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- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE July 10, 1990
-
- CPSR TO UNDERTAKE EXPANDED CIVIL LIBERTIES PROGRAM
-
- Contact: Marc Rotenberg (202) 775-1588
-
- Washington, D.C., July 10, 1990 -- Computer Professionals for Social
- Responsibility (CPSR), a national computing organization, announced
- today that it would receive a two-year grant in the amount of $275,000
- for its Computing and Civil Liberties Project. The Electronic Frontier
- Foundation (EFF),founded by Mitchell Kapor, made the grant to expand
- ongoing CPSR work on civil liberties protections for computer users.
-
- At a press conference in Washington today, Mr. Kapor praised CPSR's
- work, "CPSR plays an important role in the computer community. For the
- last several years, it has sought to extend civil liberties protections
- to new information technologies. Now we want to help CPSR expand that
- work."
-
- Marc Rotenberg, director of the CPSR Washington Office said, "We are
- obviously very happy about the grant from the EFF. There is a lot of
- work that needs to be done to ensure that our civil liberties
- protections are not lost amidst policy confusion about the use of new
- computer technologies."
-
- CPSR said that it will host a series of policy round tables in
- Washington, DC, during the next two years with lawmakers, computer
- users, including (hackers), the FBI, industry representatives, and
- members of the computer security community. Mr. Rotenberg said that the
- purpose of the meetings will be to "begin a dialogue about the new uses
- of electronic media and the protection of the public interest."
-
- CPSR also plans to develop policy papers on computers 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.
-
- The CPSR Computing and Civil Liberties project began in 1985 after
- President Reagan attempted to restrict access to government computer
- systems through the creation of new classification authority. In 1988,
- CPSR prepared a report on the proposed expansion of the FBI's computer
- system, the National Crime Information Center. The report found serious
- threats to privacy and civil liberties. Shortly after the report was
- issued, the FBI announced that it would drop a proposed computer feature
- to track the movements of people across the country who had not been
- charged with any crime.
-
- "We need to build bridges between the technical community and the policy
- community," said Dr. Eric Roberts, CPSR president and a research
- scientist at Digital Equipment Corporation in Palo Alto, California.
- "There is simply too much misinformation about how computer networks
- operate. This could produce terribly misguided public policy."
-
- CPSR representatives have testified several times before Congressional
- committees on matters involving civil liberties and computer policy.
- Last year CPSR urged a House Committee to avoid poorly conceived
- computer activity. "In the rush to criminalize the malicious acts of
- the few we may discourage the beneficial a╞A═üzÖüóíòüjà╣σ▒║à╔╣òæ5╥ⁿCPSR. A House subcommittee recently followed CPSR's recommendations on
- computer crime amendments.
-
- Dr. Ronni Rosenberg, an expert on the role of computer scientists and
- public policy, praised the new initiative. She said, "It's clear that
- there is an information gap that needs to be filled. This is an
- important opportunity for computer scientists to help fill the gap."
-
- CPSR is a national membership organization of computer professionals,
- based in Palo Alto, California. CPSR has over 20,000 members and 21
- chapters across the country. In addition to the civil liberties project,
- CPSR conducts research, advises policy makers and educates the public
- about computers in the workplace, computer risk and reliability, and
- international security.
-
- For more information contact:
-
- Marc Rotenberg
- CPSR Washington Office
- 1025 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 1015
- Washington, DC 20036 202/775-1588
-
- Gary Chapman
- CPSR National Office
- P.O. Box 717
- Palo Alto, CA 94302
- 415/322-3778
-
-