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- Computer underground Digest Tue Mar 23, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 14
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Associate Editor: Etaion Shrdlu
-
- CONTENTS, #4.14 (Mar 23, 1992)
- File 1--Alternative To The Well
- File 2--Reader's Reply: Craig's Legal Fees
- File 3--EFF Announces Pioneer Award Winners
- File 4--Readers' Reply: "Bury Usenet?" (CuD #4.10)
- File 5--More on the Internet Debate
- File 6--Abstract: What Scholars Want & Need from Electronic Journals
- File 7--Cyberspace Candidate for Congress
- File 8--BloomBecker's Legal Guidelines at CV&SC Conference (reprint)
- File 9--NASA hacker sentenced (Reprint from RISKS DIGEST #13.29)
-
- Issues of CuD can be found in the Usenet alt.society.cu-digest news
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- and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM, on Genie, on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414)
- 789-4210, and by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4),
- chsun1.spc.uchicago.edu, and ftp.ee.mu.oz.au. To use the U. of
- Chicago email server, send mail with the subject "help" (without the
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-
- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
- diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted as long as the source
- is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and they should
- be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that non-personal
- mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise specified.
- Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to
- computer culture and communication. Articles are preferred to short
- responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely
- necessary.
-
- DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
- the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
- responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
- violate copyright protections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 17 Mar 92 13:23:31 EST
- From: mpd@ANOMALY.SBS.COM(Michael P. Deignan)
- Subject: File 1-- Alternative To The Well
-
- There is another system on the internet - The InteleCom DataForum - at
- 192.67.241.11, which gives access to anyone for only $10 a month,
- unlimited time. No flat-rate/hourly charge combo. Very affordable for
- a college student who doesn't have USENET at his/her local school, or
- needs an alternative login from a terminal server, etc.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Mar 1992 14:10:14 GMT
- From: NEELY_MP@DARWIN.NTU.EDU.AU(Mark P. Neely, Northern Territory
- Subject: File 2-- Craigs' legal fees
-
- Keith Moore <moore@CS.UTK.EDU> writes:
-
- >Also, why are we asked to send money directly to the law firm that
- >defended Craig, and not to Craig himself?
-
- I should imagine that this arrangement is set up (a) because it is
- administratively convenient, and (b) so as to avoid the allegations
- that Craig is feathering his own nest.
-
- All monies received from, or on behalf of, clients must be placed into
- that client's trust account. This is the account into which a lawyer
- must place monies received in advance from his/her client for
- safekeeping until a bill is rendered to the client. The purpose of
- such an arrangement is so that the lawyer has some form of guarantee
- that he will get paid (at least to the extent that he has money on
- trust).
-
- Secondly, if the money were to be sent directly to Craig, there would
- no doubt be the cynical few who would raise (quite correctly I'd
- imagine) the problem of how we can guarantee that _all_ the money
- donated will be used for his trial defence.
-
- I hope this clears up some of the mystery.
-
- Mark Neely neely_mp@darwin.ntu.edu.au
-
- PS-- I am in no way connected with Craig or his cause!
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 17 Mar 1992 11:04:45 -0500
- From: Craig Neidorf <knight@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 3-- EFF Announces Pioneer Award Winners
-
- ++++ Text of original message ++++
-
- >Date: Mon, 16 Mar 1992 18:49:32 -0500
- >To: eff-board, eff-staff
- >From: van (Gerard Van der Leun)
- >Subject: EFF Announces Pioneer Award Winners
- >
- >
- >FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- >
- >
- >
- >ENGELBART, KAHN, WARREN, JENNINGS AND SMERECZYNSKI
- >NAMED AS FIRST WINNERS OF THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION'S PIONEER
- >AWARDS
- >
- >Cambridge March 16,1992
- >
- >
- >The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today announced the five
- >winners of the first annual EFF Pioneer Awards for substantial
- >contributions to the field of computer based communications. The
- >winners are: Douglas C. Engelbart of Fremont, California; Robert Kahn of
- >Reston, Virginia; Jim Warren of Woodside, California; Tom Jennings of
- >San Francisco, California; and Andrzej Smereczynski of Warsaw, Poland.
- >
- >The winners will be presented with their awards at a ceremony open to
- >the public this Thursday, March 19, at L'Enfant Plaza Hotel in
- >Washington, DC, beginning at 5:15 PM. Most winners are expected to be
- >present to accept the awards in person. The ceremony is part of this
- >week's Second Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy that is
- >taking place at L'Enfant Plaza Hotel in D.C.
- >
- >Mitchell Kapor, President of the EFF, said today that: "We've created
- >the Pioneer Awards in order to recognize and honor individuals who have
- >made ground-breaking contributions to the technology and culture of
- >digital networks and communities."
- >
- >Nominations for the Pioneer Awards were carried out over national and
- >international computer-communication systems from November, 1991 to
- >February 1992. Several hundred nominations were received by the
- >Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the final winners were selected by a
- >panel of six judges.
- >
- >The criteria for the Pioneer Awards was that the person or organization
- >nominated had to have made a substantial contribution to the health,
- >growth, accessibility, or freedom of computer-based communications.
- >
- > The Pioneer Winners
- >
- >Douglas Engelbart is one of the original moving forces in the personal
- >computer revolution who is responsible for many ubiquitous features of
- >today's computers such as the mouse, the technique of windowing, display
- >editing, hypermedia, groupware and many other inventions and
- >innovations. He holds more than 20 patents and is widely-recognized in
- >his field as one of our era's true visionaries.
- >
- >Robert Kahn was an early advocate and prime mover in the creation of
- >ARPANET which was the precursor of today's Internet. Since the late 60's
- >and early 70's Mr. Kahn has constantly promoted and tirelessly pursued
- >innovation and heightened connectivity in the world's computer networks.
- >
- >Tom Jennings started the Fidonet international network. Today it is a
- >linked network of amateur electronic bulletin board systems (BBSs) with
- >more than 10,000 nodes worldwide and it is still growing. He contributed
- >to the technical backbone of this system by writing the FIDO BBS program
- >as well as to the culture of the net by pushing for development and
- >expansion since the early days of BBSing. He is currently editor of
- >FidoNews, the network's electronic newsletter.
- >
- >Jim Warren has been active in electronic networking for many years.
- >Most recently he has organized the First Computers, Freedom and Privacy
- >Conference, set-p the first online public dialogue link with the
- >California legislature, and has been instrumental is assuring that
- >rights common to older mediums and technologies are extended to computer
- >networking.
- >
- >Andrzej Smereczynski is the Administrator of the PLEARN node of the
- >Internet and responsible for the extension of the Internet into Poland
- >and other east European countries. He is the person directly
- >responsible for setting up the first connection to the West in post-
- >Communist Middle Europe. A network "guru", Mr. Smereczynski has worked
- >selflessly and tirelessly to extend the technology of networking as well
- >as its implicit freedoms to Poland and neighboring countries.
- >
- >This year's judges for the Pioneer Awards were: Dave Farber of the
- >University of Pennsylvania Computer Science Department; Howard
- >Rheingold, editor of The Whole Earth Review; Vint Cerf, head of CNRI;
- >Professor Dorothy Denning Chair of George Washington University's
- >Computer Science Department; Esther Dyson, editor of Release 1.0, Steve
- >Cisler of Apple Computer, and John Gilmore of Cygnus Support.
- >
- >For more information contact:
- >Gerard Van der Leun
- >Director of Communications
- >Electronic Frontier Foundation
- >155 Second Street
- >Cambridge, MA 02141
- >(617) 864-0665
- >Internet: van@eff.org
- >
- >Gerard Van der Leun
- >Communications Director EFF
- >van@eff.org
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 13 Mar 92 16:51:24 EST
- From: Wes Morgan <morgan@ENGR.UKY.EDU>
- Subject: File 4-- Readers' Reply: "Bury Usenet?" (CuD #4.10)
-
- (In response to "Bury Usenet," in CuD #4.10):
- I would like to address a point which neither Steinberg nor Sanio
- mentioned; the "variety" factor.
-
- I certainly agree with Steinberg's implied position that television
- is a vast wasteland. However, there are still many portions of the
- television medium which provide useful, informative services. The
- obvious example for US viewers is PBS, which consistently airs in-
- tellectually stimulating and through-provoking programs. For those
- of us served by cable television, the Discovery Channel, CNBC, C-SPAN,
- and Lifetime Medical Television are additional examples of "quality TV",
- in my opinion.
-
- With Usenet, we can find parallels for both "Three's Company" and
- the Discovery Channel. Can Steinberg deny the beneficial aspects of
- newsgroups such as comp.sys.sun.*, comp.unix.admin, or comp.lang.c?
- While there are certainly newsgroups which have degenerated into
- digital shouting matches, there is still a wide variety of rational,
- informative discussion in Usenet.
-
- Steinberg mentions the lack of "collaboration" among Usenet participants.
- As rebuttal to that statement, I offer the dozens of situations/problems
- for which I have found solutions/resolutions via Usenet newsgroups. I
- have been made aware of countless bugs, security holes, and "lurking"
- problems through Usenet.
-
- I've also participated in several beta tests of software through Usenet;
- I've reviewed papers and policies, received bug reports on my own code,
- and shared my own experiences with hundreds of Usenet readers.
-
- >He describes USENET as
- >"a noble but failed experiment" and suggests to abandon it and
- >research other directions in order to improve communications and
- >quality of life.
-
- Is the television or print media in danger of abandonment? I don't
- think so. It still serves a large group of people, whose needs and
- wants lie in almost every part of the intellectual spectrum.
-
- >Browsing may be hard in high-traffic boards, especially when the subject
- >information is poor or dated during a longer-lasting discussion thread.
-
- I'd point out that finding something decent on the television may be
- equally difficult; the routine location of a "quality" program on the
- radio is almost impossible. Of course, we all develop our own personal
- "schedule" of quality television and radio programs; I'm sure that each
- of us could easily rattle off the time slots of those programs which we
- find appealing.
-
- We may examine several copies of a given magazine, evaluating its
- relevance to, and addressing of, our needs or preferences. If a
- particular magazine doesn't appeal to us, we cancel that subscription
- (or stop borrowing it from a library or friend). I'm sure that each
- of us could easily rattle off the names of those magazines which we
- find appealing.
-
- An identical "scheduling" occurs among Usenet readers. As we participate
- in Usenet, we naturally dismiss those newsgroups which we find unappealing;
- the Usenet "subscription" mechanism implements this quite well. At one
- time or another, I have read every newsgroup carried by my site; over the
- years, that huge list has been "pared down" to those 250 newsgroups which
- appeal to me. I would assume that every Usenet reader does the same; I
- don't believe that anyone could read *every* newsgroup.
-
- Given this personal "scheduling", what is the difference between Usenet and
- any other medium?
-
-
- >- "low bandwidth", meaning messages in 80-column ASCII opposed to multi-
- > media communication
-
- This is an almost necessary limitation of the medium. Sites participating
- in Usenet run the gamut of computing systems; almost every type of computer
- system is represented in Usenet. While there are Crays and Suns on the net,
- there are also AT&T 3b1s, PCs, Macintoshes, Primes, and even (I believe) a
- Tandy Color Computer or two. Many Usenet sites cannot support multimedia;
- should those sites be excluded? Should Steinberg deprive himself of a sub-
- stantial audience by submitting his articles in multimedia format?
-
- >Steve's comments on poor mastership of written language sound a bit
- >arrogant and elitist to me.
-
- They certainly do. Does Steinberg wish to replace newsgroup moderators with
- "grammar police"?
-
- {sarcasm++;}
- Shall we accept the _MLA Handbook_ as the sole authority for Usenet style?
- Perhaps we should adopt "The Elements of Style" or the GPO Style Manual as
- our Writs of Common Wisdom. As an alternative, we may simply require a cer-
- tain score on the _Usenet Qualification Examination_. Of course, all pros-
- pective Usenet articles must be properly justified and proofread.
- {sarcasm--;}
-
- Usenet works; it may have a few worn springs in its digital suspension,
- and some of its passengers may be a bit rowdy, but it stills takes more
- people from point A to point B than any current alternatives.
-
- Moving on to Steinberg's comments on moderated newsgroups.......
-
- >> However, there is the insidious danger of moderator bias.
-
- Does the same danger exist in the television or print media?
- Does the same danger exist when you submit a book to a publisher?
- Does the same danger exist when you submit a paper to a journal?
-
- This "insidious danger" (as Steinberg so hyperbolically phrases it) is
- a natural, necessary part of the moderation/editing process. How can
- it be a "danger" when all participants in the process know that certain
- editorial standards are being applied?
-
- Most newspapers reserve the right to edit Letters to the Editor; why
- doesn't anyone complain about that? Newspapers do not print every
- letter they receive; why don't we hear a great hue and cry about that
- 'bias'? I believe that this behavior continues, unassailed, because
- all parties involved understand that it is part of the natural pro-
- cess.
-
- >> Whether Townsend actually censors messages he disagrees with is not
- >> important.
-
- Actually, Patrick is *incapable* of "censoring" messages with which he
- disagrees. He may choose not to include your article in his digest;
- that's his right/obligation as the editor/moderator. However, he is
- NOT censoring you; you may still distribute that article far and wide,
- through several different media. He has no means by which he can pre-
- vent you from doing this. Therefore, he is not censoring you; he is
- merely preventing you from using HIS service to disseminate your infor-
- mation and/or opinions. This is NOT censorship; it is management. While
- Random House may not accept your book for publication, do they prevent
- you from securing the services of Bantam Books as your publisher? I don't
- think so. Why, then, is Patrick's parallel action assailed as "censorship"?
-
- >> The perception -- and the possibility -- are there.
-
- That perception, and its related possibility, are present in every form
- of mass media. That possibility applies to _Newsweek_, _Southern Living_,
- _Byte_ and _The Edmonton Herald-News_ equally. How do you propose to
- eliminate this possibility in every form of mass communication? More
- importantly, why should an electronic journal be held to a different
- standard than its hardcopy counterparts?
-
- >>1: There is no danger because an alternate group with no moderator can
- >>be easily formed.
- >
- >This is completely orthogonal to my article on USENET. Sure, we can
- >start an alternate group, but this just brings us back the noise
- >problem and we will be no closer to a more effective USENET.
-
- Why is this orthogonal? You have now argued, in successive articles,
- that both unmoderated and moderated newsgroups are inefficient; how,
- then, shall we meet your goal of a clean, efficient electronic mass
- medium?
-
- >If a moderator can censor, and
- >many people think he is, then the newsgroup is surely less trustworthy
- >than an unmoderated one.
-
- Let me ask you this: do you base your entire opinion on one source of
- information? I read national, regional, and local newspapers; I have
- found that each provides a different viewpoint on the same issues. In
- Usenet, I read both info.academic-freedom and alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk;
- I have found that each provides a different viewpoint on the same issues,
- since one is moderated and the other is free of moderation.
-
- >I merely used Townson's newsgroup because his moderation has become
- >the most controversial. I don't think Townson would disagree with
- >this. I certainly could have used CuD as my example, and pointed out
- >that many people believe that the anti-hacker viewpoint is censored
- >from the digest, but this perception is held by fewer people.
-
- This perception may exist, but both mailing lists are experiencing
- sustained growth. Could it be that people accept a certain bias or
- influence in a given medium, just as we do with our daily newspaper
- or television news broadcast?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 21 Mar 92 00:14:54 CST
- From: William Vajk (igloo) <learn@CS.UCHICAGO.EDU>
- Subject: File 5-- More on the Internet Debate
-
- The following article just appeared in comp.society. I feel it
- represents, by its mere presence, the proper challenge to the Intertek
- nonsense. The author, Steinberg, clearly sets out to stir debate, and
- does that adequately, though I saw nothing which is not a compilation
- restatement of discussions which have been on the net for years. The
- article I read in CuD 4.09 falls short of being "professional" by that
- mystical inch that's as good as a mile. I understand McMullen's
- charitable review a kindness to help inspire a young man to continue
- and therein to progress.
-
- Collaborations on a professional level abound as a direct consequence
- of usenet and the internet. There are many undocumented private
- mailing lists serving scientific and technical interests.
-
- Article follows:
- ======================================================================
-
-
- From: harnad@Princeton.EDU (Stevan Harnad)
- Newsgroups: comp.society
- Subject: File 6-- Abstract: What Scholars Want & Need from Electronic Journals
- Message-ID: <9203192256.AA06649@clarity.Princeton.EDU>
- Date: 19 Mar 92 22:56:44 GMT
- Sender: socicom@auvm.american.edu
- Lines: 109
-
-
- Abstract of paper to be presented at ASIS 1992 SESSIONS ON
- "FULL-TEXT ELECTRONIC ACCESS TO PERIODICALS," sponsored by the
- ASIS Special Interest Group on Library Automation and
- Networking (SIG/LAN) and the Association of Research Libraries
- (ARL) at the 55th ASIS Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh Hilton,
- Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, October 26-29, 1992. Session II.
- Full-Text Electronic Access to Periodicals: Strategies for
- Implementation
-
- WHAT SCHOLARS WANT AND NEED FROM ELECTRONIC JOURNALS
-
- Stevan Harnad
-
- For scholars and scientists, paper is not an end but a means. It has
- served us well for several millennia, but it would have been surprising
- indeed if this man-made medium had turned out to be optimal for all
- time. In reality, paper has always had one notable drawback. Although
- it allowed us to encode, preserve and share ideas and findings
- incomparably more effectively than we could ever have done orally, its
- tempo was always lamentably slower than the oral interactions to which
- the speed of thought seems organically adapted. Electronic journals
- have now made it possible for scholarly publication to escape this
- rate-limiting constraint of the paper medium, allowing scholarly
- communication to become much more rapid, global and interactive than
- ever before. It is important that we not allow the realization
- of the new medium's revolutionary potential to be retarded by clinging
- superstitiously to familiar but incidental features of the paper
- medium.
-
- It is also useful to remind ourselves now and again why scholars and
- scientists do what they do, rather than going straight into the junk
- bond market: They presumably want to contribute to mankind's cumulative
- knowledge. They have to make a living too, of course, but if doing that
- as comfortably and prosperously as possible were their primary motive
- they could surely find better ways. Prestige no doubt matters too, but
- here again there are less rigorous roads one might have taken than
- that of learned inquiry. So scholars publish not primarily to pad
- their CVs or to earn royalties on their words, but to inform their peers
- of their findings, and to be informed by them in turn, in that
- collaborative, interactive spiral whereby mankind's knowledge
- increases. My own estimate is that the new medium has the potential to
- extend individual scholars' intellectual life-lines (i.e., the
- size of their lifelong contribution) by an order of magnitude.
-
- What scholars accordingly need is electronic journals that provide:
- (1) rapid, expert peer-review, (2) rapid copy-editing, proofing and
- publication of accepted articles, (3) rapid, interactive, peer
- commentary, and (4) a permanent, universally accessible, searchable and
- retrievable electronic archive. Ideally, the true costs of providing
- these services should be subsidized by Universities, Learned Societies,
- Libraries and the Government, but if they must be passed on to the
- "scholar-consumer," let us make sure that they are only the real costs,
- and not further unnecessary ones arising from emulating inessential
- features of the old medium. PSYCOLOQUY, an peer-reviewed electronic
- journal sponsored by the American Psychological Association and
- co-edited and archived at Princeton and Rutgers Universities, is
- attempting to provide a model for future scholarly electronic
- periodicals of this kind.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- Garfield, E. (1991) Electronic journals and skywriting: A complementary
- medium for scientific communication? Current Contents 45: 9-11,
- November 11 1991
-
- Harnad, S. (1979) Creative disagreement. The Sciences 19: 18 - 20.
-
- Harnad, S. (ed.) (1982) Peer commentary on peer review: A case study in
- scientific quality control, New York: Cambridge University Press.
-
- Harnad, S. (1984) Commentaries, opinions and the growth of scientific
- knowledge. American Psychologist 39: 1497 - 1498.
-
- Harnad, S. (1985) Rational disagreement in peer review. Science,
- Technology and Human Values 10: 55 - 62.
-
- Harnad, S. (1986) Policing the Paper Chase. (Review of S. Lock, A
- difficult balance: Peer review in biomedical publication.)
- Nature 322: 24 - 5.
-
- Harnad, S. (1990) Scholarly Skywriting and the Prepublication Continuum
- of Scientific Inquiry. Invited Commentary on: William Gardner: The
- Electronic Archive: Scientific Publishing for the 90s Psychological
- Science 1: 342 - 343 (reprinted in Current Contents 45: 9-13, November
- 11 1991).
-
- Harnad, S. (1991) Post-Gutenberg Galaxy: The Fourth Revolution in the
- Means of Production of Knowledge. Public-Access Computer Systems Review
- 2 (1): 39 - 53 (also reprinted in PACS Annual Review Volume 2
- 1992; and in R. D. Mason (ed.) Computer Conferencing: The Last Word. Beach
- Holme Publishers, 1992; and in A. L. Okerson (ed.) Directory of
- Electronic Journals, Newsletters, and Academic Discussion Lists, 2nd
- edition. Washington, DC, Association of Research Libraries, Office of
- Scientific & Academic Publishing, 1992).
-
- Harnad, S. (1992) Interactive Publication: Extending the
- American Physical Society's Discipline-Specific Model for Electronic
- Publishing. Serials Review, Special Issue on Economics Models for
- Electronic Publishing (in press)
-
- Katz, W. (1991) The ten best magazines of 1990.
- Library Journal 116: 48 - 51.
-
- Mahoney, M.J. (1985) Open Exchange and Epistemic Progress.
- American Psychologist 40: 29 - 39.
-
- Wilson, D. L. (1991) Testing time for electronic journals.
- Chronicle of Higher Education September 11 1991: A24 - A25.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 10 Mar 92 15:32:53 PST
- From: tenney@NETCOM.COM(Glenn S. Tenney)
- Subject: File 7-- Cyberspace Candidate for Congress
-
- The following is my online announcement of my candidacy to the U.S.
- House of Representatives followed by a copy of my platform and a brief
- bio. I also have available a copy of the press release I sent out on
- Business Wire. A photograph is also available. Please email or call
- if you want more info.
-
- Equally, if you don't want me to email you again as my campaign
- progresses, please let me know.
-
- Since it is my intention to serve as an online representative, I felt
- that you would find this interesting...
-
- Yes, I would be most appreciative of any and all legal campaign
- donations except from Political Action Committees. If you aren't sure
- what is and isn't an allowable donation, just let me know...
-
- Glenn Tenney For Congress
- 2111 Ensenada Way
- San Mateo, CA 94403
- Voice or Fax: (415) 574-2931
-
- +++++++++++++++++cut here for online announcement of my candidacy
-
- MARCH 6, 1992, SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA: Progress begins with
- initiative, a coming together of a vision and the will to accomplish
- great things. Silicon Valley entrepreneurs know this very well. For
- too long, career politicians have laid barriers in the way of people
- working to build a humane, viable future with the tools that
- technology has given them. When the people have asked for widespread
- access to telecommunications, computing power, and education,
- old-school politicians have pointed to the necessity for defense
- spending instead of making investments in the future. That's why I'm
- announcing my candidacy for the U.S. House of Representatives in the
- reapportioned twelfth Congressional District of California. My
- district covers most of the area from San Mateo up to Golden Gate Park
- in San Francisco. As a Democrat, I will be challenging our twelve
- year incumbent in the June Primary.
-
- A few weeks ago I asked Congressman Tom Lantos' staff how he voted
- last year. Their initial response was to hand me the glossy
- advertising brochure that our tax dollars paid for. When pressed to
- find out how he voted, or didn't vote, I was ushered into their
- library, shown to the Congressional Record, and told to look it up
- myself day by day. This is how my representative, from one of the
- most technologically advanced districts, brings information to his
- constituents. Career politicians have remained dedicated to high
- defense spending while the real tools needed for worldwide economic
- competition are lying dormant. We need to encourage the young,
- trained minds of our country, and to provide the communications power
- to unleash that talent.
-
- Every day we are faced with non-technical problems such as health
- insurance, jobs, and our economy, but I feel very strongly that our
- country needs to look at the future of technology: how it can be used
- or abused, and how it is abusing all of us. Technology is advancing
- far faster than our laws can cope, which raises many legal,
- sociological, ethical, and constitutional questions. Answering these
- questions requires both an understanding of the technology and actual
- experiences with the technology.
-
- Our greatest resources for the future are our children and our world.
- Our country needs to take a proactive role in producing the best
- educated future generation that we can, as well as having a place for
- that generation to live and be productive. We need to find innovative
- and creative ways to put technology to work for our future rather than
- putting up legislative roadblocks to the future. Providing the
- information and education we and our children need to be competitive
- in the future is coupled to our economy. We can't be productive
- today, nor can our children compete in the future, without information
- and education. We must plan for the twenty-first century today.
-
- We are faced with a society of economic haves and have-nots. Most of
- us actively involved with technology and information access know that
- information is power. We are fast becoming a nation of information
- "knows" and "know-nots", and those who do not have the information
- will be in an even more devastating position than those who are just
- economically disadvantaged. Our government itself works to keep
- information unavailable to us. We need to bring information to the
- people, and get information from the people to our elected officials.
- This will help bring the power back to the people. You can be an
- elected official without being a career politician, but you can't
- legislate technological issues unless you understand the technology.
- We need elected officials who are online and accessible, and with whom
- information flows -- to them and from them as a dialogue.
-
- One of the problems of our political system is that it takes money to
- win. Too often these funds come from Political Action Committees.
- The traditional view has been that campaign funding is spent to "get
- the message out". The online community finally has a chance to use
- this new medium to not only get a message out, but to discuss the
- issues without spending obscene amounts of money. Let's use my
- campaign as a demonstration of the power of online politics. Pass
- this release and my platform on to your friends and colleagues, and
- around your town. Even though California's twelfth Congressional
- District covers the area from San Mateo up to Golden Gate Park in San
- Francisco, these issues need to be discussed online and in the media
- nationwide. We of the online community are currently an
- under-represented constituency. Let's change that. Let's get
- Congress online.
-
- Even an online campaign isn't free. Network etiquette precludes me
- from asking for campaign contributions, but please do contact me
- directly:
-
- Paid for by the Glenn Tenney for Congress Campaign Committee
- 2111 Ensenada Way
- San Mateo, CA 94403
-
- Voice/Fax: (415) 574-2931
-
- tenney@netcom.com or Compuserve: 70641,23
- (also MCI Mail, America Online, and others)
-
- --30--
-
- +++++++++++++++++cut here for a copy of my platform
-
- Congressional Candidate Glenn Tenney's Platform For Our Future
-
- MARCH 6, 1992, SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA: Most candidates look like
- every other candidate on most issues. I am differentiated on
- high-tech issues. Here's how I feel about a few traditional and
- technological issues:
-
- * We need to be competitive in the "global village" world
- economy, to focus on America without being protectionist. Education
- and information are keys to achieving these goals.
-
- * Our country, from the top down, needs to look years into the
- future instead of just months. Our country and our businesses also
- need to understand that our people are our major asset for the future.
- We must rescue our environment to have a future.
-
- * Being in business for myself, not being wealthy, and having
- raised five boys means that my wife and I live the health care problem
- daily. A tax credit next year doesnUt help us pay our insurance
- premium next month, let alone help us find insurance. Our country
- must commit to defining and providing a minimal level of health care
- to everyone.
-
- * When my wife and I decided to become parents we fortunately
- had access to all the information and options, and had the right to a
- choice. I am pro-family and pro-choice.
-
- * Recent events in what was the Soviet Union offers us the
- opportunity of our lifetime to take dramatic steps towards world
- peace, and a true peace-time economy. We must significantly reduce
- our defense budget while helping defense businesses and their workers
- transition to non-defense ventures. Our country's enormous supply of
- talent currently committed to defense-related projects can be put to
- effective and innovative use in solving many other problems. We can
- do this and maintain defensive strength.
-
- * We must encourage businesses to invest in our future both by
- reducing long term capital gains taxes (for capital that is actually a
- long term investment in our future) and providing tax incentives for
- research and development. Having participated in chip designs, and
- seeing how biotechnology is progressing, I know that many innovations
- require a large long-term capital investment.
-
- * There are tremendous changes waiting to happen if only we can
- provide high-speed computer and data networks between our
- universities, public schools (K-12) and homes. We need to take steps
- to wire our country for Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN) or
- 'fiber to the home.' Affordable ubiquitous networked computing will
- have an effect that can hardly be imagined by those outside of the
- field.
-
- * Most people get their news from television. About two-thirds
- of our homes receive that news on cable TV, yet only a small number of
- companies choose what channels are available. Cable TV affords us
- many advantages, yet like all technologies it is a double edged sword.
- We need policies that better deal with these "monopolies", and which
- provide for true competition.
-
- * Technology is encroaching more and more into our everyday
- life, and abusing our privacy along the way. These issues hit all of
- us when applying for credit, going to the doctor, applying for a job,
- and even when making an 800 toll-free phone call. For example, there
- are companies providing computers to doctors' offices in exchange for
- access to all of their records. These problems are affecting
- everyone, and are not esoteric technological issues. I am committed
- to protecting our privacy at home and on the job.
-
- * The computer networks criss-crossing our country are the
- highways of tomorrow. These networks are an 'online electronic
- frontier' connecting such diverse groups as a Native American Tribal
- school with an M.I.T. mathematics class. The electronic frontier is a
- new publishing medium, and a new 'place' of assembly raising many
- issues of privacy and rights of free speech. Online we can achieve
- what political consultants want: a way to get a message to many
- people. A key element of being online is that the people can also get
- their message TO their representatives. This technology affords us
- the opportunity to discuss issues with our representatives.
-
- * We need ready access to information, especially flowing to and
- from our government at all levels. Information is power, and we the
- people must recapture the power that should be ours.
-
- Paid for by the Glenn Tenney for Congress Campaign Committee
- 2111 Ensenada Way
- San Mateo, CA 94403
-
- Voice/Fax: (415) 574-2931
-
- tenney@netcom.com or Compuserve: 70641,23
- (also MCI Mail, America Online, and others)
-
- --30--
-
- ++++++++++++++++++++++ cut here for a copy of my brief bio
-
- Congressional Candidate Glenn Tenney Talks a Bit About Himself
-
- MARCH 6, 1992, SAN MATEO, CALIFORNIA: I've never had a desire to be a
- career politician. Apparently, few politicians in recent times have
- carried a vision to Washington. That's why I have decided to act on
- my vision of our country's future in the twenty-first century by
- working with you, as your representative in Washington.
-
- My vision sees an information revolution that has already started and
- will be as dramatic as was the industrial revolution. We need
- legislators who can truly understand future technologies and how to
- use them to our advantage instead of having the technologies abuse us.
- I take our future and my campaign seriously. I am compelled to help
- prepare our country for the next century even if that means becoming
- an elected official and putting my career on hold.
-
- I've been professionally involved in various aspects of technologies
- (software and hardware) having begun operating system and compiler
- design some 28 years ago, even before graduating high school. I've
- been "online" since then, being "hand's on" with technology having
- designed and implemented many small and large systems as well as
- having programmed on dozens of systems. I've also researched and
- written about technology, and about people's fears of technology.
-
- I've been self-employed (or a "high-tech entrepreneur", depending on
- how you want to view it) since I formed my own company in 1974. Since
- then I've been involved in a few Silicon Valley high-tech startups
- including the very beginning of the personal computer industry, as
- well as chip designs and a few others.
-
- My company has been a "mom and pop" venture since Susan and I were
- married in 1976. I have two children and three step-children. I grew
- up in the Chicago area and moved to San Mateo county in 1972, raising
- our children in San Mateo since 1976. I turned 43 years old the day
- after I announced my candidacy.
-
- The following are some important aspects of who I am...
-
- BA in Management (with honors), Saint Mary's College of California.
-
- Senior Member of the Institute for Electrical and Electronic Engineers
- (IEEE), and member of the IEEE Computer Society.
-
- Participating Member, IEEE USA Intellectual Property Committee
- (dealing with employed inventors rights, and copyright/patent issues
- and legislation).
-
- Member of the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM).
-
- Chairperson and Organizer of The Hackers Conference (an annual
- International high-tech conference) since it was originated by Stewart
- Brand of The Whole Earth Catalog.
-
- Member of the program and organizing committee of the first Conference
- on Computers, Freedom and Privacy held last year.
-
- Former Member of the Board of Trustees, Peninsula Temple Beth El.
-
- Licensed Amateur Radio Operator (a "ham", callsign AA6ER).
-
- Licensed Private Pilot (single engine land, instrument rated).
-
- I've also been President of a variety of local computer and amateur
- radio groups, and I am still involved with these groups and many other
- organizations.
-
- Paid for by the Glenn Tenney for Congress Campaign Committee
- 2111 Ensenada Way
- San Mateo, CA 94403
-
- Voice/Fax: (415) 574-2931
-
- tenney@netcom.com or Compuserve: 70641,23
- (also MCI Mail, America Online, and others)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 21 Mar 92 18:21:11 EST
- From: Gordon Meyer <72307.1502@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: File 8-- BloomBecker's Legal Guidelines at CV&SC Conference (reprint)
-
- J.J. Buck BloomBecker, the director of the National Center for Computer
- Crime, called for the adoption of a new nationwide set of legal guide-
- lines concerning computer crime. BloomBecker, speaking at the 5th annual
- Computer Virus & Security Conference, proposed 5 points:
-
- 1. The creation of a $200 crime law deductible. Damages incurred below
- that figure would not be the subject of criminal action.
-
- 2. The creation of a civil course of action for inadequate computer
- security
-
- 3. The making of reckless computing a felony. "Reckless computing" is
- classified as anything which could potentially cause damage.
-
- 4. The making a careless computing a misdemeanor.
-
- 5. The enactment of greater protection against unreasonable search and
- seizure.
-
- Bloombecker's recommendations and supporting statements were the subject
- of much conversation at his conference session. Donald Delaney, New York
- State Police Senior Investigator, decried the setting of a deductible
- for computer crime, pointing out that in the struggle against cellular
- phone call-selling operations, it is often an arrest for a single call
- under $200 that shuts down an on-going multi-thousand dollar fraud
- operation.
- (reprinted from ST REPORT #8.12 3/20/92 with permission)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 17 Mar 1992 13:05:09 -0700
- From: Bear Giles <bear@tigger.cs.colorado.edu>
- Subject: File 9-- NASA hacker sentenced (Reprint from RISKS DIGEST #13.29)
-
- >From the 17 March 1992 _Rocky Mountain News_:
-
- Hacker ordered to get mental help (Reuter)
-
- A computer hacker who pleaded guilty Monday to breaking into NASA
- computer systems as ordered to undergo mental health treatment and not
- use computers without permission from a probation officer. Richard
- Wittman, 24, of Lakewood [Colorado] was sentenced to three years
- probation by Denver U.S. District Judge Sherman Finesilver in a rare
- prosecution for breaking into a computer system. Wittman pleaded
- guilty last fall to one count of breaking into a National Aeronautics
- and Space Administration computer. Prosecutors said Wittman had spent
- four years trying to get into computer systems. In a plea bargain,
- Wittman admitted gaining access to NASA's computer via a malfunction
- in a bulletin board service.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #4.14
- ************************************
-