home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Computer underground Digest Sun Sep 5 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 69
- 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
- Cookie Editor: Etaoin Shrdlu, III
-
- CONTENTS, #5.69 (Sep 5 1993)
- File 1--The Ware House BBS Case Reconsidered
- File 2--Additional Facts in The Ware House (Hartford) BBS Case
- File 3--Plea for money forwarded from the IIRG
- File 4--Calif AB 1624 *IMMEDIATE* ACTION NEEDED or 1624 will die!
- File 5--Model Letter in Support of Cal E-Access Law (AB 1624)
-
- 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 (815-753-0303), 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 DL1 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; RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020
- CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from 1:11/70; unlisted
- nodes and points welcome.
- EUROPE: from the ComNet in LUXEMBOURG BBS (++352) 466893;
- In ITALY: Bits against the Empire BBS: +39-461-980493
-
- ANONYMOUS FTP SITES:
- UNITED STATES: ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/cud
- etext.archive.umich.edu (141.211.164.18) in /pub/CuD/cud
- halcyon.com( 202.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud
- aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/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)
-
- 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. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, 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: Sun, 5 Sep 1993 14:43:51 CDT
- From: Jim thomas <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 1--The Ware House BBS Case Reconsidered
-
- Until August 2, Mike Elansky was just another 21 year old student at
- the University of Hartford majoring in electronics. He also ran a BBS
- affiliated with the IIRG (International Information Retrieval Guild)
- called The Ware House, using "Ionizer" as his handle.
-
- Today (Sept 5), he remains in jail unable to post his $500,000 bond.
- His crime? Judging from newspaper accounts, his family, and his
- attorney, it appears to be for exercising his First Amendment rights.
- According to the prosecutor's indictment, Elansky's sin involves
- creating risk of injury to a minor and advocating violence against law
- enforcement agents. If convicted, he faces up to 10 years in prison.
-
- BACKGROUND
-
- The following file elaborates on the details, and there seems little
- substantive disagreement over the essential facts of the case.
- Elansky was considered by those who knew him as a typically normal
- youth with a passion for computers and electronics. Some have also
- noted that he did have an interest in explosives, neither illegal nor
- odd, and that he had previous run-ins with the law for relatively
- minor, non-violent offenses. This is not unusual in a society in which
- up to 25 percent of male colleges students between the ages of 17-22
- could say the same thing. However, nothing officially noted in
- Elansky's past seems to provide any reasonable justification for the
- current reaction to him.
-
- According to media, the indictment, defense attorney Dick Brown, and
- others close to the case, two "anarchy files" led to the indictment.
- The files, similar to but not identical with, those found in countless
- other similar ASCII files or books (especially The Anarchists Cookbook)
- described pyrotechnics. The vocabulary used in the files might be
- considered by some to be childish posturing or offensive bad taste.
- The prosecutor considered them a direct threat to law enforcement
- officers by claiming that they actively advocated violence against
- police. Apparently using a minor to aid them, Hartford police
- allegedly downloaded files from The Ware House's file section, and one
- in particular drew their attention. According to those who have read
- the file and seen the BBS logs, either the file's author or the
- uploader, but *not* Elansky, introduced instructions for making an
- explosive device with:
-
- ! Note to
- Law-enforcement type people: ! ! This file is
- intended to promote ! ! general havoc and
- *ANARCHY*, and ! ! since your going to be the
- first ! ! assholes up against the wall.. there
- ! ! isnt a damn thing you can do about ! ! it,
- pigs! !
-
- Silly? Sure. Immature? You bet. Offensive? Depends on your point of
- view. In bad taste? Undoubtedly. But, ILLEGAL? Doubtful. Of sufficient
- import, even when coupled with pyrotechnic instructions, to warrant
- arrest, indictment, and an insurmountable bond? No way. "Way," says
- the prosecutor. According to Elaine Elansky, Mike's mother, the bond
- was initially set at $25,000 by the judge, but the prosecutor
- intervened and succeeded in raising it. According to some inside
- sources, Elansky was also denied legal representation at critical
- points in the initial proceedings.
-
- There appears to be no evidence that Elansky himself advocated or
- himself was involved in any activities that advocated violence. His
- apparent interest in explosives, which, according to one informant,
- included a legal demonstration of a harmless pyrotechnic display as
- part of a licit highschool project, added to the suspicions and
- "evidence" against him. However, judging from the indictment, the only
- concrete charges and substantive evidence were the "anarchy files."
-
- WHAT ARE ANARCHY FILES?
-
- "Anarchy" files have been a common feature of many BBSes since the
- emergence of the "computer underground" culture. Their common theme
- emphasizes destructive "trashing" often perceived as a primitive form
- of social rebellion. The files range from silly pranks (such as "How
- to fuck-up a MacDonalds," which describes "barfing techniques") to
- potentially dangerous instructions for making pyrotechnical and
- similar devices. Many of the files, especially those that describe
- how to manufacture home-made hallucinogens or how to make "weapons"
- out of strange combinations of ingredients (make explosives with soap,
- vinegar, and talcum powder??), are totally ineffective. Other
- instructions are not. However, even the most destructive instructions
- that we have seen are simply plagiarized or slightly edited accounts
- taken from licit over-the-counter literature or from other sources,
- such as U.S. military manuals or highschool/college chemistry classes.
- The difference is that creators of anarchy files alter the vocabulary
- and rhetoric for a young audience. The new discourse tends to reflect
- the social rebellion of youth rather than any serious prescription for
- action. And, one is likely to learn more from watching a MacGyver
- episode than from most anarchy files.
-
- There is sufficient academic literature on the rebellious subcultures
- of youth to support the claim of excessive posturing, attachment to
- symbols perceived to be anti-social and shocking, and social rituals
- establishing unity and identity among participants in youthful
- "deviant" (a sociological, not a moral label) subcultures. This is a
- common part of the maturation process as youths pass from adolescence
- to adulthood. Whether in the form of the counter-culture of the
- 1960s, "punk-rock"/heavy-metal/thrash-metal" of the last 15 years,
- "rap" lyrics that extol violence and misogyny, or even Satanism and
- other esoteric and, for some, grossly offensive expressions of
- rejection of mainstream society, youth find increasingly creative ways
- to shock their elders in a cyclical game of generational freak-outs.
-
- There are, of course, misguided youths unable to distinguish fantasy
- posturing from reality. The most appropriate responses to troubled
- youth include non-punitive intervention or, in extreme cases, law
- enforcement intervention *after* they violate laws. Perhaps Mike
- Elansky is one for whom intervention is appropriate. Or, perhaps not.
- Based on the information released to the public so far, there appears
- to exist no substantial evidence supporting the indictment other than
- the availability of licit, Constitutionally-protected, youth culture
- documents symbolizing "wreaking havoc" on the standards of propriety
- of adults and "straights," rather than a literal advocacy of physical
- assault on persons or property.
-
- ISSUES IN THE ELANSKY CASE
-
- Perhaps the prosecutor will find sufficient evidence to try Mike
- Elansky for something. Perhaps, even if the facts are as they seem and
- evidence of wrong-doing weak, he will be found guilty. After all, the
- experiences of Len Rose, Craig Neidorf, Steve Jackson Games, Sun Devil
- victims, Rich Andrews, and many others remind us that "justice" is not
- always served by the justice system in computer-related cases.
- However, the Elansky cases raises broader issues. Just a few include:
-
- 1. THE FIRST AMENDMENT: If, as the prosecutor contends, the files in
- question are illegal and subject to felony prosecution with potential
- imprisonment, and if, as the next file indicates, the information in
- these files is readily accessible to the public through licit
- channels, then what is the basis for targeting a BBS sysop for
- prosecution while ignoring public libraries and bookstores? Does this
- mean that the prosecutor rejects First Amendment protections for
- BBSes? If so, the implications for electronic publishing are
- staggeringly frightening: It subjects sysops and users to an arbitrary
- standard of acceptability that apparently may be determined at the
- discretion of individual prosecutors. Whatever suspicions the
- prosecutor may have about Elansky's activities, making the anarchy
- files available is the crux of the indictment, and if successful in
- his prosecution for making it available, the chilling effect on
- electronic publishing will be substantial.
-
- 2. ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING: The following IIRG file notes the
- availability of numerous anarchy texts and discussions on the nets and
- elsewhere. If prosecution of the Elansky case is successful, a
- precedent could be established that would stifle both publishing and
- public discussion. If Elansky is found guilty as charged in the
- indictment, should administrators at the University of Hartford also
- be held liable for making such information available to minors through
- its computer facilities? Could other BBS sysops be punished? Would a
- user who calls a BBS in New York and downloads the file be at risk for
- a federal crime by transporting "illegal files" across state lines?
-
- MEDIA: It appears that Mike Elansky may be less than a saintly naif.
- It also appears that he is hardly a hardcore villain. Perhaps this is
- why the media doesn't find his situation worthy of front page news.
- But, Mike Elansky, depressing as his situation is, and unjust as his
- situation may seem given the current available facts, IS NOT THE
- ISSUE. When The Department of Treasury BBS was criticized for having
- virus source code and "underground files" (that included Cu Digest)
- available, the story made the front page of the Washington Post, CNN,
- the AP Wires, and other media (see CuD 5.51, 5.57, 5.58). When a
- poster on The Well, a public access system in California, was using
- ASCII to hustle four women, some simultaneously, it made the front
- page of the Washington Post, and was given prominent play in Time
- Magazine, The Chicago Tribune, The San Francisco Chronicle, and
- numerous other papers. On a slow news day, mundane sex and fabricated
- scandal sells. Substantive stories that are slow, lack a sexy angle,
- or may require thought rather than momentary titillation, are boring.
- Yet, the implications of of a kid languishing in jail because he can't
- post $500,000 bond for running a BBS with "anarchist" files has
- implications of far more import than cyber-sex. Perhaps Mike Elansky
- is the next terrorist-from-hell, using his board to plot mayhem, as
- his prosecutor suggests. Or, perhaps he is just some young kid who is
- being persecuted for exercising First Amendment rights in a form of
- persecution that illustrates prosecutorial abuse and trampling of the
- Constitution. Either way, it is curious that those who cover
- cyberspace for the major media find "cyber-Lotharios" more worthy of
- investigation than a story with substance. Something is not right in
- Hartford, and therein lies the story.
-
- A FINAL COMMENT
-
- The battle over symbolic boundaries between "good" and "evil" often
- reflects conflicts of clashing values and cultures. When laws are used
- creatively as weapons to suppress distasteful, but licit, language and
- behavior rather than to enforce the law and ensure Constitutionally
- protected rights, then the government abuses the law. To recast former
- U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis's 1928 comment, if
- government abuses law, it breeds contempt for law and invites people
- to become a law unto themselves--it invites anarchy. Whatever Mike
- Elansky may or may not have done, the implications of the ostensible
- indictment for publishing "anarchy files" seem to overstep both the
- spirit and the letter of the Constitution. Judging from the facts
- currently available, it appears that the handling of the Elansky case
- may be another instance of law enforcement excess in attempting to
- police cyberspace. If so, continued attempts by law enforcement to
- impose moral standards by excessive use of law cannot be ignored.
-
- Dissemination of information, especially information that puts others
- at risk, also entails responsibilities. It strikes me as far more
- appropriate to discuss the implications of information made
- increasingly accessible by expanding information technology rather
- than attempt to establish moral boundaries by fear of prosecution.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 4 Sep 1993 18:02:07 CDT
- From: IIRG Reprint <no@net.address>
- Subject: File 2--Additional Facts in The Ware House (Hartford) BBS Case
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following is reprinted from Phantasy #18, the
- IIRG Newsletter. It's homebase, Runestone BBS (see CuD header), is
- located in Hartford, Conn. CuD editors have edited it slightly)).
-
- +++
-
- Section [1]: "Ionizer" - IIRG Site Sysop Arrested A Report By The
- IIRG
-
- Ionizer the sysop of the Ware House was arrested on Monday August 2nd
- as he entered a pretrial hearing at the Hartford Superior
- Court, Hartford Connecticut, to face charges of his alleged connection
- for a break-in at Hall High School on October 11th, 1992.
-
- Ionizer was arrested for "Inciting Injury to Persons or Property", a
- felony, and "Risk of Injury to a Minor".
-
- Apparently Ionizer was taken to the West Hartford, CT. police
- department and was quickly photographed and fingerprinted and then was
- whisked away to the West Hartford Superior Court and was
- arraigned, (without his lawyer being present) and was ordered held on a
- $500,000 bond.
-
- West Hartford police are attempting to keep the case sealed, but the
- charges against Ionizer are for having Anarchist files available for
- download on his BBS, The Ware House.
-
- In our discussion with a source close to the events, the police have
- apparently used strong-arm "Big-Brother" tactics on a 14 year-old by
- the handle of, "Misguided Youth" who had access to the Ware House.
- Reportedly police approached him and threatened to drag him into
- court if he didn't sign an affidavit that he downloaded the file
- "ANARC2.ZIP" from the Ware House.
-
- When Ionizer first heard wind of police hassling users of his system,
- he supplied his entire system log (Ionizer kept his system log since
- day 1 of the system being up) to an IIRG member for analysis.
-
- We have analyzed the Meg Plus file and have found no record of
- Misguided Youth ever downloading the file from Ionizer's BBS. In fact
- only 2 users have ever downloaded ANARC2.ZIP that we could find.
-
- 1. HITMAN 18:56 05/23/93 LIBRARY FILE DOWNLOAD
- User Hitman download ANARCHY\ANARC2.ZIP
-
- 2. HOLLYWOOD 14:35 05/24/93 LIBRARY FILE
- DOWNLOAD User Hollywood download
- ANARCHY\ANARC2.ZIP 14:50 05/24/93 LIBRARY
- FILE DOWNLOAD User Hollywood download
- ANARCHY\ANARC2.ZIP
-
- Now apparently it seems that the West Hartford police department
- feels it can either intimidate anyone it feels like, or fabricate
- evidence.
-
- Several other Ware House users have been contacted by phone by police
- and questioned, We know "Mastermind" was contacted and was asked "Are
- you good friends with Ionizer?' and "Did he ever mention anything
- about the making of pipe bombs to you?'.
-
- According to Ionizer, the police are claiming an undercover police
- officer with the West Hartford Narcotics division is claiming to also
- have downloaded the file.
-
- Hitman has also been contacted by police and asked to supply a copy
- of the file in question, and this is events we were told happened,
-
- Quote from Hitman - Date : 08 Aug 93 10:19:14
-
- I'll tell you the whole story, as I told it to Ionizer last
- night (he called me from jail). When I was out one day, the
- detective Mr. Anielwiski (or something like that) called. I
- wasn't home, so, he talked to my dad. My dad thought I was
- doing all of this shit too, so, he took it way out of
- proportion. I got home, and he made me search for a file
- 'ANARC.*' on my hard drive. Since it is really his computer
- and his phone line, there is nothing that I could have done,
- since he could have easily done it himself. Anyways, he said
- to delete it, so I wiped it via Norton's WIPE program, so it
- couldn't be recovered. Anyways, I guess the detective called
- back, and my dad said that I had the file. But, it was
- wiped. Anyways, my dad thought we'd just undelete it, but,
- he didn't realize that the file would just be a null file
- when we did so. The rest of the story is what he told me, as
- I was at work the rest of the day. The detective came over,
- and I guess my dad copied the null file onto a floppy, but, I
- think the floppy was bad anyways. At any rate, to my
- knowledge, there is no information at all on the floppy, and,
- I've got no other copy of it on my hard drive.
-
- --Hitman
-
- Now the file in question is ANARC2.ZIP, which is ANARCHY FOR FUN AND
- PROFIT By: The Deth Vegetable Volume 1, Issue 2.
- It seems that this file is being singled out by the police because of
- its high bomb making instructions content and this message in the
- header of the file,
- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
- /--------------------------------------\ ! Note to
- Law-enforcement type people: ! ! This file is
- intended to promote ! ! general havoc and
- *ANARCHY*, and ! ! since your going to be the
- first ! ! assholes up against the wall.. there
- ! ! isnt a damn thing you can do about ! ! it,
- pigs! !
- \--------------------------------------/
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- ----------------
- None of the information contained in ANARC2.ZIP could be considered
- classified or secret as the information in the file is easily
- obtainable in any book store in books like "The Anarchists Cookbook"
- or "Ragnar's Guide to The Home and Recreational Use of High
- explosives".
-
- We did a little investigating and found "The Anarchists Cookbook", By
- William Powell on the shelf at "Barnes and Noble" bookstore in West
- Hartford, CT. (Hey Police, better run over and shut them down!!).
- We also found "The Anarchists Cookbook" at the Tunxis Community
- College Library in Farmington, CT. (HX 844 P68) and at the University
- of Connecticut at Storrs Library (SPEC APC BK f33), so it is available
- at public libraries for underage children to read and enjoy.
-
- Also after a little searching on the international network of
- computers known as "Internet" look what we found available for
- download by "ANYONE" with a computer and modem, (Including Under-age
- Children).
-
- --------------------------------------------------Host
- cs.ubc.ca (137.82.8.5) Last updated 03:33 28 May 1993
- Location: /mirror3/EFF/cud/misc FILE rw-r--r-- 7936 Mar
- 8 1992 anarch.man
-
- Host kragar.eff.org (192.88.144.4) Last updated 00:05 17 Apr 1993
- Location: /pub/cud/misc FILE r--r--r-- 7936 Mar 8
- 1992 anarch.man
-
- Host nic.funet.fi (128.214.6.100) Last updated 06:11 22 Mar 1993
- Location: /pub/doc/cud/misc FILE r-xr-xr-x 7936 Mar 8
- 1992 anarch.man
-
- Host cs.ubc.ca (137.82.8.5) Last updated 03:33 28 May 1993
- Location: /mirror3/EFF/academic/books/zzz FILE rw-r--r--
- 99 Apr 24 17:06 anarchists_handbook.d
-
- Host kragar.eff.org (192.88.144.4) Last updated 00:05 17 Apr 1993
- Location: /pub/academic/books/zzz FILE rw-rw-r-- 81
- Oct 23 05:29 anarchists_handbook.d
-
- Host cs.ubc.ca (137.82.8.5) Last updated 03:33 28 May 1993
- Location: /mirror3/EFF/academic/books FILE rwxrwxrwx
- 25 Oct 11 1992 anarchists_handbook
- ->
- zzz/anarchists_handbook.d
-
- Host kragar.eff.org (192.88.144.4) Last updated 00:05 17 Apr 1993
- Location: /pub/academic/books FILE rwxrwxrwx 25 Dec
- 2 04:31 anarchists_handbook
- ->
- zzz/anarchists_handbook.d
-
- Host wpi.wpi.edu (130.215.24.1) Last updated 03:31 22 Jul 1993
- Location: / DIRECTORY rwxr-xr-x 512 Jul 7 09:20 anarchy
-
- Host unix.hensa.ac.uk (129.12.21.7) Last updated 01:46 26 Jun 1993
- Location: /pub/uunet/doc/political/umich-poli/Essays/Anarchy FILE
- rw-r--r-- 8613 Jan 8 03:36 anarchism.today.Z
- Location: /pub/uunet/doc/political/umich-poli/Essays/Chomsky FILE
- rw-r--r-- 22156 Sep 17 1992 notes.on.anarchism.Z FILE
- rw-r--r-- 55985 Feb 2 16:09 notes.on.anarchism.ps.Z
- Location: /pub/uunet/doc/political/umich-poli/Spunk FILE
- rw-r--r-- 861 Mar 1 20:37 README.practical.anarchy.Z
- Location: /pub/uunet/usenet/control/alt FILE rw-r--r--
- 1535 Sep 11 1992 alt.society.anarchy.Z
-
- Host nic.cic.net (192.131.22.2) Last updated 01:14 22 Mar 1993
- Location: /pub/nircomm/gopher/e-serials/alphabetic/p DIRECTORY
- rwxr-xr-x 512 Mar 19 16:11 practical-anarchy
- Location:
- /pub/nircomm/gopher/e-serials/alphabetic/p/practical-anarchy
- FILE rwxr-xr-x 54325 Mar 18 23:02
- practical-anarchy.v1n3
- Location: /pub/nircomm/gopher/e-serials/general/politics FILE
- rw------- 92 Mar 21 23:38 .practical-anarchy
-
- Host unix.hensa.ac.uk (129.12.21.7) Last updated 01:46 26 Jun 1993
- Location: /pub/uunet/doc/political/umich-poli/Essays/Anarchy FILE
- rw-r--r-- 3550 Mar 18 21:17 anarchism.and.power.Z FILE
- rw-r--r-- 23063 Mar 6 19:45 anarchy-faq-0.1.Z
-
- Host charon.mit.edu (18.70.0.224) Last updated 02:34 26 Jul 1993
- Location: /pub/usenet-by-group DIRECTORY rwxrwxr-x 512 Jul
- 12 02:46 alt.anarchism
-
- Host cs.columbia.edu (128.59.16.20) Last updated 10:24 26 Jul 1993
- Location: /archives/mirror2/faq DIRECTORY rwxrwxr-x 512 Jul
- 12 09:54 alt.anarchism
-
- Host wiretap.spies.com (130.43.43.43) Last updated 03:06 22 Jul 1993
- Location: /Library/Article/Socio/.cap FILE rw-r--r--
- 28 Apr 5 19:08 anarchy.bib
- Location: /Library/Article/Socio FILE rw-r--r-- 23565
- Dec 24 1992 anarchy.bib
-
- Host unix.hensa.ac.uk (129.12.21.7) Last updated 01:46 26 Jun 1993
- Location: /pub/uunet/doc/political/umich-poli/Essays/Anarchy FILE
- rw-r--r-- 3196 May 11 17:35 anarchist.revolution.Z FILE
- rw-r--r-- 5621 May 11 17:37
- macsimin.anarchist.federation.Z
-
- Host wpi.wpi.edu (130.215.24.1) Last updated 03:31 22 Jul 1993
- Location: /anarchy FILE rw-r--r-- 44492 Jul 7 09:19
- anarchy.tar.Z FILE rw-r--r-- 61332 Jul 7 09:20
- anarchy.tar.Z.uu
-
- Host wiretap.spies.com (130.43.43.43) Last updated 03:06 22 Jul 1993
- Location: /Library/Article/Socio/.cap FILE rw-r--r--
- 39 May 28 06:28 anarchy.faq
- Location: /Library/Article/Socio FILE rw-r--r-- 45315
- May 28 06:28 anarchy.faq
-
- Host charon.mit.edu (18.70.0.224) Last updated 02:34 26 Jul 1993
- Location: /pub/usenet-by-hierarchy/alt DIRECTORY rwxrwxr-x
- 512 Jul 12 02:46 anarchism
-
- Host nctuccca.edu.tw (140.111.3.21) Last updated 01:04 13 Jul 1993
- Location: /USENET/Periodic_Postings/alt DIRECTORY rwxr-xr-x
- 512 Jul 12 1993 anarchism
-
- Host orchid.csv.warwick.ac.uk (137.205.192.5) Last updated 05:41 31
- Jul 1993
- Location: /pub/cud/misc FILE r--r--r-- 3077 Mar 8
- 1992 anarch.man.z
-
- Host clover.csv.warwick.ac.uk (137.205.192.6) Last updated 05:04 26
- Jul 1993
- Location: /pub/cud/misc FILE r--r--r-- 3077 Mar 8
- 1992 anarch.man.z
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- Our point is simple, this material is publicly available almost
- everywhere and the last time we checked (Despite Clinton), we still
- lived in a FREE country with the constitutional right of free speech.
-
- This is a plain and simple case of Police Harassment against Ionizer.
- We are not claiming he is an angel or saint by any means, as he has
- had numerous encounters with the West Hartford police including his
- arrest in 1988 for illegal use of credit cards, computer crime,
- larcency, and the illegal posession of fireworks.
-
- But to arrest an individual for having a file on his computer that is
- public domain (Not Copyrighted) and setting a half million dollar bail
- is complete bullshit.
-
- The EFF has been contacted and we hope the will come to the aid of
- Ionizer, because this may determine what you may have online as a
- sysop.
-
- Ionizers preliminary court date is scheduled for August 17th, 1993,
- and we will provide you with an update in Phantasy 19.
-
- FREE IONIZER!!! -=The IIRG 1993=-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 30 Aug 93 7:08:52 CDT
- From: Ron <rhiggins@CARROLL1.CC.EDU>
- Subject: File 3--Plea for money forwarded from the IIRG
-
- The International Information Retrieval Guild's
-
- FREE IONIZER FUND
- Buy His Freedom, Stop Government Censorship!
-
- As many of you may already be aware, Ionizer - an IIRG Site Sysop
- has been arrested by the West Hartford,Connecticut Police
- Department.
- For Full details of His arrest we would refer you to Phantasy
- Magazine #18.
-
- We would ask you to donate whatever you can afford to his legal
- defense.
-
- All funds collected will be used for Mike's defense and no other
- purpose. Mike's bond has been set at $500,000 Dollars and his legal
- fees have already amassed to over $15,000 Dollars.
-
- Since Mike's only crime is having "Anarchy" files online for his
- users downloading pleasure. We feel that winning this case is of the
- upmost importance to all of us in the telecom community.
-
- If we do not stop the government in its attempts to censor the
- public, we have abandoned what it truly means to be a Freedom
- Loving American.
-
- Send Whatever you can to:
-
- FREE IONIZER
- C/O David Elansky
- 25 Maiden Lane
- West Hartford,Connecticut 06117
-
- Make Checks or Money Orders Payable to Michael Elansky (Ionizer)
- This way we are assured all money goes directly to his defense
-
- ((The bank's account number for the fund should be placed on the
- checks: 02-060-573652))
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 4 Sep 1993 13:25:38 -0700
- From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: File 4--Calif AB 1624 *IMMEDIATE* ACTION NEEDED or 1624 will die!
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The California "electronic access" Bill could
- soon be a reality, but the squabble over fees may kill it.
- California readers should contact their representatives and voice
- their views in the next few days!))
-
- ++++
-
- Sep. 4, 1993
-
- AB1624 HAS PASSED SIX TIMES, UNANIMOUSLY
- Before their summer vacation, two Assembly committees and the full
- Assembly each passed AB1624, each by unanimous vote.
- Aug. 18th, it passed Senate Rules, unanimously. Sep. 2nd, it passed Senate
- Appropriations on a Rule 28.8 waiver, classified as unanimous approval. The
- next day, Sep.3rd, it passed the full Senate, unanimously.
- It only needs Assembly "concurrence in amendments" to pass the Legislature.
- (As is usual, it was amended at almost every step of the way. See updates.)
- The Assembly can vote with two days to spare, before they recess Sep. 10th.
- But ...
-
- JOHN BURTON (Democrat-San Francisco) WILL DEMAND FEES OR KILL IT
- Bowen's original bill had no fee requirements for those using electronic
- copies of public legislative info, just as there is no fee for using paper
- copies (except in bulk, and then fees only partly cover printing costs).
- Before Burton would permit his Assembly Committee on Rules to hear AB1624,
- he forced Bowen to include amendments requiring any "individual or entity"
- who wanted to "republish or otherwise duplicate" *electronic* copies of any
- of this public information to first obtain (1) approval from the Joint Rules
- Committee, (2) authorization [a contract] from the Legislative Counsel [who
- currently peddles the data on magtape for $300,000-$400,000 per year] and
- (3) pay whatever "fee or other charge" the Legislative Counsel demanded.
- That would include 25-cents-per-hour BBSs, $20-per-month fixed-fee Internet
- hosts, libraries that charge a fee for using their computers, schools that
- charge a lab-fee for computer courses, the 25-cents cafe terminals in San
- Francisco (often used by the homeless for mail and contacts), etc. - none of
- which are set up to monitor when users access fee-sucking "public" legislative
- data, versus all the rest of their fee-free services.
- It would not, however, charge end-using corporations or lobbyists.
- Aside from being clearly unenforceable, it would create two outrageous
- precedents:
- 1. Copies of public information that are most timely, cost the least to
- make and are in most useful form would cost money, while snailmailed,
- landfill/paper more-costly copies arriving too late to be useful remain free.
- 2. Those who can and will pay for *useful* access to public records can get
- modern access, while all other citizens are 2nd-class peons, functionally
- prohibited from practically participating in their [our] own governance.
-
- BURTON SAID FEE REQUIREMENT COULD BE AMENDED-OUT IN THE SENATE; IT WAS
- After most of these points were brought out in the May 24th hearing of his
- Rules Committee, and Bowen said she never wanted use fees in the first place
- and would like to delete them, Burton said, "You can amend them out in the
- Senate" - which Bowen did (and Burton noted that would force the bill to
- return to the Assembly for concurrence in [Senate] amendments).
-
- NOW BURTON WANTS FEE REQUIREMENTS BACK IN
- Now - to hell with his public statement in May:
- When checking with Bowen's office yesterday evening, I asked if she had
- spoken with Burton [the *only* known roadblock to passage]. Bowen's
- spokes-creature would only say, on the record, that, "Our understanding is
- that Mr. Burton still wants to charge anyone who resells the data ..."
- And Bowen won't accept fee-requirements for using public information
- (at least *one* legislator *does* understand the principles of "public"
- records, regardless of form and ignoring loot-seeking legislators).
- Burton is apparently willing to exempt newspapers, but still wants to
- screw everyone else that charges *any* fee at all for *any* access that
- includes legislative data.
-
- PASS IT NOW, OR BOWEN CAN'T TRY AGAIN UNTIL 1995; NOT EFFECTIVE UNTIL 1996
- Legislators are prohibited from introducing a bill on the same subject more
- than once in each two-year legislative session. If AB1624 is killed now,
- Bowen can't re-introduce it until 1995, not to become effective until 1996.
-
- BEFORE Sep.8th, BURTON NEEDS TO HEAR FROM CITIZENS HE *SUPPOSEDLY* REPRESENTS
- If you live in San Francisco, fax or phone Burton and demand equally-free
- access, regardless of form or later use - as one of his *constituents*.
- If you live outside of San Francisco, phone or fax him as Chair of the
- Assembly Rules Committee, telling him public access is more important than
- a rake-off to the Legislative Counsel (that's the only real issue).
- Ask your friends to do the same - especially those working or living in SF.
-
- BEFORE Sep.8th, WILLIE BROWN NEEDS TO HEAR THE SAME MESSAGE
- Speaker Willie Brown is one of the few people who can [usually] persuade
- Burton. He's known to be [passively] supportive of electronic public-access.
- He needs to know that we care about free, equal access, regardless of use.
-
- BEFORE Sep.8th, ASK YOUR REPRESENTATIVE TO SUPPORT AB1624 WITHOUT CHANGES
- Burton may [will?] try to amend AB1624 on the Assembly floor - probably to
- charge every vile fee-charger except, of course, powerful newspapers.
- Or, in order for Burton to control the bill, he must get the full Assembly
- to assign it to his personal barony, the Assembly Committee on Rules.
- Ask your representative in the Assembly to refuse any motions to amend
- AB1624, or to again assign it to Burton's Rules Committee - given the late
- date, six unanimous votes in its favor, almost 70 organizations and close to
- a 1,000 individuals supporting it, and not a single formal opponent to it.
-
- [ILLUSTRATING WHY ONLINE ACCESS IS NEEDED] CALL OR FAX; SNAILMAIL IS TOO LATE
- Hundreds of bills are being rammed through - or killed - in this final
- week before our full-time legislators recess for the rest of the year. Most
- are going through on rule waivers.
- The Assembly can consider Burton's [expected] request probably as early as
- Monday, Sep.6th. It could pass it as early as Sep.8th. It recesses Sep.10th.
-
- ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON RULES CHAIR JOHN BURTON: CONTACT VECTORS
- Hon. John Burton, fax/916-324-4899
- voice/916-445-8253 (plead with / talk to Sr.Asst. Cathy Gardella if possible)
- To send him too-late snailmail: Room 3152, State Capitol, Sacramento CA 95814
-
- NEW INFO: SPEAKER WILLIE BROWN'S FAX NUMBER
- A "better-connected" e-writer sent in Willie Brown's fax #: 916-445-4189
- voice/916-445-8077 (talk to Chief-of-Staff Michael Galizio if possible)
- Essentially-useless snailmail: Room 219, State Capitol, Sacramento CA 95814
-
- FOR YOUR LEGISLATOR'S PHONE & FAX NUMBERS, CALL BOWEN'S OFFICE (OR CALL ME)
- You can get your Assembly Member's phone number, and maybe fax number,
- from Bowen's office, 916-445-8528 (often there evenings and weekends!).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 5 Sep 1993 12:31:00 -0700
- From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: File 5--Model Letter in Support of Cal E-Access Law (AB 1624)
-
- Sep. 5, 1993
-
- Hon. John Burton, Chair
- c/o Cathy Gardella, Senior Assistant
- Assembly Committee on Rules
- State Capitol, Room 3152
- Sacramento CA 95814
-
- by fax, only: 916-324-4899, because snailmail will be too late
-
-
- Dear Mr. Burton,
-
- I write to plead with you to reconsider your position on AB1624. As I
- understand it, you want to require Rules Committee approval, Legislative
- Counsel contract, and fees or other charges as required by Legislative Counsel
- of every entity that charges a fee for publishing or otherwise circulating
- public legislative records that they receive electronically from the
- Legislative Counsel's computer via the nonprofit, nonproprietary public
- computer networks.
-
- I ask that you reconsider your demand for fees, for at least ten reasons:
-
- 1. BAD PRECEDENT -- FREE FOR OLD-FASHIONED PAPER VS. FEES FOR MODERN ACCESS
- Demanding fees -- in excess of the state's incremental cost of duplication
- and distribution, which is nil in the case of electronic access -- for copies
- of public information based only on its physical form (electrons vs. paper)
- sets dangerous precedent. It is equivalent to charging for more-economical
- printing-press copies of public records in the 15th Century when it was
- customary to have scribes tediously hand-copy public information.
-
- 2. CREATES TWO CLASSES OF PUBLIC ACCESS BASED ON WEALTH AND POSITION
- You can demand permission, contracts and fees of everyone who charges
- something for distributing information, incidentally including public
- information -- except, of course, the politically-powerful newspapers. But
- then, you will limit modern access only to those "First-Class" citizens who
- (1) work in positions where they have free access to the public computer
- networks or (2) those who are willing and able to pay unnecessarily-high
- access charges to the few for-fee services that would tolerate the bureaucracy
- and fees prerequisite to including electronic public records in the
- information they make available.
- All other citizens will be limited to "Peon-Class" access to paper public
- records that often arrive too late to allow anything other than anger and
- frustration over being shut out of the Legislature's decision-processes by the
- delay of what most of us call "U.S. Snail Mail."
-
- 3. YOU WOULD EXCLUDE SCHOOLS, COLLEGES, STUDENTS, LIBRARIES, HOMELESS, ETC.
- In 1989, the U.S. Census Bureau reported that 46% of all students "had
- regular daily contact with computers." Many K-12 schools, teachers and
- students use computers that charge some nominal fee for their systems to
- access electronic-mail, global discussion groups, U.S. Supreme Court
- decisions, the Library of Congress, the Congressional Record, etc. Many are
- nonprofit or low-profit systems.
- Many colleges and universities charge lab-fees for computer-lab courses.
- Many public and institutional libraries charge some nominal fee for using
- their computers to access otherwise-free global information databases and huge
- public-records files.
- Many of San Francisco's homeless are now using public computer terminals in
- cafes and other public locations to send and receive mail, exchange
- information on food and shelter sources, etc. But, the terminals are coin-
- operated, and thus could not be used for accessing legislative information
- unless each cafe or terminal-owner contracted with and paid fees to your
- Legislative Counsel.
- There are endless additional examples and variations.
-
- 4. BUREAUCRACY AND FEES WOULD DETER MOST LOW-COST PUBLIC ACCESS
- There are no Andrew Carnegies to pay for today's modern electronic
- libraries. Those who are building them must somehow fund them. Most charge
- as little as possible -- directly or indirectly -- but many do, somehow,
- charge.
- Most people currently using the public networks do so at work or school.
- Many pay nothing, although the company or school system may charge some fee to
- the department using their services.
- Others users pay a small student or researcher's lab-fee or small library of
- coin-operated fee.
- Many people gain toll-free global information access via electronic
- bulletin-board systems (BBSs) run out of peoples' homes or incidental to small
- businesses. They may charge, perhaps, 25-cents per hour, if they charge
- anything.
- Other folks who don't have free access at work or school or library or
- community network may pay $15 to $20 per month, fixed-fee, for unlimited use
- of low-cost public Internet host-computers -- for electronic-mail, global
- discussions, worldwide public-file access . . . and for access to federal and
- state public records.
- Unless you structured a baroque labyrinth of bureaucratic regulations, your
- fee-for-fee mandate would snare most or all of these public-access systems.
-
- Your fee-for-fee requirement would cause most low-cost public-access
- information services to necessarily refuse to carry your fee-laden electronic
- public records. And most would almost-certainly broadcast an outraged,
- furious outcry to all of their users -- that would be quickly echoed to you
- and other legislators.
-
- 5. IMPOSSIBLE TO ENFORCE; WOULD INCITE WIDESPREAD VIOLATION OF YOUR LAW
- About 15- to 20-million people are now using networked computers -- at work,
- in schools, colleges, libraries, nonprofit organizations, homes, corporations
- and some are also in lawyers' and lobbyists' offices. They use one or several
- of the 1.8-million host-computers in the public Internet, or one of more than
- 24,000 BBSs in the free Fidonet, or any of the thousands of other computers
- that are "gatewayed" to those and other public networks.
- Most folks think of public records as, in fact, being public -- and will
- copy them freely. Even if they are doing so directly or indirectly via a
- computer system that charges some fee for use.
- Any fee requirement for public information accessed directly or indirectly
- via a fee-based
-
- 6. A TECHNICAL NIGHTMARE -- WHO PAYS? HOW MUCH SURVEILLANCE OF USERS?
- Almost any fee-for-fee requirement would create monumental contortions -- or
- gross disregard -- due exclusively to how the networks operate. Example:
- I receive free copies of free electronic public legislative data via one of
- the computers in my high-profit private-sector corporation (it produces
- computer-aided-design software; has nothing to do with legislative
- information, other than as an end-using "citizen").
- I see a legislative item that I think would be of interest to readers of
- several public news-groups -- electronic "newsletters" in which anyone may
- publish and distribute anything. So I "post" the item in those news-groups,
- that include numerous of items from numerous individuals.
- News-groups typically have automatic regional-to-global circulation --
- including distribution to fee-charging (job-producing) information systems,
- that may or may not be for-profit operations.
- Must each of them scan and censor what they receive, if their users pay some
- fee for accessing news-groups? Note: There are already several of us who
- were/are planning to automatically post ALL public legislative information to
- some news-groups that focus on legislation -- as is a common information-
- sharing practice across the public networks.
-
- 7. SUPPORT -- DON'T SUPPRESS -- DEVELOPMENT OF HIGH-TECH SMALL BUSINESS
- There are "only" 700,000 to a million Californians who currently use access
- to the public computer networks -- this year. But that is an increase of
- perhaps 80% over last year. Like the first television on the block, or the
- first telephone in town, public electronic information access is exploding.
- There are "freenets" and community networks currently being organized in
- almost every urban area of the state, with many reaching the suburban and even
- rural areas.
- Those who can't find capital and operating grants are planning on charging
- fees -- but the lowest possible fees. These include networks operated by
- public agencies, libraries, schools, etc.
- Almost all of these public-access systems -- fee or free -- are small,
- innovative, job-producing systems providing valuable information and
- communications access to an exploding population of users.
- Please do not suppress or deter their access to your public information.
-
- 8. FREE LAND-FILL PAPER VS. FEES FOR RECYCLABLE ELECTRONS
- Do you really want to set the precedent that distributing public records in
- the form of speed-of-light, essentially-free, recyclable electrons should
- require permission, contracts and fees, while the same identical information
- in the form of delay-ridden, pre-landfill paper made from former trees remains
- available for free?
-
- 9. PRECEDENTS FOR ELECTRONIC SPEECH, ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLY, ELECTRONIC PRESS
- I understand you plan to exclude subscription newspapers from your fee-for-
- fee mandate. Will the newspapers that have both paper and electronic copies,
- such as the San Jose Mercury News, be permitted to publish legislative
- information electronically, without cost, while other electronic publishers
- must obtain permission, sign contracts and pay fees only because they do not
- also publish paper copies?
- Must my speech that might include legislative information be censored, when
- I communicate via computer network to anyone who is paying some fee to the
- computer system on which they receive my comments? Or must their system
- censor public legislative information that I include in my comments?
- Must those citizens who assemble electronically exclude participants who use
- for-fee systems for their participation, whenever California legislation is
- discussed, verbatim?
-
- 10. YOUR PRECEDENT FOR THE PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO PETITION THEIR GOVERNMENT
- Must the People's right to petition the government for a redress of
- grievances be limited to paper, verbal and face-to-face petition, but censor
- publication and distribution of public legislative records, IF and only if
- they are in electronic form?
-
-
- Mr. Burton -- please!
- Do not hamper modern public access to modern public records by demanding
- fees and bureaucracy to benefit your Legislative Counsel. His current
- computer and his current public-network connection costs him the same, whether
- he uses it only to benefit his staff and the legislators, or whether he also
- uses it to provide great benefit and open government to the public.
- Honor the award you received from the Society of Professional Journalists
- for your work to assure open access to our government and our governance.
- Support maximum public access to public records, even when they are
- distributed at less cost and with greater speed in electronic form.
-
- John -- please! -- let me report that you are a part of the future.
-
- I remain,
-
- Sincerely,
-
- /s/ Jim Warren
-
- Jim Warren,
- futures columnist, MicroTimes (220,000 California circulation),
- government-access columnist, BoardWatch (60,000 national and global circ.) &
- public-access writer, Government Technology (60,000 to state & local agencies)
-
- [My comments are not official statements of the publications for which I
- write, but they most-certainly do reflect the content of my columns.]
-
- Note: I have NO business or financial interest in the outcome of this
- legislation. I do, however, have a great civic interest in the opening of the
- process of our governance that it can facilitate -- if it is not suppressed.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.69
- ************************************
- Enter Command:
-