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- EFFector Online Volume 5 No. 1 2/5/1993 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
- 584 lines
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- In this issue:
- Three perspectives of a two-day meeting in Atlanta between EFF and
- representatives of regional groups of grassroots networking activists.
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- INTRODUCTION:
-
- This past January 23rd and 24th, 11 members of the electronic
- community met in Atlanta with members of the staff and board of
- the Electronic Frontier Foundation. The meeting lasted a day and a
- half, with topics of discussion including EFF's recent organizational
- restructuring and how groups serving the electronic community can
- work together to be more effective. By the end of the two days,
- meeting attendees had formed a group to organize and formulate
- guidelines for continuing interchange among all who work to
- strengthen electronic communications.
-
- This issue of EFFector Online presents some first-hand views of what
- transpired in Atlanta. Mitch Ratcliffe, one of the members of
- This!Group out of San Francisco's Bay area, David Smith, a board
- member of the EFF-Austin group, and Jerry Berman, EFF's Executive
- Director, all offer their thoughts about the meeting. Other meeting
- attendees were:
-
- Dick Anderson, Delegate from EFF-Austin
- John Perry Barlow, EFF Executive Committee Chairman
- Judi Clark, Delegate from This!Group
- Esther Dyson, EFF Board Member
- Dave Farber, EFF Board Member
- Cliff Figallo, EFF Online Coordinator
- John Gilmore, EFF Board Member
- Mike Godwin, EFF Legal Services Counsel
- Mitch Kapor, EFF Board Chairman
- Jon Lebkowsky, Delegate from EFF-Austin
- Matt Midboe, Delegate from Huntsville, Alabama
- Simona Nass, Delegate from NTE (New York)
- Alexis Rosen, Delegate from NTE (New York)
- Shari Steele, EFF Staff Attorney
- Bob Stratton, Delegate from Washington, DC, area
- Glenn Tenney, Delegate from This!Group
- Ed Vielmetti, Delegate from Ann Arbor, Michigan
-
-
- Information Activists Confer, Establish Understanding
- *******************************************************************
- by Mitch Ratcliffe
-
- Atlanta, where the world comes everyday for news and colorized
- movies, the capitol of Cyberspace, was the setting for a discussion
- between the Electronic Frontier Foundation and information activists
- on the weekend of January 23-24. After two days of discussions, the
- parties came away with a new understanding of EFF's legislative
- agenda in coming years, and how local groups can work together to
- raise awareness of electronic freedom and privacy.
-
- EFF has endured a roller-coaster year, during which it wrestled with
- the growth of its influence in Washington and growing interest in
- local chapters. After the group's board of directors rejected investing
- organizational energy in local chapters and closed its Cambridge,
- Mass. office -- shifting all funding to a Washington office -- they
- faced the challenge of explaining their new role to the world. EFF's
- founders had already discovered the Internet community can be a
- fickle friend. As the group succeeded inside the Beltway, its Internet
- constituency has savaged them in e-mail and news groups. People
- have questioned their commitment to civil liberties and whether the
- EFF agenda served only its corporate sponsors.
-
- So, the purpose of the meeting in Atlanta was clearly two-fold. In
- addition to identifying the projects on which the attendees can work
- together, EFF needed to cultivate a chorus of voices in key virtual
- and actual forums that can articulate their new agenda. The
- representatives invited to the summit included members of the
- Austin, Texas,-based EFF chapter that has been growing for the past
- year, as well as activists from New York, San Francisco, Ann Arbor,
- Mich., and Huntsville, Ala.
-
- EFF and the representatives of the various groups met bearing with
- them considerable defensiveness after months of crossed signals and
- animosity. What transpired was not a conversion, but a discovery of
- the personalities behind the EFF machine. Mitch Kapor and John
- Perry Barlow, the founders, and Jerry Berman, the lobbyist who has
- ascended to head the now Washington-based organization, exposed
- themselves to questioning for two days. What we found were very
- human leaders, who are as confused about perceptions of them as
- the world is about where they came from, what they have
- accomplished and how they operate in Washington. While we do not
- agree with everything they do, there is no denying that they are
- effective. Considerable educational and advocacy territories are also
- wide open for other groups who want to make them their own.
-
- "There has been some ambiguity in people's minds with regard to
- who we are," Barlow said. "We are who we've always been. The
- changes we announced are fairly minimal. We've decided to focus a
- lot of our activities in Washington because there is a significant
- window of opportunity there"
-
- If EFF has suffered from anything this last year, it's bad
- communication. Without a concerted effort to reach out to the Net --
- and to everyday people who live and work on the fringes of
- Cyberspace, because they use computers, cable television and ATM
- cards -- the organization has allowed itself to become a victim of its
- own early expectations that enlightened visions of the future would
- allow them to transcend organizational and Beltway politics. Instead,
- the EFF received a fierce, full-body reality check. They've found that
- experience can be a high-sticking teacher on the black ice of life.
-
- "We're a bunch of permanent, chronic mavericks," Kapor said. "But
- certain things became very clear when the board met to discuss our
- direction. We clarified the role of chapters, or lack of chapters,
- deciding that we did not want a centralized organization. The other
- thing that's increasingly clear is that there is a sense in certain parts
- of the net that EFF has a perceived obligation to serve particular
- constituencies. We are not trying to be the provisional government of
- Cyberspace, and we also reject the idea that we have an obligation to
- serve the good of the net," he said.
-
- He also said his own personal animosity for running the day-to-day
- operations of a large organization had contributed to the
- miscommunication between EFF and potential chapters.
-
- Discussion on the first day revolved around the recently announced
- changes at EFF. After EFF presented several perspectives on its
- Washington-based strategy, the activists from around the country
- explained how their groups were founded and had begun to grow.
-
- "We're better defined and we're capable of changing based on what
- we hear from the outside," said EFF board member Esther Dyson. "We
- are not for the net community, we're for the idea of communities.
- One that we come from and feel close to is the net community, but
- that's not the only one."
-
- Jerry Berman explained that EFF will continue to advocate for
- freedom of expression and extension of civil liberties into
- Cyberspace.
-
- "We are committed to the legal services and civil liberties service
- role and we will work with people using the technology in different
- ways that will raise constitutional and public policy issues," Berman
- said, citing as an example the 2600 case the EFF has just joined with
- the American Civil Liberties Union. "With regard to those two
- functions, of representing people in trouble and civil liberties
- representation, we are on the ground. With regard to representation
- of the net community, there is a strong part of all of us who wants to
- work with grass-roots organizations outside of Washington DC."
-
- That outreach will come through collaboration with local information
- advocates, Berman said.
-
- The regional groups in attendance outlined their organizations:
-
- This!Group, the San Francisco-based group, said that it has pursued a
- loose structure, but tightly defined projects. Without a board or
- officers in place, This!Group has not grown particularly fast. It has,
- however, begun work on a pamphlet, "Thirteen Things to Keep You
- Awake at Night at the Dawn of the Information Age", and a CD-ROM
- containing video and audio clips from the Computers, Freedom and
- Privacy Conferences I and II, and text of various electronic civil
- liberties cases and papers.
-
- EFF-Austin, the "alpha" chapter that EFF sanctioned in 1991, has
- grown very quickly and holds monthly Cyberdawg events to reach a
- large audience of potential members. With approximately 70
- members, EFF-Austin has published "InfoDisks" of EFF-related
- documents and conducted seminars on sysop liability.
-
- NTE, the New York group that sprung up last fall, has 50 or so active
- members. They have established a board of directors and hold
- monthly meetings in Manhattan that are well attended. Net access is
- a focus for NTE, because several public access UNIX providers have
- joined; they would also like to conduct educational programs for
- ordinary folk and the law enforcement community.
-
- Ann Arbor, the Washington DC area and Huntsville, where people
- have discussed forming groups, were represented, as well.
-
- Conversation about how the Net might be organized to fight
- intrusions on privacy or freedom of expression revolved around how
- EFF might act as a central clearinghouse for information. But more
- than that, it became apparent that a national action coordinator is
- needed. This person or organization must be a conduit not only
- between EFF and the regions, but also a mechanism for generating
- letters to Congress, agencies and so on (for example, imagine the
- impact of 100,000 letters sent to the National Security Agency vis-a-
- vis encryption export policy -- the Director of the NSA should have
- to wonder about how people got his address by now -- but no
- such coordinated mailings have happened).
-
- Attendees called repeatedly for a national coordinator staff member
- at EFF. They also demanded that EFF take its show on the road,
- having staffers and the board meet with activists around the
- country. However, this may have been missing the real point -- if the
- people of the Net want to have this kind of coordination, they are
- probably going to have to set the wheels in motion themselves. EFF
- has a talent for lobbying, and will be honing their legislative blade
- over the next year. The Net -- or better, people concerned about the
- extension of civil liberties into Cyberspace -- had better get to
- organizing a body that can provide these services. The message is
- that EFF is already busy.
-
- So came the suggestion on the second day that a federation of
- information activist organizations would be one possible solution to
- the problem. Of course, more organization may be the last thing the
- Net and activists need. But the suggestion was made and approved
- resoundingly by all. A steering committee was named to explore how
- such an organization might be launched, and to gauge the interest of
- groups like Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, the
- American Library Association, ACLU and many others. The steering
- committee began work on a statement of principles and conjured the
- working title for the group: Congress of Information Associations
- (CIA). A Birds of a Feather session to discuss the CIA will be
- scheduled for the Third Conference on Computers, Freedom and
- Privacy in Burlingame, Calif. on March 9 - 12, 1993. (for CFP
- information, send mail to cfp93@well.sf.ca.us).
-
- What was accomplished? The reestablishment of communication
- among members of a broad coalition, but one that has not succeeded
- in including everyone concerned about electronic communications
- and civil liberties. Contentiousness is the first law of the Net, and
- there is certain to be argument about the motivations of EFF in
- holding this conference without invitations to CPSR, ACLU and the
- thousands of activists who are reaching users in the far corners of
- the Matrix. But for those who attended, it was a weekend of
- productive face-to-face talk that may serve as the foundation for
- future collaboration and action.
-
- Mitch Ratcliffe
- Editor at Large
- MacWEEK
- coyote@well.sf.ca.us
- Mitch_Ratcliffe@macweek.ziff.com
-
-
- +=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+
-
- February 7, 1993
-
- ATLANTA SUMMIT CONFERENCE
-
- David Smith
- bladex@wixer.cactus.org
- [This is not intended to be a definitive account, but rather my
- personal account of what I thought was important at the Atlanta
- Summit Conference. --D.S.]
-
- The format of the conference was (roughly) a day and a half of
- conversations while seated in a Georgia Tech campus building, 2-3
- hours of conversation while seated at a Chinese restaurant, and many
- more hours of conversation while seated in the lobby and bar of the
- hotel.
-
- In addition to a greater understanding of the other groups and
- individuals, I learned a lot more about EFF-Austin, and how we fit
- into the "national scheme."
-
- Take, for example, the nature of each organization. The word "civil
- liberties" was dropped more times by lunch than I had heard in
- almost a year of my own involvement with EFF-Austin. While EFF-
- National works primarily as a political activist, EFF-Austin works as a
- social activist. The strength of our organization is providing a forum
- and common ground for the vast and diverse members of the Austin
- electronic community.
-
- While a wing of EFF-Austin may develop in the future that more
- closely resembles the traditional cyber-liberties organizations, a self-
- definition of "community activist" more aptly describes not only our
- history but future goals as well.
-
- A preconception I carried into Atlanta was thinking that the "Best
- Thing To Do" was the creation of a document, FAQ, outline, or
- guideline that served as a cookbook for creating other local groups
- across the country. After meeting and speaking with members from
- the other groups, however, I now believe a cookie sheet cut-out
- won't work, because each group exists as a function unique to their
- environment and local area.
-
- Some examples.
-
- San Francisco already hosts a strong Computer Professionals for
- Social Responsibility (CPSR) group as well as Bay Area MacIntosh
- User Group (BMUG). There is no need (or desire) for This!Group to
- replicate those efforts. There is no need (or desire) for another highly
- structured organization like an EFF-Austin, and so this is a very loose
- affiliation of people picking and choosing tasks that interest them.
- Judi Clark and Mitch Ratcliffe are working a CD-Rom that will be a
- combination of historical archive of the Computers Freedom and
- Privacy Conference (sound bytes, multi-media), as well as having
- 600+ textfiles. Glenn Tenney mentioned as another possible project
- an informational brochure or pamphlet.
-
- Another example of a group being a function of their area is Matt
- Midboe, the representative from Huntsville. He cannot receive UUCP
- access in his area, much less an Internet connection. (Note: He is
- "borrowing" one from one of the Departments at his University, with
- implicit permission). Austin has at least a dozen sites to receive
- USENET newsgroups and e-mail access, so this is not an issue of
- concern for EFF-Austin.
-
- Finally, after listening to Simona Nass and Alexis Rosen discuss the
- organization-building experiences of NTE, I am glad that we had the
- good common sense to only have *one* lawyer-type and not half a
- dozen or more.
-
- EFF-NATIONAL RE-ORGANIZATION
-
- Jerry Berman, executive director of EFF-National, spoke about the
- recent reorganizations, the role of EFF, and how it operates. After
- reading the press release and litany of jilted lovers on
- comp.org.eff.talk, and after speaking with other EFF-Austin Board
- members, my impression was that EFF had engaged in a full scale
- retreat.
-
- Berman's explanation, however, showed the re-organization as an
- attempt to realign the organization with their commitments to
- advance the cyber liberties agenda. Not only did it not work to have
- two offices, he said, but it was counter- productive, created mixed
- signals, and was not very effective. Rather than abandoning the
- communications function of the Cambridge office, they were simply
- re- consolidating inside the Beltway. Nearly every member of EFF-
- National that spoke admitted to the organization having a serious
- communication problem, aggravated in part by having two offices.
-
- Berman also left me with a greater understanding of the role that EFF
- plays in national politics. Cyberspace is a domain in the Washington
- political arena surrounded by entities who have interests other than
- the First Amendment at heart : the CIA, FBI, the military, AT&T, NSA,
- IBM, et. al. These organizations have enclosed telecommunications
- policy into a gridlock and the way EFF-National has chosen to break
- this gridlock is through alliances with as many members as possible
- in order to provide for the passing of the civil liberties agenda.
-
- Berman gave as an example the digital telephony bill, which the FBI
- proposed, allowing law enforcement agencies (in essence) a back
- door to all encryption methods.
-
- EFF-National opposed this on constitutional grounds and enlisted the
- aid of several business and telecommunication industry interests.
- Perhaps these corporations were *really* concerned with the bottom
- line and thought that the scheme would be too expensive to
- implement. Perhaps they aligned with EFF-National not out of
- concern about being a good democratic citizen, but out of the desire
- to protect profits.
-
- So what? says the EFF-National.
-
- The alliance was so effective that not a single member of the Senate
- nor House of Representatives sponsored the bill, when it could have
- just as easily been framed as protecting the public from terrorists or
- the need to be tough on crime etc. etc. The civil liberties agenda was
- served through alliances with industry spear-headed by EFF-
- National.
-
- That is the dance that Jerry Berman is hosting in Washington.
-
- POST ATLANTA AGENDA
-
- Besides a sense of greater understanding and co-operation between
- groups (as measured by a whole week sans flames on the
- thesegroups mailing list), some more concrete items are rising out of
- Atlanta.
-
- The local groups banded together to present EFF-National with a joint
- proposal about what we wanted from EFF-National. Essentially we
- made a list of resource-sharing tasks that would help us out, and
- asked EFF-National to assign or hire a person to perform these tasks.
- Berman said this would be discussed at the Board Meeting (which
- was scheduled for Sunday afternoon), though no official
- announcement or follow- up as been released as of this writing.
-
- As a direct result of contacts made in Atlanta, Matt Midboe reports
- that he has located a company interested in providing access to the
- Huntsville area.
-
- A special Steering Committee was formed to investigate the creation
- of a formal organizational structure that will serve as an alliance
- between the cyber-liberties groups. Jon Lebkowsky immediately
- volunteered as the representative for EFF-Austin, pending Board
- approval at the next Director's meeting.
-
- We also agreed to continue using the thesegroups mailing list as a
- forum for communication. We discussed having another conference
- in a year from now, and immediately volunteered Austin as a host
- site. <joke! joke!> EFF-Austin is also working on projects that involve
- members of different groups.
-
- * * *
-
- End note :
-
- I want to point out that both Dick Anderson and Jon Lebkowsky
- were vigorous participants in representing EFF-Austin as well. There
- just wasn't room to try and discuss everything.
-
- Also, I want to personally thank EFF-National for sponsoring the
- conference and taking the time to listen to our concerns. I want to
- thank EFF-National for paying for our round trip airfare and dinner
- Saturday night, as well as Mike Godwin for picking up the tab at the
- bar, even if Atlanta doesn't stock Shiner Bock.
-
- +=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-
- EFF-Austin contact information
- E-mail : eff-austin@tic.com
- Snailmail : PO Box 18597, Austin, TX 78760
- VoiceMail : 512-465-7871
- Disclaimers : You are encouraged to re-distribute this.
- document electronically. Any opinions expressed belong to
- the author and not the organization. (c) 1993
- +=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+=+-+= +-+=+
-
- February 5, 1993
-
- An Open Letter from Jerry Berman
- Executive Director
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- On January 12, 1993, the Electronic Frontier Foundation
- announced that it was moving all of its operations to Washington, DC,
- and that I was EFF's Executive Director. At the same time, EFF
- announced that it was not going to establish formal EFF chapters
- around the country. On January 23 and 24, members of EFF's board
- and staff met in Atlanta with representatives of groups interested in
- possible EFF affiliation to explain our decisions and discuss future
- cooperative efforts. In this first issue of EFFector Online for 1993, we
- offer you both "grass roots" and EFF views on what this all means. I
- am including my own first take on the changes at EFF.
-
- First and foremost, we are consolidating our operations in
- Washington, DC, in order to better carry out our mission of fostering
- openness, individual freedom and community on the electronic
- frontier. We want to serve as more effective advocates of policies
- and causes that increase civil liberties and democratic values in new
- digital media, and we want to engage in education and advocacy both
- with other groups who share a common mission and with "grass
- roots" citizens on and off the net who want to join with us in these
- efforts.
-
- But why Washington? The answer is plain: While many of us
- are increasingly cynical about Washington, DC, and "inside the
- beltway" politics, we must also understand that the momentous
- decisions that affect our society are being made in Washington. This
- is as true when it comes to the shaping and civilizing of cyberspace
- as with anything else.
-
- While many who already communicate online think of the
- electronic frontier as inhabited by BBS systems, the WELL, USENET
- and other fledgling outposts of new digital communities, in fact the
- electronic frontier exists within communications wires that are
- highly regulated and structured. Today, giant public and private
- institutions -- from the FBI to the Congress, from the FCC to the
- telephone and cable companies -- are battling between and among
- themselves over the future control and governance of the electronic
- frontier.
-
- Recognizing the importance of being "inside the beltway," EFF
- opened the Washington office last January and ever since has
- devoted an increasing amount of staff and resources to shape the
- outcome of these policy battles in ways that are consistent with and
- supportive of civil liberties and democratic values. Unfortunately,
- we have not communicated well about our goals and activities.
- Seldom have our electronic public interest policy efforts, or those of
- others, been discussed in EFFector or other EFF outlets. And when
- they have, they have often been badly garbled or misconstrued.
- We can only accept full responsibility for failing to explain the civil
- liberties implications of the "ISDN thing" or to fully communicate
- EFF's leadership role in thwarting the FBI's effort to "dumb down"
- new computer and communications technologies and networks to
- carry out government wiretapping.
-
- As none of these policy debates or issues are resolved, nor can
- they be resolved in ways that serve the public interest without
- broader citizen participation, we are restructuring our operations and
- our communications.
-
- Soon, both EFFector and our new public policy newsletter will
- set out the critical issues. For example, we will explain how:
-
- * our ISDN initiative and our involvement in the NREN are
- designed to empower a diversity of electronic voices to share politics,
- commerce and culture with one another as we transition to the
- broadband networks of the next century;
-
- * EFF will continue to coordinate a broad coalition of
- organizations -- from public interest groups like the ACLU and CPSR
- to companies interested in the future of communications like AT&T,
- Microsoft, Lotus and Sun Microsystems -- in opposition to the FBI's
- legislation to "certify" technologies and networks only when they
- meet broad, ill-defined wiretapping standards;
-
- * EFF wants to build grass roots support for lifting export
- and other controls on encryption to guarantee the right of privacy
- and security;
-
- * EFF not only wants to litigate future "Steve Jackson
- Games"-type cases, but it wants to avoid the need to do so by
- establishing new Secret Service and FBI investigative guidelines that
- keep law enforcement officers from trampling on the First and
- Fourth Amendment rights of computer users;
-
- * we want other groups to use EFFector and other EFF
- publications for communicating about their local, state and national
- policy and cultural initiatives; and
-
- * EFF is interested in working toward a possible
- federation of electronic frontier outposts that we would join but not
- govern or control.
-
- To accomplish this mission, we will be located in Washington
- but will maintain our presence on the Net. We are committed to
- listen, learn and work towards common goals but maintain our
- independence. Members of the EFF board and staff will be out and
- about, both online and off.
-
- EFF is a unique organization, operating at a critical moment.
- Major policy decisions affecting free speech and privacy will be made
- over the next several years. Combining technical, legislative and
- legal expertise, EFF is committed to engaging in vigorous advocacy
- for our vision of the electronic future, which we hope you share. We
- look forward to working with you to make this vision a reality.
-
- Jerry Berman*
- EFF Executive Director
-
- (*Before joining EFF as Washington Office and now Executive Director,
- Jerry Berman was Chief Legislative Counsel for the American Civil
- Liberties Union and founder of the ACLU Projects on Privacy and
- Information Technology.)
-
- =============================================================
-
- For information on EFF membership, email <fig@eff.org> or call
- (617)576-4506.
- EFFector Online is published by
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, DC 20003
- Phone: +1 202 544-9237 FAX: +1 202 547 5481
- Internet Address: eff@eff.org
- Coordination, production and shipping by Cliff Figallo, EFF
- Online Communications Coordinator (fig@eff.org)
- Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged.
- Signed articles do not necessarily represent the view of the EFF.
- To reproduce signed articles individually, please contact the authors
- for their express permission.
- =============================================================
-
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