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- From: philip@SMU.StMarys.CA (Philip Howard (Computer Services))
- Newsgroups: alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk
- Subject: RE: "Computers graphic...", letter to the Globe
- Summary: flaming the Moon
- Keywords: bad press
- Message-ID: <philip.12@SMU.StMarys.CA>
- Date: 29 Jul 92 18:46:59 GMT
- Sender: usenet@nstn.ns.ca (NNTP Entity)
- Organization: Saint Marys University
- Lines: 94
-
- The following letter was faxed to the Globe today. Not 30min. later I got a
- call from Peter Moon, the reporter who wrote the article. He was still
- chuckling... He admitted, though, that the Internet is a hard concept to
- grasp (no ribald pun intended).
-
-
-
-
-
- 610-5681 Rhuland Street
- Halifax, Nova Scotia
-
- The Editor,
- The Globe & Mail
- Toronto, Ontario
- Fax: (416) 585-5085
-
- Dear Sir or Madam,
-
- The following response to your front page "expos" of the Internet is
- written in the style of a network article, or "post." On "the Net", quoted
- passages are preceded by the '>' symbol (inserted automatically by software
- when replying to a post). Puns or tongue-in-cheek remarks often end in a
- "smilie", a sideways happy-face symbol made up of keyboard characters; eg,
- :-). Critical remarks are known as "flames." Postings are usually far more
- casual than is common with written correspondence. Acronyms like IMHO (In
- My Humble Opinion) and BTW (By The Way) are used freely to the distress of
- those new to the system, the "newbies." Postings usually conclude with
- information about the poster. These signature lines, or "sigs", may include
- sarcastic disclaimers along the lines of "The opinions expressed are not
- necessarily those of my employer."
-
- (Note: For correct spacing, reproduce the following in a mono-spaced font
- like courier, 80 column page width.)
-
- ----------------------Cut Here-----------------------------------
- X-NEWS: husky1 can.globe&mail.sex: 50
- Relay-Version: VMS News - V6.0-3 14/03/90 VAX/VMS; site husky1.stmarys.ca
- Newsgroups: can.globe&mail.sex
- Subject: Computers graphic when it comes to porn
- From: phoward@husky1.stmarys.ca
- Date: 27 Jul 92 13:46:50 -0400
- Organization: St. Mary's University, Halifax, N.S., Canada
- Lines: 50
-
- In article<1992July20.frontpage@globe.to.ont>,"Computers graphic when it
- comes to porn", Moon@globe.to.ont<"Peter Moon"> writes:
-
- >Pornographic photographs and obscene stories... are available to
- >virtually anyone in Canada with a computer and a telephone link.
-
- Uh, well, nooo... unless one has purchased the network service, access is
- not *publicly* available, Peter... as you confess later in the article. But
- then that would not have grabbed your readers' ...uh... attention, right?
-
- >Canadian universities enter the computer system that includes the
- >controversial sex bulletin boards through Internet.
-
- Peter, I think you really missed the mark on this one. Of the almost 3,000
- *Usenet* (to be accurate) discussion groups with worldwide distribution,
- you mentioned the three or four sleazy ones. In fact, Usenet discussion
- groups or "netnews" is only one feature of this "network of networks."
- Electronic mail, the speedy transfer of vast data files, and Internet
- accessible library catalogs and databases make up a far greater portion of
- network traffic. The Internet is a tremendous knowledge resource and your
- article only covered the worst of it.
-
- It was as if you had visited a foreign land and spent your entire visit at
- the garbage dump! You overlooked the language and the culture. The Internet
- is becoming, to employ a common phrase, a "distinct society." Its ethos is
- people helping people, sharing information and computing resources, working
- together in a way that outsiders cannot fully appreciate. We are not the
- computer hackers of common lore. We come from all disciplines because every
- field of endeavour benefits from improved access to information.
- Future, faster networks like the Internet have been called "the critical
- infrastructure of information superhighways" by one supporter, American
- Vice Presidential candidate Sen. Albert Gore. IMHO the subject deserved
- fuller coverage than that very narrow article which could only have been
- meant to appeal the most prurient interests of your readers.
-
- BTW, these comments will have been available to tens of thousands of people
- by the time you get around to deciding whether or not to include them on
- the Letters to the Editor page. They will circle the globe in can.general
- and alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk :-)
-
- Please direct any flames to my email box since I am not a regular reader of
- can.sex.globe&mail... *wink* ;-)
-
- -----
- Philip M. Howard | internet: phoward@husky1.stmarys.ca
- Technical Support Analyst | voice: (902) 420-5481
- Saint Mary's University | fax: (902) 420-5115
- Halifax, Nova Scotia | "Maintaining regularity
- C A N A D A B3H 3C3 | without drugs or medication."
-