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- Computer underground Digest Sat May 2, 1992 Volume 4 : Issue 20
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Associate Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, Jr.
- Arcmeisters: Brendan Kehoe and Bob Kusumoto
-
- CONTENTS, #4.20 (May 2, 1992)
- File 1--COCOT Scam or Simple Exploitation?
- File 2--Pres. Candidates ONLINE (Perot, Bush, Clinton, Brown, etc.)
- File 3--Ross Perot for President BBS
- File 4--FBI attempting to use mailing lists for Investigations
- File 5--Society and Tech Online
-
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-
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-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 24 Apr 92 19:01:13 CDT
- From: Jim Thomas <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 1--COCOT Scam or Simple Exploitation?
-
- Telephones and long distance service are crucial to modemers, and most
- of us have become accustomed to the abuses of providers, especially
- COCOTS and smaller long distance carriers. COCOTs, Customer-Owned
- Coin-Operated telephones, are bad enough when they rip-off the general
- public, but when they exploit a captive population, they can be
- unethical, perhaps illegal. The scenario of one example of COCOT abuse
- and a high-rate long distance carrier illustrate the problem.
-
- A caller (C), recently released from a federal prison, was sent to the
- Salvation Army Freedom Center (SAFC) (a community corrections center
- at 105 S. Ashland in Chicago) to serve out the final months of his
- sentence. He made two collect calls to a friend (JT) on March 24
- (10.20 pm) and March 31 (9.29 pm). Believing these were routine
- calls, JT accepted them. The two calls were for $10.40 (for 20
- minutes) and $5.23 (for five minutes). Neither charge includes taxes.
- The phone at the SAFC is a COCOT, and the long distance carrier is
- U.S. Long Distance.
-
- When prisoners are released from the custody of a prison to a
- community center, they normally immediately call their family and
- close friends to assure them they are fine and to provide a new
- address and other information. Released prisoners are generally not
- likely to have long distance credit cards or to be consumer-literate
- on the nuances of long distance billing. Newly released prisoners
- rarely have sufficient financial resources, and in Illinois, most come
- from low-income backgrounds. Consequently, excessive phone costs are
- being imposed on those least-able to afford it. The SAFC is taking
- advantage of the importance of communication with the outside and with
- the lack of consumer literacy to exploit ex-offenders and their
- families. Their stated purpose to "help" prisoners is not served by
- these excessive rates of which the SAFC receives a substantial
- flat-rate portion and perhaps an additional percentage.
-
- Whatever the ethics of the SAFC COCOT, it seems aided by apparently
- deceptive practices of the long distance company, USLD, which may
- be illegal.
-
- JT received his March telephone bill from GTE, his local carrier. He
- noticed that the charges were billed by Zeroplus dialing, a billing
- agent that handles calls for a number of long distance carriers. He
- called his local GTE representatives to complain, and was told by two
- supervisors that GTE could do nothing, that they only collected the
- fees *for* other carriers, and that consumers should be consumer
- literate and be aware of who the long distance carrier is *before*
- accepting a call. They indicated that customers should also inquire
- about the toll charges before accepting. Even when raising the issue
- of possible fraud, GTE personal were indifferent. Although
- acknowledging that they received "many" complaints, they emphasized
- that it was the consumers' responsibility to educate themselves.
-
- JT obtained the number for USLD's customer service, which turned out
- also to be Zeroplus Dialing. So, he called Zeroplus to further
- investigate the charges. Zeroplus indicated that they, too, were
- merely a billing agent (as well as customer service representatives),
- and that the carrier was U.S. Long Distance (USLD) out of San Antonio,
- Texas. They indicated that they were powerless to adjust a billing
- and suggested calling USLD directly. They also indicated that GTE was
- able to adjust billings. GTE vehemently denied this, but a return
- call to Zeroplus prompted two supervisors to check, and they indicated
- that, according to their contract, GTE personnel were mistaken.
- (Another call to GTE to ask for an explanation in the discrepancy
- between the claims led to another denial.
-
- A call to USLD was initially less than satisfactory. A representative
- there indicated that they had nothing to do with the billing. They
- only set the rates, and JT must take billing problems up with
- Zeroplus. JT again called Zeroplus, who indicated that USLD's claim was
- nonsense, and USLD was the only company who could provide information
- about the bill, the COCOT, and handle the complaint. The information
- about billing procedures provided by supervisors seems confusing. As
- near as JT could determine from the conflicting information provided,
- USLD claimed only to set rates, not involve itself with billing or
- rate adjustment. Zeroplus Dialing claimed only to process and collect
- the charges, not adjust billing. GTE claimed only to serve as billing
- agent, and claimed to have no authority to adjust billing. Each
- organization referred JT to the others.
-
- Neither USLD nor Zeroplus were willing or able to provide information
- about the identity of the COCOT or the location of the telephone,
- although GTE was able to identify the location (but not the owner) in
- about 60 seconds. According to C, the caller, there was no information
- on the telephone itself identifying it as a COCOT, and the only marker
- on it was a sticker that indicated a repair number, but no
- other identifying information.
-
- JT's recollection was that when he accepted the calls in March, the
- long distance operator *did not* identify with a company, but said
- only: "Long distance operator with a collect call from C. Will you
- accept it?" This seemed to be a normal inquiry and was sufficiently
- close to the "AT&T long-distance" format that the call was
- unquestioned. But, because of time that had elapsed, it was possible
- that JT's recollection of the March calls was flawed. To be sure, JT
- arranged for C to call several times in late evening of April 24. C
- made three collect calls to JT with the following results. The ensuing
- dialogue was written as it transpired and was heard by both JT and C:
-
- Call 1, about 11:30 pm -- The phone rang:
-
- JT: Hello?
-
- Op1: long distance operator with a collect call from C.
- Will you accept?
-
- JT: Which long distance operator?
-
- Op1: This is the long distance operator.
-
- JT: I mean, which long distance company are you the long distance
- operator for?
-
- Op1: U.S. Long Distance.
-
- JT: How much will accepting the call cost?
-
- Op1: What?
-
- JT: How much will it cost me to accept these charges? What are
- your rates?
-
- Op1: I don't know. I'll have to connect you to my supervisor.
-
- The operator then disconnected, although in talking with his
- supervisor later, the disconnection seemed a legitimate accident. On
- disconnect, C immediately called back.
-
- Call 2 -- This call came through an automated voice message system in
- which a pre-recorded male operator's voice announced that a company
- called "American" had a long distance call from (pause for caller to
- identify himself). The pre-recorded voice then continued: Dial 5 to
- reject the call, 0 to accept, otherwise stay on the line. Believing
- that "stay on the line" meant that a live operator would answer, JT
- stayed on the line, but the original message repeated several times.
- Wondering if dialing a 9 would connect to a live operator, JT dialed
- 9. Whether through inadvertent dialing or through the system's failure
- to recognize the 9, the call went through as "accepted." Both JT and
- C immediately disconnected. The GTE supervisors' earlier advice to
- inquire about LD tolls is rather difficult when it is not possible to
- speak with an operator. Legal? Apparently. Shady? Deceptively so! On
- disconnect, C called JT a third and final time.
-
- Call 3, about 11:50:
-
- JT: Hello?
-
- Op2: Long distance operator with a collect call from C. Will you
- accept the call?
-
- JT: Which long distance company are you with?
-
- Op2: U.S. Long Distance.
-
- JT: How much will the call cost if I accept?
-
- Op2: What?
-
- JT: What are your rates? Will this be expensive?
-
- Op2: I don't know. Just a minute, I'll have to check with my
- supervisor.
-
- (placed on hold for about 15 seconds)
-
- Op2: The first eight minutes will be $7.46, and 42 cents for each
- additional minute. Do you accept the call?
-
- JT: What if we only talk for five minutes?
-
- Op2: It's a flat rate.....do you accept the call or not?
-
- JT: Even for a short call?
-
- Op2: (pause) The first minute would be $5.92. Do you accept
- the call?
-
- JT: Just a minute, I'm calculating....
-
- A little over a minute of discussion interspersed with the operator's
- insistance that JT make a decision on accepting, even though it was
- made clear that he was calculating, created pressure to accept, so JT
- asked to speak to a supervisor. The operator said "just a moment,"
- and disconnected him. However, the phone rang about 30 seconds later,
- and the USLD supervisor was on the line apologizing for both accidental
- disconnects. The supervisor was helpful and courteous, and not
- unsympathetic to the situation. She discussed the billing policies and
- the USLD system for about 20 minutes. However, she indicated that the
- USLD policy was to indicate immediately that the call was from U.S.
- Long Distance when the operator connected with the charged party, and
- seemed concerned that their operators failed to do so.
-
- What is to be made of this?
-
- 1. USLD's DECEPTION: The failure of multiple operators to immediately
- identify themselves and their company when connecting with the party
- called may or may not be intentional, but the result is deceptive.
- Whatever the stated policy of USLD, there is unequivocal evidence that
- their operators, either by informal norm or by tacit operator
- procedures, violate what all supervisors indicated to be a legal
- requirement to self-identify when connecting with customers. The
- introductory words ("long distance operator with a collect call
- from...") are said quickly and are glossed over, and normally the
- party called doesn't listen with sufficient care to determine that
- "long distance operator" isn't preceded with a company name. The
- focus is generally on *who* is making the call, not with the need to
- pay cautious attention to a quickly-spoken carrier name (or whether
- the name is spoken at all). Further, the dialogue reveals that the
- initial words were "Long distance operator" and not "This is the long
- distance operator," which removes the second or so that listeners
- require to get their audio bearings that an extra word or two would
- provide. If AT&T's claim to be *THE* long distance company has merit,
- then one would normally associate the initial words "long distance
- operator with a collect call from..." with an established company.
- Whatever the motivation, USLD's operators seem to employ a deceptive
- method by which a small long distance carrier that charges
- exceptionally high rates can confuse and mislead a customer.
-
- 2. GTE'S "RESPONSIBILITY:" GTE distanced itself from what it agreed
- can be abusive practices of those for whom it serves as a billing
- agent: a) It claimed "nothing can be done" because it's only the
- billing agent; b) It claimed that abusive policies of others are
- unfortunate, but not their problem--it's the fault of deregulation
- (akin to saying people don't rip-off people, opportunities do); c) It
- "blamed the victim" by saying that it is consumers' responsibility to
- be consumer-literate. Let's look at this rationale:
-
- a) NOTHING CAN BE DONE: If an LD carrier for whom GTE is a billing
- agent is alleged to engage in deceptive practices in violation of
- either law or policy, GTE is under no obligation to treat that carrier
- "neutrally" as GTE personnel claim. If they uncritically accept the
- responsibility of collecting for any company that repeatedly engages
- in deceptive practices, then it effectively acts in collusion with the
- offender. One would hope for a more ethical response from an
- enterprise such as GTE that claims to be a staunchly reputable
- company. If they are actually saying they can do nothing in the face
- of alleged deception other than shrug their shoulders and collect
- their cut, then they promote deceptive practices. Even a sympathetic
- "we'll look into it" response would be better than blowing off the
- complaining customer with a "tough luck kid, ya shoulda knowed better"
- attitude.
-
- b) DEREGULATION'S THE PROBLEM: Telling a ripped-off customer that
- it's deregulation, not peoples' behaviors, that cause problem is
- akin to the Secret Service telling BellSouth that the Legion of Doom
- wasn't guilty of breaking into their computers--it was the
- computer's weak security that was at fault. Len Rose, Craig Neidorf,
- and Shadowhawk learned that this line of reasoning has little currency
- when a teleco alleges victimization. Unethical behaviors are the
- problem, not deregulation. For GTE to use this excuse to distance
- themselves from their obligation to assure that they do not promote
- rip-off by serving as a collection agent for those ripping-off is
- merely another form of denying both the problem and their obligation
- to investigate complaints for which there is evidence of deception.
- Instead of aligning themselves with an ethical position, GTE aligns
- with the problem.
-
- c) THE CUSTOMER SHOULD KNOW BETTER: Should consumers be
- consumer-literate? Absolutely! Is it possible to be consumer literate
- in this situation? No way! The problems of collecting information
- after the problem occured were difficult, and JT still lacks answers
- to the questions he posed to over a dozen teleco personnel in as many
- day-time, full-rate long distance calls. Consider just a few of the
- problems in becoming "consumer literate:"
-
- When a long distance carrier is less than forthcoming about its
- identity when connecting with a collect call, and when it's initial
- spiel to a customer gives the impression that it is a familiar,
- common, company rather than one that charges high rates, consumers are
- put at a disadvantage. When asked about billing costs, operators do
- not have this information readily available, and one operator
- (operator 2) gave rates different from those given by a
- supervisor--the operator gave inaccurate information. Further, when
- an *automated* system connects with a consumer, there is no
- opportunity to investigate the rate structure. If there is no obvious
- way to connect with on-line personnel, it is impossible to
- self-inform.
-
- The multi-tiered billing structure and, in this instance, the initial
- unwillingness of each company to accept responsiblity for the billing
- policy creates further difficulties in obtaining information. Queries
- to operators and supervisors on a number of basic issues led to "I
- don't know," "We don't have that information," or "we can't give that
- information out." It is unreasonable to expect the average consumer to
- be functionally literate when there are so many barriers to obtaining
- information. Ironically, a GTE supervisor who strongly argued that
- consumers should familiarize themselves with teleco policies gave out
- significant erroneous information: JT asked whether there were some
- higher authority than this supervisor to whom he could appeal in
- discussing the problem. She claimed unequivocally and absolutely that
- she was the ultimate arbiter, and there was no one higher.
- Subsequence calls indicated she was in error. Although she did not
- intend to deceive and simply coded the question in a limited way
- (despite multiple rephrasings), she nonetheless misinformed. Her
- information would lead one to believe that there were no other channels
- to be pursued at GTE, which would deter most customers from additinal
- inquiry. Further, either GTE personnel or Zeroplus personnel were in
- substantial error when identifying GTE's contractual ability to
- adjust charges. If teleco supervisors and managers cannot sort out
- fundamental responsibilities, how can consumers be expected to be
- "consumer literate?" Although the GTE supervisor was otherwise
- cordial, her error provides a significant example of the distorted
- information given to consumers even when they try to inform
- themselves.
-
- 3. THE ETHICS OF THE SALVATION ARMY FREEDOM CENTER: The SAFC should
- be held to account for exploiting those people it ostensibly is
- contracted to serve. The SAFC reportedly receives a portion of the
- initial connect charge in two separate categories. One figure was
- $1.40, and the other $1.75. The USLD personnel providing these figures
- did not know if they were combined or if the SAFC receives an
- additional percentage of the toll over the initial connect charge.
- Whatever the details, the SAFC is being compensated by people who can
- ill-afford such exorbitant rates. It is not clear whether there are
- COCOTS for personnel who are not recently released prisoners in the
- area of the facilities for employees or "civilians." Nor is it known
- whether coin-operated phones elsewhere in the facilities have carriers
- with more traditinal rates. SAFC personnel with whom JT spoke
- claimed to have no knowledge of the telephone policies, who was in
- charge, who collected the money, or who made the decisions for
- selecting specific carriers. Whatever the reasons, the SAFC is
- engaging in a practice that questions both their integrity and their
- stated purpose of facilitating ex-offenders' return to society.
-
- 4. WHAT IS THE CUSTOMER'S RESPONSIBILITY? Judging from this incident,
- it is impossible for consumers to inform themselves of the nuances of
- teleco policies. It is not that there are too many separate policies
- created by deregulation (as GTE personnel and others claimed). Rather,
- there are too many teleco-created obstacles to obtaining information
- and too many levels for the intrusion of misinformation, some given
- intentionally, some inadvertently. In a sad and rather ironic way, the
- consistent misinformation or deception of telecos partially supports
- the contention of phreaks and hackers that unauthorized intrusions
- into industry computers are necessary to help provide information on
- corporations that seem unaccountable for their actions.
-
- The telephone has long been a semi-friendly device that we come to
- accept as part of everyday life. Most consumers do not expect
- answering a ringing telephone to be an occasion for potential rip-off
- by telecos that claim to serve, rather than abuse, us. Unfortunately,
- given the behavior of those acting on behalf of some telephone
- companies, the telephone is becoming a potential enemy and instrument
- of abuse. Rather than serving as an instrument that brings people
- closer, the actions of telephone abusers, including teleco personnel,
- are making us more distrustful.
-
- WHAT IS TO BE DONE? Readers of Pat Townson's TELECOM DIGEST
- continually identify teleco abuses and relate how they can be resisted
- (Telecom Digest is available on usenet). In cases such as this,
- several responses might be useful. First, those receiving collect
- calls should question the operator to determine the identity of the
- carrier if not initially given. Parties should also request a
- detailed rate structure that includes the cost of the initial
- connection, the cost-per-minute, and any additional charges. Second,
- when alleging abuses, filing complaints with appropriate agencies,
- such as the state's public utilities/commerce commission, is crucial
- to bring to legislators' attention the problems of COCOTS,
- questionable carrier practices, and other issues. Third, letters to
- the telecos involved, legislators, and others also increases the
- visibility of the problem. Finally, if otherwise legitimate
- organizations, such as the SAFC, are utilizing carriers or COCOTS that
- abuse public trust, the matter should be brought to their attention.
- If they are under contract to another organization, as the SAFC is to
- the Illinois Department of Corrections, then the contracting
- organization should also be notified. It also is often possible to
- involve watchdog or consumer advocacy groups (in Illinois, Citizen's
- Utility Board and others) to provide suggestions for responding.
-
- When telecos challenge the ethics and social competency of hackers,
- they claim to hold the moral highground and object to what they
- perceive as predatory behavior when their own ox is gored. When their
- own practices are challenged, they are far less willing to apply the
- same standards of behavior to themselves that they expect from others.
- Like Woody Guthrie said, "Some rob ya with a six-gun, some with
- a fountain pen."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 30 Apr 92 22:58:58 PDT
- From: jwarren@AUTODESK.COM(Jim Warren)
- Subject: File 2--Pres. Candidates ONLINE (Perot, Bush, Clinton, Brown, etc.)
-
- Please copy, post & circulate
-
- It's time to have an ONLINE presidential debate/forum.
-
- Here is the message I just faxed and snailmailed to the indicated
- presidential candidates.
-
- ** Please send your own request (feel free to modify this one if you wish).**
- ** If they get enough requests, they will be pressured to participate. **
- ** (When you send a request to them, please send a note of it to me.) **
-
-
- Greetings,
- We invite you to join an ONLINE presidential candidates' forum.
-
- Ross Perot has proposed using "electronic town-hall meetings" to
- allow citizens to participate in their/our government.
-
- Jerry Brown has reaped national headlines from "going online" on a
- small computer network (GEnie) to discuss his candidacy with a
- national audience.
-
- George Bush signed legislation last year, to greatly enhance the
- nation's "electronic highway system" that already connects 1.3-million
- computers.
-
- There are about 8- to 15-million people who are "online" -- using
- computer-teleconferencing and electronic-mail services across this
- cooperative web of computers called the "Internet." Several million
- people regularly read news and participate in public discussions using
- this network.
-
- Perot and Brown have shown that they know how to use these "electronic
- highways" to share their views with those whom they propose to
- represent. We ask you to do the same.
-
- We ask you to make your views available to 8- to 15-million people.
- You can do so, at little or no cost to you or to your audience.
-
- Here's how:
-
- 1. You will "speak" by electronically "posting" your remarks on the
- network within a one-week period -- at any time and place that is
- convenient for you, night or day, using any normal telephone. [also,
- please see item 9, below]
-
- 2. You will post (1) position-statements and comments on issues of
- interest to you, similar to"opening remarks" in a face-to-face debate,
- and (2) your responses to questions from reporters selected by the
- nation's leading news media.
-
- 3. The reporters will be chosen by daily newspapers with at least
- 250,000 circulation, plus recognized national news-magazines, plus the
- national television networks. These organizations will be invited to
- select one of their editorial/news staff to pose questions to you
- throughout the one-week period. Reporters will be encouraged to pose
- follow-up questions and to post special note if a candidate fails to
- respond to a question by the end of the week's forum.
-
- 4. Both the candidates and the reporters will be encouraged to
- consult with others in drafting their questions, responses and
- comments. The number of questions per reporter will be limited by
- agreement among that group.
-
- 5. For each question or comment, reporters will be limited to
- 10-lines x 80-characters/line. Each of your responses will be limited
- to 40-lines x 80-characters/line. There will be separate facilities
- provided where you can post more extended comments and
- position-papers, if you wish to do so.
-
- 6. All participants will agree that their questions, responses and
- comments are to be in the public domain and may be copied without
- further permission.
-
- 7. The participating reporters will agree to accept electronic-mail
- from anyone wishing to send it to them during the one-week period, and
- their electronic addresses will be attached to each of their
- questions. Thus, everyone else online will be able to suggest
- questions and offer additional information and comments to the
- reporters.
-
- 8. In parallel with this debate/forum where participation will be
- limited to presidential candidates and the questioning reporters,
- there will also be a nationwide public forum in which everyone online
- may discuss the questions, your responses and the issues that are
- raised -- via an established system for such discussion already in use
- by several million people.
-
- 9. We will schedule this forum as soon as one or more major
- national candidates agree. It will take place regardless of whether
- all candidates choose to participate.
-
- 10. There will be no cost to your campaign -- assuming that your
- campaign has access to a personal-computer with a telephone-modem and
- can find someone you trust* who can operate it and is familiar with
- how to use the network.
-
- * - If you cannot locate a computer person, we will be happy to
- distribute a request for volunteers across the network for you.
-
- A copy of this has been faxed and mailed to other candidates as noted,
- below. Copies have also been posted to numerous online newsletters
- and newsgroups, and e-mailed to numerous leaders across the network.
- You may be somewhat-able to gauge likely-interest in this proposal by
- the number of similar requests you receive in the next several weeks,
- by phone-call, fax and "snailmail."
-
- I would be happy to discuss this with you or your staff, and look
- forward to your timely reply -- which will also be promptly publicized
- across the nets.
-
- I remain, Sincerely,
- /s/ Jim Warren
- Electronic Civil Liberties Initiative
- 345 Swett Road
- Woodside CA 94062
- 415-851-7075; fax/415-851-2814; e-mail/jwarren@well.sf.ca.us
-
- [ And, for identification purposes only: founder, InfoWorld newspaper;
- Contributing Editor & "futures" columnist, MicroTimes (~200,000 circulation);
- organizer & Chair, First Conference on Computers, Freedom & Privacy (1991); a
- recipient, first Pioneer Awards (1992), Electronic Frontier Foundation;
- founding host, PBS television's "Computer Chronicles" series; founding
- President, Microcomputer Industry Trade Association; member, Board of
- Directors, Autodesk, Inc.; etc. ]
-
- cc:
- H. Ross Perot, P.O.Box 517010, 12377 Merit Dr.#1100, Dallas TX 75251-7010
- attn: Sharon Holman or Tom Luce, unofficial campaign honcho/a
- national/800-685-7777; in Texas/214-419-5000; fax/800-925-1300
- Jerry Brown, 2121 Cloverfield Blvd.#120, Santa Monica CA 90404-5277
- attn: Jodie Evans, campaign manager
- national/800-426-1112; in California/310-449-1992; fax/310-449-1903
- George Bush, 1030 15th St. NW, Washington DC 20005
- attn: Robert Mosbacher, campaign manager
- national/202-336-7080; [no 800-number]; fax/202-336-7117
- Bill Clinton, P.O.Box 615, 1220 W. 3rd St., Little Rock AR 72201
- attn: Dave Wilhelm & Jeff Eller, campaign manager & campaign spokesperson
- national/501-372-1992; [no 800-number]; fax/501-372-2292
- [Send other copies to the presidential candidates of *your* choice.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 1 May 92 16:21:33 CDT
- From: Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 3--Ross Perot for President BBS
-
- One candidate who has gone on-line is H. Ross Perot, independent
- candidate for President. This month's (May, 1992) issue of BOARDWATCH
- MAGAZINE (for information, contact Jack Rickard at:
- jrickard@teal.csn.org). as a lengthy article on Perot and his "new
- vision" for an electronic democracy. BOARDWATCH reports that Dave
- Hughes, sysop of the former Rogers Bar BBS in Colorado Springs,
- established the Ross Perot for President BBS as a way of an
- "electronic town hall." The number is: (719) 632-3391. Below are
- selected excerpts of what you see when you log in:
-
- **********
-
- atdt 1 719 632 3391
- RINGING
-
- CONNECT 2400/NONE
-
- Welcome to the H. Ross Perot
- Support BBS of Old Colo City
-
- THE ELECTRONIC BACK ROOM
- AT ROGERS BAR!
-
-
- First Name? jim
- Last Name? thomas
- Calling from (City,State)? DeKalb, IL
-
- TBBS Welcomes JIM THOMAS
- Calling From DEKALB, IL
- Is this correct? Y
-
- <A>VIDTEX <B>TRS-80 1/3 <C>VT-52 <D>ATARI <E>H19/H89/Z19
- <F>IBM PC <G>Televid 925 <H>VT-100
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- Enter letter of your terminal, <CR> if not listed: F
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- Please Enter a 1-8 character Password to be used for future logons. This
- password may have any printable characters you wish. Lower case is considered
- different from upper case and imbedded blanks are legal. REMEMBER THIS
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- You are caller number 467
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-
-
- ******************************
- ** Online for H. Ross Perot **
- ******************************
-
- <P>urpose of this BBS
- <C>olorado Campaign Information
- <M>essage Boards Where You Can Start A Topic
- <R>ead All Messages all Boards Now
-
- <I>nformation about Perot
- <F>iles - Upload, Download or Read Longer Documents
-
- <W>ho are last 127 Callers?
-
- <T>echnical Matters
-
-
- Command: p
- Type P to Pause, S to Stop listing
-
- This BBS is put up to help those interested in the
- H. Ross Perot potential Presidential Candidacy:
-
- (1) Find out legal requirements for signing petitions
- in Colorado
- (2) Find out where/who/when you can sign
- (3) Learn more about Perot and his views
- (4) Locate other interested supporters
- (5) Register to help out
- (6) Discuss Perot and the Campaign BBS style
-
- (This BBS operates courtesy of Dave Hughes, from the premises
- of Old Colorado City Communications, 2502 West Colo Ave, #203
- Colorado Springs, CO 80904. 719-632-4848 voice. It uses the
- phone line 719-632-3391 which, since 1980 has been used
- effectively to conduct 'online politics' from Rogers Bar.)
-
- Command: i
- Information About The Candidate
-
- (1) Brief Biography
-
- (2) What people say about him
-
- (3) Other Published Sources
-
-
- (-)Previous Menu
- (0)Top Level Menu
-
- (G)oodbye...Log off
- Command: r
-
- Type P to pause, S to stop, N to skip to next msg
-
- <F>orward or <R>everse Multiple
- <N>ew Messages
- <M>arked Messages
- <S>elective Retrieval
- <I>ndividual Message(s)
- <A>bort Retrieve
-
- Which One? N
-
- Pause after each msg(Y/N)? Y
-
- Command: d
- Type P to Pause, S to Stop listing
-
- Recent Uploads to the System:
-
- SPEECH1 7040 Perot Speech before National Press Club
- LIMBAUG1 3308 Rush Limbaugh's Reaction on Compuserve
- WELL0325 12868 Heavy Discussion on the 'Well' (Calif)
- BOOKS 373 List of Books about Perot
- INSIGHT 6912 A Reporters View of Perot in his element
- OFFICE 1939 Colorado Springs Office Organized
- BIO 5888 Biography of Perot
- USATODAY 2638 Extracts of Perot Views on Issues
- TRIGGER 13274 Debate on Perot's 'Trigger Happy' potential
- NATPRESS 41088 Full Text National Press Club Speech
- CONTACTS 5893 Perot Organizers in Other States
- IDEAS91 7266 1991 Ideas and Positions taken by Perot
- WELL0418 11400 Well discussion of 'responsibility'
- THE-DEFICIT 3982 Key Issue # 1 - The Deficit
- EDITORLTR 2515 Letter to Editor, local CS paper
- HELP 0 new jersey
- UFOBBS.TXT 308 PHOENIX LIBERATOR EXCITING NEW NATL UFO BBS (
-
- <D>ownload, <P>rotocol, <E>xamine, <N>ew, <L>ist, or <H>elp
-
- **********
-
- The idea of a board that serves as a community forum and a place for
- obtaining speeches and other documents pertaining to candidates for
- political office is nifty. As Jim Warren (above) suggests, politicians
- should be persuaded to move into the 21st century and contribute to the
- development of cyberspace.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Dave Banisar <banisar@WASHOFC.CPSR.ORG>
- Date: Tue, 28 Apr 1992 21:49:11 EDT
- Subject: File 4--FBI attempting to use mailing lists for Investigations
-
- Source: Computer Privacy Digest and Risks 13.54
-
- FBI attempting to use mailing lists for investigation
-
- The 20 April 1992 issue of DM News, a direct marketing trade
- publication, reports that within the past two weeks, Metromail and
- Donnelly Marketing (two of the very largest mailing list companies)
- were approached by the FBI which is seeking mailing lists for use in
- investigations. Other mailing list firms also received feelers
- according to the story. "Neither of the identified firms would discuss
- details, but one source familiar with the effort said the FBI
- apparently is seeking access to a compiled consumer database for
- investigatory uses."
-
- "The FBI agents showed 'detailed awareness' of the products they were
- seeking, and claimed to have already worked with several mailing list
- companies, according to the source."
-
- Metromail, according to the article, has been supplying the FBI with
- its MetroNet address lookup service for two years. The FBI said that
- the database is used to confirm addresses of people the FBI needs to
- locate for an interview.
-
- This marks the first time since the IRS tried to buy mailing lists in
- 1984 that a government agency has attempted to use mailing lists for
- enforcement purposes.
-
- In a separate but related story in the April 24 issue of the Friday
- Report, a direct marketing newsletter, the RBOC's are teaming up with
- other firms to develop white page directories on CD-ROM. For example,
- US West has a joint venture with PhoneDisc USA of Marblehead, Ma. The
- article states that the company offers lists failing mailing list
- enhancements to law enforcement agencies. [NOTE: an enhanced list
- means the names and addresses were matched with a marketing database
- and additional demographic information was added to the list from the
- marketing database].
-
- Mary Culnan, School of Business Administration, Georgetown University
- MCULNAN@GUVAX.GEORGETOWN.EDU
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 29 Apr 92 18:41:02 EDT
- From: Gordon Meyer <72307.1502@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: File 5--Society and Tech Online
-
- GEnie's Public Forum*NonProfit Connection area (home of CuD back
- issues on GEnie) has announced a series of online conferences on
- Technology and Society.
-
- For CuD readers that may be GEnie users, here's the schedule of
- events....
-
- ward Rheingold -- Virtual Reality
- ------------------------------------------
-
- When Grateful Dead guitarist Jerry Garcia experienced virtual
- reality, he said, "They made LSD illegal. I wonder what they are
- going to do about this stuff."
-
- With a head-mounted display and sensors monitoring body movement,
- people are already walking through computer-simulated buildings
- before construction and firing weapons from remote tanks. What
- will the future look like? What decisions should we make now,
- before the full impact of virtual reality?
-
- Howard wrote _Virtual Reality_, edits _The Whole Earth Review_
- and consults with the US Congress Office of Technology
- Assessment. He has written for such publications as _The New
- York Times_, _Esquire_, _Playboy_ and _Omni_. His other
- (excellent!) books include _Tools for Thought_ and _Excursions to
- the Far Side of the Mind._
-
- May 10: Steve Cisler -- Public Access to Information
- ----------------------------------------------------
-
- Steve, an expert on national information issues from Apple Computer,
- will join a discussion of public access to information and public
- control over high-speed data highways.
-
- May 24: Katie Hafner -- Social Consequences of Computer Networks
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Co-author of _Cyberpunk: Outlaws and Hackers on the Computer Frontier_,
- Katie will talk with us about the communities that have grown up around
- computer networks.
-
- May 31: Jerry Berman -- Free Speech Online
- -------------------------------------------
-
- Founder of the ACLU Privacy and Technology Project and now director
- of the Washington, DC, office of the Electronic Frontier Foundation,
- Jerry will join our discussion about who controls the content of
- electronic communication and the systems through which it travels.
-
-
- All conferences will begin at 9pm EDT in the PF*NPC conference
- area.
-
- If the issues and discussions raised by the conferences warrant,
- future issues of CuD may contain summaries or excerpts from these
- conferences as appropriate.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #4.20
- ************************************
-
-