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- ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION INTRODUCED IN WASHINGTON 7-10-90
-
- 10 July 90 --- Mitch Kapor, the founder of Lotus Development Corp.,
- announced at a news conference this morning that his newly formed
- Electronic Frontier Foundation is giving $275,000 to Computer Profes
- sionals for Social Responsibility to expand their program on computers and
- civil liberties.
-
- CPSR will host a series of policy round-tables in Washington during the
- next two years, to bring together lawmakers, computer users, industry
- representatives, and law enforcement officials "to ensure that our civil
- liberties protections are not lost amidst policy confusion about the use
- of new computer technologies," according to a press release.
-
- "CPSR also plans to develop policy papers on computer and civil liberties,
- to oversee the Government's handling of computer crime investigations, and
- to act as an information resource for organizations and individuals
- interested in civil liberties issues."
-
- In addition, Kapor said EFF will foot the legal costs to recover a
- computer bulletin-board system seized about 4 months ago from Steve
- Jackson Games of Austin, Texas. Reasons for the seizure are still
- unclear, since no charges have yet been filed, and the warrant for the
- seizure was sealed by the court.
-
- During the raid the Secret Service also confiscated drafts of a role-
- playing game that SJG was about to release, believing it to be a training
- manual for computer crime. The game - GURPS Cyberpunk - has since been
- published (with modifications), but this morning Jackson asserted that the
- delay and the work needed to reconstruct the game cost his company some
- $125,000.
-
- "I am a horror story," he began. Picking up on metaphors used by John
- Perry Barlow, who preceded him to the microphone, Jackson called himself
- "one of the homesteaders on the electronic frontier... One day I came
- home to find the barn burned down, the horses set loose...and the culprits
- who did it weren't desperados. They were the cavalry!"
-
- Jackson's lawyer, Harvey Silverglate, added that taking the BBS that SJG
- used for customer support was analogous to seizing presses from the New
- York Times. Terry Gross, a lawyer for Craig Neidorf, pressed the point
- further as he told of his client's problems. Neidorf, a college student
- who edits an electronic newsletter called "Phrack," has been charged with
- perpetrating a "wire fraud scheme" by electronically receiving "stolen
- goods" (a BellSouth internal memo describing 911 system features) and
- transmitting a digest of the memo as an article in Phrack.
-
- "This is like prosecuting the New York Times or the Washington Post for
- wire fraud for publishing the Pentagon Papers," Gross argued. These
- charges wouldn't have been brought if Phrack were published on paper, he
- added. Some of the charges against Neidorf are specific to electronic
- transmission.
-
- In thanking EFF for the grant, Marc Rotenberg, CPSR's spokesman in
- Washington, said the Jackson and Neidorf cases epitomize the tough moral
- and legal issues we'll be grappling with for years to come. Gross,
- Silverglate and Rotenberg agreed that these early cases are especially
- important because they may set precedents.
-
- Kapor repeatedly emphasized that the Electronic Freedom Foundation isn't a
- "hackers defense fund." "Unauthorized intrusion into computer systems is
- improper behavior and should be illegal," he declared. EFF's purpose is
- to see that First Amendment rights aren't trampled in overreaction to real
- or imaginary threats posed by computer crackers.
-
- A basic feature of today's "information society" is anxiety about our
- dependence on electronic media whose workings we don't understand, Kapor
- explained. Barlow added that we're on "the learning curve of Sisyphus":
- technology is evolving faster than we can understand, and it always will
- be.
-
- Kapor suggested that hackers are increasingly portrayed as threatening
- sorcerers mainly because they don't share most people's anxiety and
- ignorance about computer technology. He described the current anti-hacker
- hysteria in terms of the sci-fi movie classic, "The Forbidden Planet":
- the monsters, it turns out in the end, were all Dr. Morbius' projections.
-
- "Hacker" used to be a term of high praise, Kapor pointed out. Hackers also
- created the multi-billion dollar personal computer industry, so it is
- appropriate that EFF is funded by Kapor, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak,
- and a "Silicon Valley pioneer" who wishes to remain unnamed.
-
- Kapor warned that "polarization and misunderstanding" of hackers could
- slow public acceptance of computer networks as a valuable tool in everyday
- life. If we want useful nets for everyone, he said, we must make them
- both open AND secure - a programming feat that calls for hacker-type
- ingenuity.
-
- To improve public understanding of electronic networks and the resources
- they provide, Kapor announced that EFF will sponsor the development of
- "intelligent front-ends" for UNIX e-mail, to be used on Apple/Mac and DOS
- machines. This software would be available at little or no cost, and so
- easy to use that even a "hacker's mother" won't find it intimidating.
- Making networks more accessible will greatly expand the market for
- hardware and software, he concluded.
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation can be contacted at One Cambridge
- Center, Suite 300, Cambridge, MA 02142 (617-577-1385; fax 617-225-2347;
- Internet eff@well.sf.ca.us.
-
-
-
- (An earlier version, with essentially the same information - this earlier
- version is the one actually distributed at the press converence):
-
-
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASEJuly 10, 1990
-
- NEW FOUNDATION ESTABLISHED TO ENCOURAGE COMPUTER-BASED COMMUNICATIONS
- POLICIES
-
- Contact: Cathy Cook (415) 759-5578
-
- Washington, D.C., July 10, 1990 -- Mitchell D. Kapor, founder of Lotus
- Development Corporation and ON Technology, today announced that he,
- along with colleague John Perry Barlow, has established a foundation to
- address social and legal issues arising from the impact on society of
- the increasingly pervasive use of computers as a means of communication
- and information distribution. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
- will support and engage in public education on current and future
- developments in computer-based and telecommunications media. In
- addition, it will support litigation in the public interest to preserve,
- protect and extend First Amendment rights within the realm of computing
- and telecommunications technology.
-
- Initial funding for the Foundation comes from private contributions by
- Kapor and Steve Wozniak, co-founder of Apple Computer, Inc. The
- Foundation expects to actively raise contributions from a wide
- constituency.
-
- As an initial step to foster public education on these issues, the
- Foundation today awarded a grant to the Palo Alto, California-based
- public advocacy group Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
- (CPSR). The grant will be used by CPSR to expand the scope of its
- on-going Computing and Civil Liberties Project (see attached).
-
- Because its mission is to not only increase public awareness about civil
- liberties issues arising in the area of computer-based communications,
- but also to support litigation in the public interest, the Foundation
- has recently intervened on behalf of two legal cases.
-
- The first case concerns Steve Jackson, an Austin-based game manufacturer
- who was the target of the Secret Service's Operation Sun Devil. The EFF
- has pressed for a full disclosure by the government regarding the
- seizure of his company's computer equipment. In the second action, the
- Foundation intends to seek amicus curiae (friend of the court) status
- in the government's case against Craig Neidorf, a 20-year-old University
- of Missouri student who is the editor of the electronic newsletter
- Phrack World News (see attached).
-
- "It is becoming increasingly obvious that the rate of technology
- advancement in communications is far outpacing the establishment of
- appropriate cultural, legal and political frameworks to handle the
- issues that are arising," said Kapor. "And the Steve Jackson and Neidorf
- cases dramatically point to the timeliness of the Foundation's mission.
- We intend to be instrumental in helping shape a new framework that
- embraces these powerful new technologies for the public good."
-
- The use of new digital media -- in the form of on-line information and
- interactive conferencing services, computer networks and electronic
- bulletin boards -- is becoming widespread in businesses and homes.
- ∙√However, the electronic society created by these new forms of digital
- communications does not fit neatly into existing, conventional legal and
- social structures.
-
- The question of how electronic communications should be accorded the
- same political freedoms as newspapers, books, journals and other modes
- of discourse is currently the subject of discussion among this country's
- lawmakers and members of the computer industry. The EFF will take an
- active role in these discussions through its continued funding of
- various educational projects and forums.
-
- An important facet of the Foundation's mission is to help both the
- public and policy-makers see and understand the opportunities as well as
- the challenges posed by developments in computing and telecommunications.
- Also, the EFF will encourage and support the development of new software
- to enable non-technical users to more easily use their computers to access
- the growing number of digital communications services available.
-
- The Foundation is located in Cambridge, Mass. Requests for information
- should be sent to Electronic Frontier Foundation, One Cambridge Center,
- Suite 300, Cambridge, MA 02142, 617/577-1385, fax 617/225-2347; or it
- can be reached at the Internet mail address eff@well.sf.ca.us.
-
-