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- Computer underground Digest Sun May 22 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 38
- 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 Editor: Etaoin Shrdlu, Senrio
-
- CONTENTS, #5.38 (May 22 1993)
- File 1--Here We Go Again - 2600 Magazine Threatened With Lawsuit
- File 2--Obtaining Whitehouse E-Publications
- File 3--UK Computer Misuse case
- File 4--CPSR Position Openings
- File 5--A little feedback on Bridges of Understanding
-
- 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
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- 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; and on: Rune Stone BBS (IIRG
- WHQ) 203-832-8441 NUP:Conspiracy
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- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
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- 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: Thu, 20 May 1993 21:55:32 EDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
- Subject: Here We Go Again - 2600 Magazine Threatened With Lawsuit
-
- Emmanuel Goldstein, editor of 2600, reports that the magazine is again
- being threatened with litigation by a large teleco, this time AT&T.
- Last year, BellCore threatened legal action (CuD #4.33). Emmanuel
- recently posted the following:
-
- +++ begin Emmanuel's message
-
-
- It looks like 2600 is being threatened with yet ANOTHER lawsuit.
- This time it's AT&T we've apparently annoyed. The following letter
- was just received by us:
-
- AT&T
- 131 Morristown Road
- Basking Ridge, NJ 07920-1650
- 908 204-8413
- FAX 908 204-8537
-
- R.A. Ryan
- Trademark and Copyright Attorney
-
- April 13, 1993
-
- Eric Corley
- P.O. Box 99
- Middle Island
- New York 11953-0099
-
- Dear Mr. Corley:
-
- I have been informed that the Winter 1992-93 edition of
- your publication 2600 Magazine includes material copied
- from AT&T's Eastern Area Directory.
-
- The material copied by you is proprietary to AT&T and
- subject to the protection of state and federal law
- including The Copyright Law of the United States.
-
- AT&T will take immediate action to protect its
- proprietary information and its copyrighted property in
- the event you persist with its publication.
-
- Very truly yours,
-
- R.A. Ryan
-
- Recycled Paper
- (end letter and Emmanuel's message)
-
- The 2600 article in question is simply 2 3/4 pages (pp 36-38) of
- addresses of AT&T offices. The article's is: "IS AT&T HIDING NEAR
- YOU?" It's introduced with a short blurb:
-
- "This is a list of every AT&T office (including switching stations)
- in eight states. The leftmost column is the "work location code"
- which is what the office is known as to AT&T bureaucrats."
- CONNECTICUT CT4630, 92 CHESTNUT ST, BRANDFORD, 06405
-
- And so forth for nearly 3 pages. It seems about as proprietary as
- telephone listings, but we're probably mistaken. We're certain that
- AT&T wouldn't stoop to using it's power to harass others for frivolous
- reasons.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 15 Apr 1993 22:15:15 EST
- From: Dave Banisar <banisar@WASHOFC.CPSR.ORG>
- Subject: Obtaining Whitehouse E-Publications
-
- WHITE HOUSE ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS AND PUBLIC ACCESS EMAIL
- FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
-
- Updated April 7, 1993
-
- Table Of Contents
-
- I. Signing up for Daily Electronic Publications.
- A. Widely Available Sources.
- B. Notes on Widely Available Sources.
- C. Direct Email Distribution
-
- II. Searching and Retrieving White House documents.
- - WAIS
- - GOPHER
- - FedWorld BBS
-
- III. Sending email to the White House.
- - CompuServe
- - America OnLine
- - MCI
- - Fidonet
- - Internet
-
-
- I. HOW DO I SIGN UP FOR ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS BY THE WHITE HOUSE?
-
- The White House Communications office is distributing press releases
- over an experimental system developed during the campaign at the MIT
- Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
-
- You can obtain copies of all the press releases from a wide variety of
- on-line services or discussion groups devoted to either national
- politics in general or President Clinton in particular. These are
- listed in sections I and II.
-
- Section Ic explains how you can sign up to receive press releases
- directly from the experimental MIT system by using an automated email
- server. The present system was not designed to handle high levels of
- message traffic. A more powerful system will become available in due
- course, and in the meantime, it would be appreciated if you used this
- service sparingly. One appropriate current use is secondary
- redistribution and archiving. If you use it, you will be carried
- forward when the more powerful system that replaces it.
-
-
- A. WIDELY AVAILABLE SOURCES
-
-
- 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
-
- 6. On Fidonet: See Echomail WHITEHOUSE
-
- 7. On Peacenet or Econet: See pol.govinfo.usa.
-
-
- B. NOTES ON WIDELY AVAILABLE SOURCES
-
-
- 2. CompuServe's White House Forum (GO WHITEHOUSE) 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.
-
- 3. 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.
-
- 4. 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. DIRECT EMAIL DISTRIBUTION
-
- If you don't have access to the these accounts or if you would prefer
- to receive the releases via email, then the next section details how
- to sign up for this service. The server is not set up to answer
- email letters, comments or requests for specific information. To
- reach this MIT server, send email:
-
- 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 email 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 email 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 email 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 email
- 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. As you will quickly discover, there is a automatic form
- processing interface that parallel the quick and easy subject line
- commands discussed here. More detailed help is available by sending
- an email query as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject--Please Help!
-
- Finally, if you want to search and retrieve documents, but you do not
- have access to the retrieval methods discussed in section II, you can
- do this via email through the MIT server. You can obtain the WAIS
- query form by sending an email query as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org
- Subject--WAIS
-
- Once you have identified the documents that you want, be careful not
- to request them all at once, because you may be sent a message
- containing all the documents and this message may be too big for some
- mail delivery systems between the email server and you.
-
-
- II. HOW DO I RETRIEVE WHITE HOUSE PUBLICATIONS FROM INTERNET ARCHIVES?
-
- Various sites are archiving the press releases distributed . 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 and
- also accessible via Gopher.
- 1.a 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.
-
- 1.b GOPHER is a distributed menuing system for information access on the
- Internet developed at the University of Minnesota. gophers are
- client-server implementations and various gopher clients are
- available for nearly any computing platform. You may now use
- gopher clients to assess the White House Papers and other
- political information on SunSITE.unc.edu's new gopher server.
- You may also add links from your local gopher server to
- SunSITE for access to the White House Papers.
-
- For gopher server keepers and adventurous clients to access
- SunSITE you need only know that we use the standard gopher
- port 70 and that our internet address is SunSITE.unc.edu
- (152.2.22.81). Point there and you'll see the references to
- the Politics areas.
-
- For folks without gopher clients but with access to telnet:
- telnet sunsite.unc.edu login: gopher The rest is very straight
- forward. Browsing options end with a directory mark (/),
- searching options end with an question mark (?). There's
- plenty of on-line help available.
-
- 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 FedWorld Computer System, operated by the National Technical
- Information Service, archives White House papers in a traditional BBS
- type file library. Connect to FedWorld by calling (703) 321- 8020.
- No parity, eight data bits and one stop bit (N-8-1). FedWorld
- accommodates baud speeds of up to 9,600. White House papers are
- located in the W-House library of files. To access this library from
- the main FedWorld menu, enter <f s w-house>. Files are named with the
- first four digits being the release month and day (e.g. 0323XXX.txt).
- Some standard abbreviations after the date include:
-
- rem - Remarks by the President
- pc - Press Conference transcript
- pr - Press Release
- AM - AM Press Briefing
- PM - PM Press Briefing
- sch - The President's public schedule
- spch- Text of major speeches.
-
- These files are saved in ASCII format. Files can be viewed online by
- requesting to download a file and then selecting (L)ist as the
- download protocol. This will display the file a screen at a time.
- White House papers are kept in the above format for up to two months.
- Papers more than two months old are compressed using Pkzip into a
- single file that contains all of the files for that month (e.g.
- 0193.zip contains all papers released during January 1993). In
- addition to White Documents, FedWorld also provides a gateway to more
- than 100 government funded BBSs and computer systems.
-
-
- III. HOW DO I SEND EMAIL TO THE WHITE HOUSE?
-
- The White House email 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. Email 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 email 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
-
- Fidonet TO: WHITEHOUSE@1:2613/333
- Echomail: WHITEHOUSE views echomail conference
-
- 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
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 22 May 93 20:34:33 GMT
- From: david@SWARB.DEMON.CO.UK(David Swarbrick)
- Subject: UK Computer Misuse case
-
- ==============================================================
- BBS--Just Mooting Legal BBS
- Date--22-05-93 (19:49) Number--5
- From--DAVID SWARBRICK Refer#--NONE
- To--ALL Recvd--NO
- Subj--CMA convictions Conf--(5) Comp Misus
- +----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The two co-accused of Paul Bedworth Neil Woods and Karl Strickland,
- are the first to be imprisoned in the UK for offences associated with
- the Computer Misuse Act 1990.
-
- At Southwark Crown Court on Friday 21 May 1993, both defendants were
- given six month sentences. They pleaded guilty to an offence of
- conspiring to commit offences under the Computer Misuse Act 1990, and
- of offences under the Telecommunications Act of 1984. The actual
- offences were causing criminal damage (Woods), conspiracy to obtain
- telegraphic services dishonestly, and engaging in the unauthorised
- publication of computer information (I confess the last one is a new
- one on me - perhaps it is under the Data Protection Act?).
-
- Woods admitted causing 15,000.00p damage to one computer system, and
- otherwise it is clear that the three gained access to some 'serious'
- computer systems. They also ran up very large bills for some
- organisations such as the Financial Times.
-
- The judge accepted that the accused had neither intended to cause
- harm, nor had they profited in any dishonest way.
-
- He said 'I have to mark your conduct with prison sentences both to
- penalise you for what you have done and for the losses caused, and to
- deter others who might be similarly tempted.'
-
- 'If your passion had been cars rather than computers we would have
- called your conduct delinquent, and I don't shrink from the analogy of
- describing what you were doing as intellectual joyriding ... There
- may be people out there who consider hacking to be harmless, but
- hacking is not harmless. Computers now form a central role in our
- lives, containing personal details, financial details, confidential
- matters of companies and government departments and many business
- organisations.
-
- Some, providing emergency services, depend on their computers to
- deliver their services. It is essential that the integrity of those
- systems should be protected, and hacking puts that integrity into
- jeopardy'
-
- He said he wanted to give a clear signal that hacking would not be
- tolerated.
-
- DS Barry Donovan formerly of the computer crimes squad said that
- hacking as an activity had much decreased since the arrests.
-
- The co-accused, Paul Bedworth was found not guilty a few weeks ago
- after a three week trial. That trial ended in some confusion for the
- law. Paul Bedworth had admitted all the acts he was accused of, but
- claimed (and had medical evidence to suppor him) that he was addicted
- to hacking and therefore not capable of committing the crime.
-
- The judge had in Paul's case, quite properly, told the jury that even
- if established, the defence claim was not capable of being a defence
- under English law, and that in effect therefore the jury could only
- convict him. The jury rejected this and acquitted him. In the UK, no
- one is allowed to enquire as to the inner workings of the jury room,
- but I offer my own speculation. His defence was both insufficient in
- law, and inherently implausible (addicted to your keyboard? No way)
- Another possible explanation (gathered from the woolly realms of
- speculation - and worth no more) is that the prosecution was seen to
- have been bullying Paul, and the jury refused to do the bully's work
- for them.
-
- In any event, anyone reading this who hopes to rely upon his defence,
- is advised that a life of innocent virtue is more to be recommended.
- (Source in part Stephen Ward, Independent 22 May
- 1993)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 19 May 1993 17:28:50 PDT
- From: Nikki Draper <draper@CSLI.STANFORD.EDU>
- Subject: CPSR Position Openings
-
- The following jobs are available in the CPSR National Office in Palo
- Alto, California. Please feel free to pass these listings along to
- any interested parties.
-
- Nikki Draper
- Assistant to the Director
-
- *********************************************************************
- COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
-
- MANAGING DIRECTOR
- *********************************************************************
-
- The CPSR National Managing Director is responsible for the top-level
- administration and organizational development of
- Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility Inc., a non-profit
- public-interest organization of computer scientists and other
- professionals concerned about the impact of computer technology
- on society. The job is the highest level administrative position
- within the organization and requires extensive autonomous decision-
- making and implementation, along general guidelines of activity
- established by the Board of Directors. The key areas of responsibility
- are the following:
-
- % Overall coordination of the national organization, including
- management of relations among the national office staff, program
- office, the Board of Directors, and the chapters.
-
- % Oversight for financial management, including bookkeeping,
- approval of expenses, interaction with accounting and payroll
- services, and, in conjunction with the Finance Committee &
- Board Treasurer, preparation of an annual budget and financial
- status reports.
-
- % Provide assistance to the Board in its fundraising efforts.
-
- % Oversee production of the Annual Report.
-
- % Close work with the Board of Directors and its committees in
- the development and execution of long-range plans for
- organizational development.
-
- % In conjunction with the Communications Director, supervise
- the planning and staging of the Annual Meeting.
-
- % Responsibility for hiring, supervision, and evaluation of
- national office staff.
-
- Part-time, 20-25 hours per week $20,000-23,000 plus benefits. One
- year appointment. Participation in meetings demands flexibility in
- scheduling. Occasional travel to national board meetings.Women
- and people of color are encouraged to apply.
-
- Send resume plus cover letter by June 8 to CPSR, PO Box 717, Palo
- Alto, CA 94301, (415) 322-3778 or CPSR@csli.stanford.edu
-
- *********************************************************************
- COMPUTER PROFESSIONALS FOR SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
-
- Database/Office Manager
- *********************************************************************
-
- The CPSR Database/Office Manger is responsible for the the
- maintenance and development of CPSR databases as well as the day
- to day administrative operations of Computer Professionals for Social
- Responsibility Inc., a non-profit public-interest organization of
- computer scientists and other professionals concerned about the
- impact of computer technology on society. The job is a critical
- position within the organization. The key areas of responsibility are
- the following:
-
- includes accurate data entry, responding to membership queries
- regarding the status of their membership, producing reports from
- the databases as needed
-
- % Execute organizational mailings of membership materials,
- including membership renewal letters, new members development
- packages, brochures, event announcements, direct mail fundraising
- appeals, and the quarterly newsletter.
-
- % Handle information requests and orders for publications
-
- % Collect and process the mail
-
- % Deposit checks
-
- % Keep inventory of office supplies and order material as needed
-
- % Work with Director of Communication to keep inventory of
- educational material and reorder as needed
-
- % Assist with board meetings
-
-
- % Manage institutional memory, including file maintenance
-
- % Other tasks as needed
-
- Qualifications: Experience with computers - preferably Macs, able
- to prioritize, capable of working with minimal supervision, work
- effectively as part of a team, self motivated, detail oriented,
- experience in dealing with databases and issues surrounding
- database management.
-
- Part-time, 25 hours per week, $13,000 - $15,000, plus benefits.
- Women and people of color are encouraged to apply. Send
- resume plus cover letter by June 8 to CPSR, PO Box 717, Palo Alto,
- CA 94301, (415) 322-3778. CPSR@csli.stanford.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 17 May 93 09:43:41 CDT
- From: larry@DUCKTALES.MED.GE.COM(Larry Landwehr)
- Subject: A little feedback on Bridges of Understanding
-
- In CuD 5.36, the CuD moderators wrote in re: "Building Bridges
- of Understanding:"
-
- > The obvious question, of course, is: Why should law enforcement
- > personnel bother discussing these issues with an audience that
- > includes "kids," law students, attorneys, professors, computer
- > specialists, and other LE agents? To us, the answer is simple: If the
- > goal is to minimize computer abuse rather than to simply "prosecute,"
- > then open dialogue is a cost-effective and efficient way of
- > educational outreach. It's in everybody's interests for law
- > enforcement personnel to encourage and participate in these dialogues.
- > Kim Clancy moderates the round-table forum with a gentle, but incisive
- > hand. She combines her experiences as a security specialist with her
- > belief in the value of dialogue and information-sharing as an
- > educational tool as a means of building bridges and promoting
- > understanding. We share her view that increased understanding is a
- > significant means of decreasing unacceptable accesses.
-
- "educational outreach"?
- "dialogue and information-sharing"?
-
- Come on. You have _got_ to be kidding. Or else extremely naive. Are
- you seriously suggesting that someone in management (in a police
- bureaucracy) would seriously back such a nebulous concept? That they
- would put their professional reputations and jobs on the line for so
- something so intangible that you can't even measure it? Get real!
-
- Since at least the time of Robert Peal and his "bobbies" in London,
- and probably long before that, law enforcement personnel have used
- informants to manage crime. Stool pigeons, snitches, narks, whatever
- you want to call them, are the most cost effective way of controlling
- crime. Sometimes you get a little spinoff like actually helping
- someone get their life straightened out so they quit their criminal
- activities, but this is pure icing. The reason why law enforcement
- personnel associate with criminals is to make more arrests. That's it
- - pure and simple. Cops are pragmatic.
-
- Now that many people in law enforcement are college educated, we start
- to see police organizations with "public relations departments". My
- view is that this is an experiment in social engineering, done for the
- benefit of the liberal members of law enforcement (which are a
- minority) and for the benefit of the media (which is very liberal).
- The conservative members of law enforcement go along with these
- programs because they originate in upper management and because
- conservatives are pragmatic and cynical enough to subvert these
- programs and use them as a cover to spread their nets for more
- informants.
-
- Anyone who engages in illegal activity had better understand the
- psychology of law enforcement personnel or they will shortly be doing
- time in a calaboose. A marriage between liberalism and law enforcement
- is like trying to mate a donkey with a horse. It can be done, but the
- result is almost certainly going to be as sterile as a mule. Elegant
- social theories can be a productive seedbed for new ideas, but
- pragmatism does the weeding. Those readers of CuD who cannot
- distinguish the map from the territory will be in for a rude awakening
- if they engage in illegal activities. CuD should at least warn them of
- this.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.38
-