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- Computer underground Digest Sun Mar 28 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 23
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Copy Eater: Etaion Shrdlu, Senior
-
- CONTENTS, #5.23 (Mar 28 1993)
- File 1--Response to Virus Writing Contest (#5.21)
- File 2--Akron BBS Sting update
- File 3--"Munro Falls Carryout" - more Akron BBS Sting updates
- File 4--Getting information to and from the White House
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost electronically from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The
- editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302)
- or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
- 60115.
-
- Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
- news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
- LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
- libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
- the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
- On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
- on the PC-EXEC BBS at (414) 789-4210;
- in Europe from the ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352) 466893;
-
- ANONYMOUS FTP SITES:
- UNITED STATES: ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/cud
- uglymouse.css.itd.umich.edu (141.211.182.53) in /pub/CuD/cud
- halcyon.com( 202.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud
- AUSTRALIA: ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2) in /pub/text/CuD.
- EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud. (Finland)
- ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud (United Kingdom)
-
- Back issues also may be obtained through mailservers at:
- mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us or server@blackwlf.mese.com
-
- 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 for non-profit 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: Wed, 24 Mar 93 13:03:09 PST
- From: roy%burnflag.ati.com@HARVUNXW.BITNET(Roy)
- Subject: Response to Virus Writing Contest (#5.21)
-
- This note is in reference to the current issue of CuD and the all the
- discussion of Mark Ludwigs' virus writing contest.
-
- Let's just say I decided to have a bomb making contest. This is for
- the purely scientific purpose of studying how bombs work, and allowing
- people to study different ways to defuse bombs. I am going to award
- some cash to the winner and publish the plans for making the bomb in
- my soon-to-be-released book called "The Little Black Book of Bomb
- Making Techniques".
-
- So, the book gets published and sells lots of copies. Mark Ludwig
- arrives home one day to find that his place of residence has been
- destroyed by a huge bomb. It just so happens that the type of bomb
- used is the same award winning explosive device as I published in my
- book.
-
- Surely, Mr. Ludwig would not hold me responsible for the destruction
- of his home caused by someone who decided to implement the plans I
- presented purely for "scientific research purposes".
-
- Roy Batchelor / Burn This Flag BBS / San Jose, CA / 408-363-9766 /
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 24 Mar 93 01:16:36 EST
- From: David Lehrer <71756.2116@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: Akron BBS Sting Update
-
- Akron Anomaly BBS trial issue:
-
- Distributed with permission of The Akron Beacon Journal
- David Lehrer
-
- ********************
-
- POLICE SAY THEY WERE TAKING A BYTE OUT OF CRIME MUNROE FALLS
- MAN WAS ARRESTED FOR HAVING X-RATED PICTURES ON HIS COMPUTER
- BULLETIN BOARD; HIS PARENTS BELIEVE THE STING OPERATION WAS
- POLITICALLY MOTIVATED.
-
- Akron Beacon Journal (AK) - MONDAY March 22, 1993
- By: CHARLENE NEVADA, Beacon Journal staff writer
- Edition: 1 STAR Section: METRO Page: A1
- Word Count: 1,538
-
- TEXT:
- When the police cars pulled up to David Lehrer's quiet Munroe Falls
- street last June, it was a little like they were swooping
- down on a major criminal.
-
- Police Chief Steve Stahl went to the door and told Lehrer that he
- had a search warrant to seize computer equipment belonging to Lehrer's
- son, Mark. The chief told the elder Lehrer that there was
- reason to believe Mark Lehrer, then 22, was using the computer and a
- modem to disseminate matter harmful to juveniles.
-
- Essentially, the chief said, it appeared that there were dirty
- pictures on a popular computer bulletin board operated by the
- younger Lehrer and that teen-agers could use their own computers to
- view the dirty pictures.
-
- The police went through the Lehrers' home -- seizing,
- labeling and photographing anything and everything that fit on the
- computer. It was just like on a police television show, only it was
- happening in Munroe Falls and the accused was a college student
- computer whiz.
-
- Greg Lehrer, Mark's younger brother, remembers asking one
- of the officers: 'Why don't you go out and find some real criminals?'
-
- That was nine months ago.
-
- Some might still ask that question.
-
- The case of the State of Ohio vs. Mark Lehrer was closed last week
- when Lehrer stood before a judge in Summit County and pleaded
- guilty to one rather strange misdemeanor: attempted possession of a
- criminal tool.
-
- Lehrer and his family said the plea bargain was a way to put the
- matter behind them without risking a jury trial and more legal
- expenses. They consider the whole episode a witch hunt by Munroe Falls
- police.
-
- David Lehrer has said from the beginning that Munroe Falls police
- only wanted to appropriate his son's high-power computer -- which they
- labeled a criminal tool -- for their own use.
-
- Within the computing community, the case caused so much outrage
- that some lawyers and accountants set up a defense fund to help
- Lehrer. More than $1,500 came from all over the country.
-
- Munroe Falls Police Chief Steve Stahl is about as unhappy
- over the resolution as the Lehrers.
-
- Stahl wanted a felony conviction. The chief denied being on a witch
- hunt for criminals in a relatively crime-free suburban community.
-
- Lehrer's attorney, Don Varian, said the prosecutor offered to
- plea bargain because prosecutors would have had problems going to
- trial: 'They would have lost and they knew it,' he said.
-
- On this much everyone agrees: Between last June and last week, the
- case took lots of strange turns.
-
- THE AKRON ANOMALY
- It started one day last spring when Munroe Falls police got a tip
- from a Kent State University student who said he was concerned
- that obscene material was available to juveniles through a computer
- bulletin board known as the Akron Anomaly.
-
- The Akron Anomaly was the baby of Mark Lehrer, a University of
- Akron student. Lehrer has been into computers since he was in grade
- school and his dad brought the first one home. Among people who
- love computers, bulletin boards are a way to share ideas and programs.
- Bulletin board users are a little like yesterday's ham radio
- operators.
-
- The operator of a computer bulletin board is usually someone
- who has lots of games, pictures and programs to share.
-
- Others can sign onto their own computers -- and with the aid of a
- modem and telephone line -- tap into the bulletin board and copy the
- files.
-
- As computers go, Lehrer had a V-8 engine, a 486 IBM clone
- with 500 megabytes of memory. (The whole Bible could be stored in
- 1 1/2 of those megabytes.)
-
- Lehrer works at a computer store in Stark County. He was allowed
- to buy accessories and upgrades at discount. His system -- not
- including discs --was valued at about $3,000.
-
- The bulletin board was so successful that early last year a
- local computer group called it one of the best around.
-
- Those who wanted to use the bulletin board more than 45 minutes
- a day were asked to pay $15 a year, which Lehrer applied to his phone
- bill.
-
- X-RATED MATERIAL
-
- The board had an adult section with X-rated pictures and movies.
- Those who wanted access to the adult section had to send Lehrer
- a copy of a driver's license and get a special clearance.
-
- Computer users don't just take things from a bulletin board.
- They contribute, too.
-
- Programs and pictures sent to the Anomaly were received in sort
- of an 'in' basket. Lehrer then sorted them and filed them by category.
-
- The X-rated stuff -- which Lehrer said was less than 2 percent
- of the available files -- was put into the restricted-entry
- adult category. According to Stahl, some of the X-rated files
- wound up in the clean section.
-
- One in particular troubled Stahl. It was labeled '69,' a slang
- term for oral sex, and had three X's behind it.
-
- To Stahl, that meant dirty. And since it wasn't in a
- restricted-access section, anyone could see it.
-
- But since Munroe Falls didn't actually have any outraged
- parents complaining, the police set up a sting operation.
-
- Working on the advice of prosecutors from the Cuyahoga Falls
- Municipal Court, police found a 15-year-old volunteer and had
- him apply for membership under a fake name. They sat him down at a
- computer and had him press the button to access one of the X-rated
- files. Then he left because his parents didn't want him viewing the
- material.
-
- Lehrer was charged with disseminating matter harmful to
- juveniles and possession of criminal tools -- his computer.
-
- At a preliminary hearing last June, Cuyahoga Falls Municipal
- Judge James Bierce warned that more evidence would be needed to
- convict Lehrer. Nonetheless, the matter was bound over to the grand
- jury.
-
- And that's where it died. Just why isn't clear. Grand jury
- proceedings are secret.
-
- Stahl said the grand jury didn't actually get to see the pictures.
-
- Varian has his own theory.
-
- The police didn't have an independent witnesses saying they or
- their children were offended, Varian said. All they had was the
- 15-year-old kid who was set up. That meant the jury would have had to
- look at the issue of entrapment. Jurors might not have liked that.
-
- NEW CHARGES
-
- But the matter didn't end with the grand jury no-billing the
- issue of disseminating matter harmful to juveniles.
-
- New charges surfaced.
- When authorities seized Lehrer's computer, they also took
- those shopping bags full of floppy discs. And apparently among them
- were some sex pictures in which the subjects could have been under 18.
-
- So Lehrer was indicted for pandering obscenity involving minors.
-
- It didn't matter that the pictures came from a disc and weren't on
- line or available through the bulletin board.
-
- The new charges made David Lehrer, Mark's father, suspect even
- more that there was a hidden agenda.
-
- POLITICS AT WORK?
-
- Lehrer chairs the city's charter review commission. Last
- May, the commission voted not to make the police chief's job
- classified, which would have afforded Stahl a great measure of job
- protection.
-
- Plus, after the bust, Susan Lehrer -- Mark's mother --
- visited the chief. She took notes. She said Stahl talked about how
- her son's computer could be used in police work.
-
- Stahl denied his actions were politically motivated. He also
- denied wanting to get the computer, which is now in the hands
- of state law enforcement officials.
-
- The chief said he decided it would be wrong to ignore the case
- just because Mark Lehrer's father held a public position.
-
- Stahl denied digging through the floppies to find more to charge
- Lehrer with. The Bureau of Criminal Investigation did that, he said.
-
- COMPUTER GONE FOR GOOD
-
- Mark Lehrer acknowledged having some adult files in the
- unrestricted area. With 10,000 files to deal with, he said, it was a
- clerical error.
-
- Summit County Prosecutor Lynn Slaby said that it would have been
- tough to convict Lehrer on the kiddie porn charges because proving
- the ages of the people in the pictures would have been tough.
- Varian said the women looked in the range of 16 to 20.
-
- To salvage the case, prosecutors offered the plea bargain. Lehrer
- said he agreed to it because expert witnesses -- people to
- testify the people in the picture weren't under 18 -- would
- have cost $6,000.
-
- Most importantly, he said: 'I didn't want to go to trial for
- child pornography. Juries sometimes convict people unfairly.'
-
- He got no jail time, no probation and a small fine. But he had to
- give up his computer.
-
- 'We did not endorse the plea agreement,' Stahl said. He said he
- still believes that Lehrer is guilty of disseminating matter
- harmful to juveniles.
-
- The chief said he isn't on an obscenity crusade. 'We're not
- Ravenna,' he said, referring to that city's anti-porn-crusading mayor,
- Donald Kainrad.
-
- To Lehrer -- who sees an empty room instead of a sophisticated
- computer -- it's been a nightmare and the end of a great hobby.
-
- 'Being hit with child pornography charges' was far from just, he
- says. 'It's scary what people -- police and prosecutors -- can do to
- a citizen.'
-
- CAPTION:
- Photo
-
- PHOTO: LEW STAMP
-
- Beacon Journal - David Lehrer (left) and his son Mark
- question why Munroe Falls police targeted Mark's computer
- bulletin board, the Akron Anomaly.
-
- DESCRIPTORS: DAVID LEHRER; MARK; MUNROE FALLS POLICE; SEARCH WARRANT;
- COMPUTER EQUIPMENT; COLLEGE STUDENT; OBSCENE; JUVENILE;
- BIOGRAPHY; INFORMATION
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 27 Mar 93 07:36:29 EST
- From: David Lehrer <71756.2116@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: CuD
-
- "Munroe Falls carryout"
-
- The following is an editorial published in the Akron Beacon Journal on
- Wednesday, March 24, 1993. This editorial is copyrighted by the Akron
- Beacon Journal, and commercial use or resale of this article is
- forbidden. Permission to post this editorial in its entirety has been
- generously granted by Mr. David B. Cooper, Associate Editor.
-
- Background:
-
- The 9-month long Mark Lehrer/Akron Anomaly BBS felony trial situation
- terminated on March 8, 1993.
-
- Topic: Published articles about the Akron Anomaly BBS 'sting'
- directed by Munroe Falls, Ohio police chief Steve Stahl on June 18,
- 1992. All published articles concerning this 'sting' and associated
- battles will be distributed immediately upon permission being granted
- by the author(s).
-
- Responses are encouraged!
-
- >From the Beacon: "We welcome your letters and the chance to publish as
- many as possible."
-
- "We ask that letters be original, concise and legible and bear
- the writer's full signature, address and daytime phone number."
-
- "All letters are subject to editing. We withhold names only for good
- reason. The same conditions apply to letters sent by fax."
-
- "Please address your letters to Voice of the People, Akron Beacon
- Journal, P.O. Box 640, Akron, Ohio 44309-0640."
-
- "If you want to send your letter by fax, use our fax number:
- (216) 996-3520."
-
- David Lehrer
-
- *******************
-
- 07084027
- MUNROE FALLS CARRYOUT
- Akron Beacon Journal (AK) - WEDNESDAY March 24, 1993
- Edition: 1 STAR Section: EDITORIAL Page: A14
- Word Count: 313
-
- MEMO:
- Editorial / Our Opinion
-
- TEXT:
- The Fourth Amendment to the Constitution was written to safeguard
- ordinary citizens against unreasonable search and seizure.
- Recently, however, law-enforcement officials have taken to seizing
- possessions of convicted and suspected criminals, particularly drug
- dealers.
-
- In the case of 23-year-old Munroe Falls resident Mark Lehrer,
- police confiscated a sophisticated, $3,000 computer setup, programs
- and disks on the suspicion that he might be letting kids look at
- dirty pictures. That charge was never proved. In fact, it appears
- that police received only one or two complaints about his computer
- bulletin board, none from area parents. Lehrer contends a
- clerical error put the pornography into files accessible to all the
- bulletin board's users, not just adults. Police enlisted a
- 15-year-old, falsified his identity for a membership and then helped
- the teen call up a possibly offending program.
-
- But, when the Summit County grand jury refused to indict the
- University of Akron computer whiz on the original charges, Munroe
- Falls police filed other charges based on the possibility that
- some of the programs in Lehrer's private collection contained
- pictures of minors.
-
- Lehrer did plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge of 'attempted
- possession of criminal tools' -- his computer -- based on those
- subsequent charges.
-
- No one downplays the seriousness of crime in our society, whether
- it's in the suburbs or inner cities. None argue that children should
- be able to view pornography.
-
- But in the absence of compelling evidence that Lehrer was
- trying to peddle child porn to kids, either at the outset of this
- case nine months ago or now, it could appear that the police acted
- hastily in confiscating the computer. Such actions invite questions
- as to whether the police were protecting against a child pornographer
- or using the intimidating powers of the police and judicial system
- to help themselves to a nice hunk of expensive machinery. dl
-
- DESCRIPTORS: MUNROE FALLS; MARK LEHRER; POLICE; BIOGRAPHY; CHILD
- PORNOGRAPHY; EVIDENCE; OBSCENITY
-
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 16 Mar 1993 08:08:53 -0800 (PST)
- From: booloo@FRAMSPARC.OCF.LLNL.GOV(Mark Boolootian)
- Subject: Getting information to and from the White House
-
- GETTING INFORMATION TO AND FROM THE WHITE HOUSE
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
- Updated March 12, 1993
-
- A. HOW TO SIGN UP FOR ELECTRONIC RELEASES FROM THE WHITE HOUSE:
-
- The White House Communications office is distributing press releases
- over an experimental system developed during the campaign.
-
- You can sign up to receive press releases on this experimental system
- by using the automated computer server. You will be carried forward
- onto the system that replaces it. However, it would be appreciated if
- you used this service sparingly at this time. The present system was
- not designed to handle high levels of message traffic. In due course,
- a more powerful system will be available.
-
- You can also find copies of the press releases in certain on-line
- bulletin board groups devoted to discussions of either national
- politics in general or President Clinton in particular.
-
- 1. On USENET/NETNEWS, electronic publications are found on a variety of
- groups:
-
- Direct Distribution
-
- alt.politics.clinton
- alt.politics.org.misc
- alt.politics.reform
- alt.politics.usa.misc
- alt.news-media
- alt.activism
- talk.politics.misc
-
- Indirect Distribution
-
- misc.activism.progressive
- cmu.soc.politics
- assocs.clinton-gore-92
-
- 2. On CompuServe: GO WHITEHOUSE
-
- 3. On America Online: keyword WHITEHOUSE or THE WHITEHOUSE or CLINTON
-
- 4. On The WELL: type whitehouse
-
- 5. On MCI: type VIEW WHITE HOUSE
-
-
- If you don't have access to the these accounts or if you would prefer
- to receive the releases via e-mail, then the next section details how
- to sign up for this service. The server is not set up to answer
- e-mail letters, comments or requests for specific information. To
- reach this server, send e-mail:
-
- to: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- subject: Help
-
- The server works by reading the subject line of the incoming message
- and taking whatever action that line calls for. If you want to sign up
- to automatically receive press releases, then your subject line would
- begin with the word RECEIVE. You can then specify what kind of
- information you are interested in receiving. The categories of
- information are:
-
- ECONOMIC POLICY
- Get releases related to the economy such as budget
- news, technology policy review, etc.
-
-
- FOREIGN POLICY
- Get releases related to foreign policy such as
- statements on Bosnian airdrop, Haitian refugee
- status, etc.
-
-
- SOCIAL POLICY
- Get releases related to social issues like
- National Service (Student Loan) program,
- abortion, welfare reform, etc.
-
- SPEECHES
- All speeches made by the President and
- important speeches made by other
- Administration officials.
-
- NEWS
- Transcripts of press conferences released by
- the White House Communications office, as well
- as the President's remarks in photo ops and
- other Q&A sessions.
-
- ALL All of the above
-
- So, if you wanted to sign up to get releases related to the economy your
- e-mail message would look like this:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject: RECEIVE ECONOMY
-
- When you send a signup message to the clinton-info server, it sends
- you back a status message letting you know what distribution streams
- you are signed up for. If you ever want to check on what groups you
- are signed up for send the following message:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject: STATUS
-
-
-
- You can stop receiving e-mail releases by sending a REMOVE message to
- the clinton-info server. The word REMOVE would be followed by whatever
- distribution stream you wanted to drop. If you wanted to stop
- receiving message about the ECONOMY then your mail would look like
- this:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject: REMOVE ECONOMY
-
- You could substitute SOCIAL, FOREIGN, SPEECHES, NEWS or ALL for
- ECONOMY in the above message and you would be dropped from that
- distribution list. If you send the subject line REMOVE ALL, then you
- will be taken off the e-mail distribution system all together and will
- not receive further releases of any kind.
-
- You can also ask for help from the automated server. Send an e-mail
- query as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject: HELP
-
- The server will respond by sending you a detailed form that will guide you
- through the process of signing up for the various distribution streams.
-
- B. ARE THE WHITE HOUSE PRESS RELEASES BEING ARCHIVED.
-
- Yes. Various sites are archiving the press releases. What follows is an
- incomplete list of some of the sites containing the documents that have
- been released to date. This FAQ will be updated to reflect new sites as
- they become known.
-
- SITE DIRECTORY
-
- 1. SUNSITE.UNC.EDU /HOME3/WAIS/WHITE-HOUSE-PAPERS
- 2. FTP.CCO.CALTECH.EDU /PUB/BJMCCALL
- 3. FTP MARISTB.MARIST.EDU
- 4. CPSR.ORG /CPSR/CLINTON
- 5. FedWorld BBS 703-321-8020 8-N-1
-
-
- Notes: The following are notes on how to log in and get
- information from the above sites.
-
- 1. Office FOR Information Technology at University of
- North Carolina Maintains the full collection of White
- House electronic release available for search with WAIS.
- (:source
- :version 3
- :database-name "/home3/wais/White-House-Papers" :ip-
- address "152.2.22.81"
- :ip-name "sunsite.unc.edu"
- :tcp-port 210
- :cost 0.00
- :cost-unit :free
- :maintainer "pjones@sunsite.unc.edu"
- :description "Server created with WAIS release 8 b5 on
- Feb 27 15:16:16 1993 by pjones@sunsite.unc.edu
- These are the White House Press Briefings and other
- postings dealing with William Jefferson Clinton and
- Albert Gore as well as members of the President's
- Cabinet and the first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton,
- Chelsea, Socks and others in Washington DC. Dee Dee
- Meyers and George Stephanopoulos. Other good words:
- United States of America, Bill Al Tipper Democrats USA
- US These files are also available via anonymous ftp
- from sunsite.unc.edu The files of type filename used in
- the index were:
- /home3/ftp/pub/academic/political-science/whitehouse-
- papers/1993 ")
- Folks without WAIS clients or gophers that act as WAIS
- clients may telnet to sunsite.unc.edu and login as swais
- to access this information via WAIS.
-
- 2. No special instructions.
-
- 3. The CLINTON@MARIST log files which contain all the official
- administration releases distributed through the MIT servers
- are available via anonymous FTP. These logs contain in
- addition to the official releases, the posts that comprise the
- ongoing discussion conducted by the list subscribers.
- To obtain the logs:
- FTP MARISTB.MARIST.EDU - the logs are in the CLINTON directory
- and are named CLINTON LOG9208 thru CLINTON LOGyymm where yymm
- stands for the current year and month. Problems should be
- directed to my attention: URLS@MARISTC.BITNET or
- URLS@VM.MARIST.EDU.
- Posted by Lee Sakkas - owner, CLINTON@MARIST
-
- 4. Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility is
- providing all Clinton documents on technology and privacy
- at the CPSR Internet Library, available via
- FTP/WAIS/Gopher at cpsr.org /cpsr/clinton (and in other
- folders as relevant). For email access, send a message
- with the word "help" at the 1st line of text to
- listserv@cpsr.org.
-
- 5. The White House Forum (GO WHITEHOUSE) on CompuServe is devoted
- to discussion of the Clinton administration's policies and
- activities. The forum's library consists of news releases and
- twice daily media briefings from the White House Office of
- Media Affairs. CompuServe members can exchange information
- and opinions with each other in the 17 sections in the forum's
- message area. The message board spans a broad range of
- topics, including international and United Nations activities,
- defense, health care, the economy and the deficit, housing and
- urban development, the environment, and education and national
- service.
-
- 6. On America Online the posts are sent to the White House Forum,
- located in the News & Finance department of the service and
- accessible via keywords "white house" and "clinton." The
- White House Forum on America Online contains the press
- releases from the White House, divided into the categories
- "Press Briefings," "Meetings & Speeches," "Foreign Policy,"
- "The Economy," "Technology," "Health Care," and
- "Appointments." The area features a message board so you can
- discuss the releases with other AOL members, and a searchable
- database for easy retrieval of releases in the topic that
- interests you.
-
- 7. MCI Mail users can access daily information on the
- administration's programs provided by the White House through
- MCI Mail bulletin boards. The available boards are: WHITE
- HOUSE ECONOMIC, WHITE HOUSE FOREIGN, WHITE HOUSE SOCIAL, WHITE
- HOUSE SPEECHES and WHITE HOUSE NEWS. A listing of these
- boards can also be obtained by simply typing VIEW WHITE HOUSE
- at the COMMAND prompt.
-
-
- C. SENDING E-MAIL TO THE WHITE HOUSE
-
- The White House e-mail system is under construction. This is a new
- project and suffers from all of the problems common to a startup
- operation. The Communications office is currently working on defining
- what this system will do, as well as trying to come up with equipment
- and staffing to make sure that it works. E-mail messages are
- currently being printed out and responses are being sent out via US
- Mail.
-
- Nobody wants this new venture to work more than the staff that has
- devoted so many hours to getting it up and running. But much time and
- effort will be required before the system is truly interactive. In
- the mean time, they will need a little patience from the electronic
- community. If you send a message to the White House, please include a
- US Post office address for replies.
-
- You can send e-mail to the following accounts:
-
- Compuserve: 75300,3115
- GO: WHITE HOUSE finds White House forum
-
- America OnLine: clinton pz
- KEYWORD: WHITEHOUSE finds White House area
-
- MCI TO: WHITE HOUSE
- VIEW WHITE HOUSE views bulletin boards
-
- Internet: clinton-hq@Campaign92.Org
- 75300.3115@compuserve.com
- clintonpz@aol.com
-
-
- Please send corrections, deletion and additions to this faq to:
- Updates@Clinton92.Org
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.23
- ************************************
-
-