51cz60HkVGRiA8NzY3MTEuMzE3QGNvbXB1c2VydmUuY29tPrQYRUZGIDwxOjEw
OS8xMTA4QEZpZG9OZXQ+tBlFRkYgPDE5OjEyMDIvMTAxQFdpc2hOZXQ+tBlFRkYg
PDM2OToxMDExLzJASW5kcmFOZXQ+tBhFRkYgPDE4MToxOTMvMUBTdG9ybU5ldD60
IERpc2NhcmQgb2xkZXIga2V5IC0gaXQncyByZXZva2Vk
=2A8+
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
[Final note: beware line wrapping - key will not work if mangled!]
Updated: Mar. 21, 1995