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-
- Computer underground Digest Wed Sep 8 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 70
- 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, #5.70 (Sep 8 1993)
- File 1--World Wide Web Newsletter Information
- File 2--Big time hacker from the small town
- File 3--Re: A Class Like None Other [revised]
- File 4--Imaginary Government Reply to Jim Warren's Model Letter
- File 5--'Zine Watch: CRYPT, GRAY AREAS and BOARDWATCH
- File 6--Other BBSes Carrying CuD
- File 7--Phrack now only available on the CuD shadow archives
- File 8--EFF Position Opening--DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS
- File 9--Canadian Document Database
- File 10--UK Privacy International Conference
- File 11--CALIF E-ACCESS BILL (AB #1624) PASSES!!!
-
- 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: Tue, 31 Aug 1993 19:13:48 +0000
- From: wwwn@UKARTNET.DEMON.CO.UK
- Subject: File 1--World Wide Web Newsletter Information
-
- +++++++++++ ELECTRONIC PRESS RELEASE +++++++++++
- SEPTEMBER 1 1993
-
- The World Wide Web Newsletter brings you Desktop Global Networking
-
- Now you can plug in to an endless world of people and information: the
- fastest growing global event, with room and resources for everyone.
- Al Gore dubbed it the "information superhighway" now everyone from
- the President of the United States to the grungiest cyberpunk is out
- there, roaming the highways. The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER is a unique
- source of news, information, help, addresses and ideas from and about
- the new global networks. If you want to know about the cyberspace
- you need to read the World Wide Web Newsletter.
-
- The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER is proud to introduce Desktop Global
- Networking (DGN) for all. Anyone who has an interest in communication;
- anyone who is thinking about utilising the power of desktop global
- networking; anyone who should know what is happening out there; anyone
- interested in the range of resources and products that make up the
- World Wide Web has to read The World Wide Web Newsletter.
-
- The World Wide Web is a metanetwork of interconnected computers, known
- variously as the Internet, the Matrix and Cyberspace. The World Wide
- Web Newsletter is your navigation system to the greatest free resource
- and communication system in the history of the world.
-
- The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER is designed with the non-specialist in
- mind - you don't need a degree in computer networking to read us. We
- aim to bring you clear, informative, helpful, exciting insights into
- the most useful communication and information system that you will
- ever use.
-
- This World Wide Web the Internet, the Matrix, the Cyberspace is a
- huge interconnected system of networked computers. It is estimated
- that fifteen million people a day use the system and that the system
- is growing at ten percent a month. The Web will change our lives. As
- access to it becomes widespread, so knowledge of how it works, what is
- in it, how to make use of it and what will happen next becomes of
- prime importance to more and more of us.
-
- The global network is so huge that newcomers and old hands alike find
- it difficult to keep tabs on the needles in this haystack. The WORLD
- WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER brings you the best of the global networks every
- other month: News; Features; UK access information; network
- multimedia; a-z of the Internet; Frequently Asked Questions; common
- problems, common solutions; Reviews - books, software, hardware,
- services and systems; non-Internet systems and how they connect; how
- individuals use the global networks.
- Resource and Listings sections will provide ready references to resources
- on the Internet, from those you use everyday to the obscure depths that you
- may never otherwise find.
-
- The September/October issue of The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER
-
- + UK Networking: how to; where to; who to and a full listing of UK Internet
- access providers.
- + Powermail The wonderful world of mailing lists: how to exploit the
- power of e-mail.
- + Cello - Full featured Internet software for Windows reviewed by Neville
- Wilford
- + Awesome Sites: Virtual Tourism the John S. Makulowich Column
- + NetNews latest news from the global networks
- + Off Internet Hardware and software developments outside and around the
- Internet
- + Internet a-z: Astronautics How to become an astronaut and other
- frequently asked questions
- + Plus information on software and hardware developments; resource lists;
- publications; Internet Multimedia and much more.
-
- If you don't read The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER, you'll never know what you
- are missing - or who's missing you.
-
- The WORLD WIDE WEB NEWSLETTER
- Editor: Ivan Pope
-
- ISSN 1350 - 2263
-
- Individual issues 3 + 1 p&p
- 24 for 6 issues including postage in the UK and Europe.
- 42 (US$60) elsewhere including airmail postage
- Payable to Art Computers
-
- CIS: 100135,1673
- ivan@ukartnet.demon.co.uk
- IPope@well.sf.ca.us
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT THE EDITOR IVAN POPE ON
- +44 81 533 0818
- or
- IVAN@UKARTNET.DEMON.CO.UK
- or
- FAX ON THE ABOVE NUMBER
-
- Published by: Art Computers, 13 Brett Rd, London E8 1JP UK
- Ivan Pope
- Editor
- ivan@ukartnet.demon.co.uk
-
- The World Wide Web Newsletter +44 (0)81 533 0818
- 13 Brett Rd Fax: +44 (0)81 533 0818
- London E8 1JP wwwn@ukartnet.demon.co.uk
- UK
- +++++++++++++
- -
- The World Wide Web Newsletter (WWWN). The WWWN is a monthly subscription
- newsletter that covers the new global networks.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 31 Aug 1993 07:55:04 EST
- From: Chip Seymour <CHIP@BDSO.CV.COM>
- Subject: File 2--Big time hacker from the small town
-
- This article appeared in "The Bolton Common" Vol. V, No.251 dated
- Friday, August 27, 1993, after somehow being overlooked by the larger,
- more prolific newspapers.
-
- Let me set the scene. The town of Bolton (Massachusetts), population
- 4,000 (on a good day) strides Interstate 495 about 40 miles west of
- Boston and 15 miles north of Worcester, and boasts one and one-half
- traffic lights, two orchards, and three churches. Period.
-
- The Common's 'Police News' column mentions that "At about 7:30
- Saturday morning, August 14, police received a report of a peacock on
- the loose at the intersection of Harvard Road and Main Street."
-
- Mayberry, right? NOT!
-
- "POLICE NAB OBSCENE CALLER" by Bill Latimer (reprinted without asking)
-
- "A Bolton police and New England Telephone Company investigation of
- threatening and obscene telephone calls to a Bolton family may have
- uncovered a computer hacker network capable of wreaking havoc on New
- England's power distribution system. Regardless of any wider
- implications, says Police Chief Warren Wilson, the investigation has
- put an end to the calls that terrorized a local family since July 21
- and put its members in fear for their lives. Police believe a
- 13-year-old Gardner (Massachusetts) boy is responsible for the calls.
- The police department has evidence of the youth's calls, evidence that
- the US Secret Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation are
- interested in examining, says Wilson.
-
- "Bolton police have not charged the youth with any crime, Wilson said
- at press time, because of the 'multi-jurisdictional aspects of the
- case.' In addition to federal interest in the case, Acton and
- Fitchburg (Mass.) police believe the youth terrorized victims in those
- towns from his home using sophisticated computer equipment, says
- Wilson. Bolton's reports are being forwarded to the Worcester County
- district attorney's office.
-
- "Wilson provided the Common with a broad outline of the investigation
- and law enforcement agencies' suspicions. Bolton Officer Bill Blewett
- began an investigation after a local family notified police on July 21
- that they had received several obscene calls, some of which threatened
- murder. With the help of New England Telephone, police installed a
- phone trap on the victims' phone, which gave authorities the phone
- numbers from which all calls to the victims originated. Several more
- of the obscene, threatening calls -- sometimes with more than one
- voice on the line -- were traced back to Mount Wachusett Community
- College and Heywood Memorial Hospital, both in Gardner (Mass, about 20
- miles west of Bolton). Because both have elaborate phone systems,
- officials there could not say who might have made the calls.
-
- Police then concentrated on the other phone numbers from which people
- placed legitimate calls to the victims.
-
- A Bolton number appeared frequently, often at about the same time as
- the obscene calls, and Blewett went to that house to interview the
- residents. Information gathered there in an interview with a young
- Bolton resident --Wilson refused to be more specific -- led police to
- the home of the Gardner youth.
-
- "With a search warrant from Gardner District Court in hand, officers
- went through the Gardner home and seized a computer 'with more power
- than anything we've got at the station,' says Wilson.
-
- "'The computer contains much evidence of illegal activity,' says
- Wilson, 'including voice data, which we have listened to, constituting
- harassing and obscene telephone calls.' One custom program in the
- computer is named 'Harass.'
-
- "The Gardner boy was allegedly a member of a nationwide computer
- hackers' network, whose members can access the phone systems at large
- institutions, such as the college and hospital, and charge thousands
- of dollars worth of phone calls to the institutions. The seized
- computer contains records of thousands of phone calls, says Wilson,
- many of them one-minute or less. These are indicative of computer
- hackers trying to gain access to other computer systems, Wilson says.
-
- "The hackers' network may have had the capability 'to penetrate the
- New England [electric] power structure,' Wilson says he learned when
- the federal agencies became involved. 'The computer contents are being
- held for analysis by the Secret Service at their request.' The Common
- has learned from a source close to the case that the group may have
- attempted to access the computer system at at least one nuclear power
- plant in Massachusetts.
-
- The victims, whom Wilson declined to identify, have expressed
- 'tremendous relief' that the caller has been identified. The dozens of
- phone calls, some at 2 and 3 a.m., had shaken the family so badly that
- they were about to hire special duty police officers to guard their
- home at night. The 13-year-old suspect did not know his victims, says
- Wilson. 'It was not a personal vendetta.'
-
- "Wilson summed up the progress of the wider investigation: 'More to
- come.'
-
- And now, back to Mayberry.
-
- "A domestic rabbit was found on Old Shirley Road on August 20. Anyone
- missing a rabbit should call police ... "
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 28 Aug 1993 18:28:32
- From: jmbell@DARMOK.WIN.NET(Jonathan Bell)
- Subject: File 3--Re: A Class Like None Other [revised]
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: For parsimony, we reproduce here only the first
- and last two paragraphs of Johnathan Bell's paper, which summarize
- his central themes. His points are well-argued, and the copious
- footnotes should be of value to scholars. The entire paper can be
- obtained from the CuD ftp archives. We recommend it)).
-
- A CLASS LIKE NONE OTHER: HOW THE TRADITIONAL MEDIA CLASSIFICATIONS
- FAIL TO PROTECT IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER
-
- by Jonathan Bell
-
-
- August 4, 1993
- Mass Communications Law and Ethics
- Dwight Teeter - Summer 1993
-
- Imagine the mass communications functions of publisher, distributor,
- broadcaster, advertiser and utility rolled into one and you might find
- that the beast before you is being operated out of your own home -- or
- at least that of a friend or neighbor. The computer bulletin board
- (BBS) offers a variety of services to its users: shopping, electronic
- mail, public discussion of hot topics, free software, free advice,
- news. All that may sound idealistic but it is here. The only thing
- endangering BBS' and their system operators' (sysops') ability to run
- them is a legal system unclear and uneducated about the First
- Amendment held dearly by those who keep them going, whether they are
- the users or the operators.
-
- Exactly where BBS' stand in the legal structure has not been
- definitively decided by anyone. Getting sysops to agree has yet to be
- accomplished, users see things differently and lawyers and government
- often have views widely divergent from the thoughts of the other two.
- The simple fact that the proper status of bulletin boards has yet to
- be answered reasonably opens up the dire need for a new media
- classification system. No one sees eye to eye, and assurances that the
- right thing will always be done do not work.
-
- *************************
-
- It may seem shocking for users today to learn that more than ever they
- are responsible for what they write and what they distribute. The
- ability to have your voice heard is unprecedented but so is the
- capability to harm. The media lessons of copyright, privacy and
- defamation still are being taught on the networks today. They will
- continue as more people log on to the networks at hand, spreading
- their personage electronically.
-
- Education can answer many of the problems facing the electronic world
- today. But no puzzles are solvable until computer information systems
- and bulletin boards are granted the highest degree of First Amendment
- rights and freedom from liability necessary to keep the waves of
- public exchange coming throughout the future.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 6 Sep 93 03:04 PDT
- From: john@ZYGOT.ATI.COM(John Higdon)
- Subject: File 4--Imaginary Government Reply to Jim Warren's Model Letter
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: While we often share John's cynicism, which he
- expresses satirically below, it appears that Jim Warren's idealism and
- belief in collective action were *not* misplaced. A few minutes ago,
- CuD learned that Jim Warren's (and others') efforts to pass the
- California electronic access bill that would increase availability of
- public documents to the public were rewarded. Warren's model letters
- and other strategies were instrumental in today's final passage of the
- legislation. See File #11, below)).
-
- +++++++
-
- Jim Warren presented a substantial argument in his "Model Letter" to
- John Burton. But it is entirely based upon the premise that anyone in
- the California state government gives two hoots or a holler about the
- citizenry. Therefore I appoint myself official (tongue-in-cheek)
- spokesperson for our state legislature and answer each of Mr. Warren's
- arguments against the charging of fees for on-line access to state
- documents. (My apologies for anything that seems true enough to be
- mistaken for seriousness.)
-
- Mr. Warren writes:
-
- > 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
-
- Mr. Warren, you obviously think that any of us here in Sacramento give
- a damn about how much anything in government costs. The money comes out
- of your pocket, not ours. We collect it from you in taxes. We even will
- track you down after you retire in another state to make sure we get
- our pound of flesh. I hope that answers your concern regarding costs.
-
- > 2. CREATES TWO CLASSES OF PUBLIC ACCESS BASED ON WEALTH AND POSITION
-
- Mr. Warren, where on earth have you been all of your life. Of course
- people with money and position have the power. We have campaign
- contributions to work off here. Actually, there are several issues at work.
- Newspapers are our friends. They give us mindless, unquestioning access
- to the public with our press hand-outs and print what we make
- convenient. On the other hand, people who are too poor to pay fees for
- on-line document access are probably radical trouble makers. We don't
- need that kind of riff-raff examining what we do here in Sacramento.
-
- > 3. YOU WOULD EXCLUDE SCHOOLS, COLLEGES, STUDENTS, LIBRARIES, HOMELESS, ETC.
-
- Naturally. Students have always been a pain in our rear. Thankfully, as
- a group, their voting record stinks. The last thing we want to do is
- incite these children into recklessly exercising their rights. And for
- heaven's sake, why on earth would we want a bunch of homeless bums to
- know what is going on in Sacrmento? And the beard and glasses types
- that frequent libraries--well, need I say more?
-
- > 4. BUREAUCRACY AND FEES WOULD DETER MOST LOW-COST PUBLIC ACCESS
-
- No shit Sherlock! Did someone lead you to think that we had some desire
- to make our silly shenanigans public?
-
- > 5. IMPOSSIBLE TO ENFORCE; WOULD INCITE WIDESPREAD VIOLATION OF YOUR LAW
-
- Did you ever consider that maybe money is not the issue here, but
- rather denial of access? Give us some credit. But a nice bonus in
- having fees built into the system is the fact that we know perfectly
- well that people will ignore the law. This gives us carte blanche to
- "round up all the usual suspects" should we decide that someone has
- spoken the wrong thing at the wrong time. When we want to "put someone
- away", it is most useful to have some trumped up charge. Not paying
- fees is made to order.
-
- > 6. A TECHNICAL NIGHTMARE -- WHO PAYS? HOW MUCH SURVEILLANCE OF USERS?
-
- Mr. Warren, we KNOW that. In addition to the above, we are provided
- with a great excuse to monitor and search and seize to our hearts'
- content.
-
- > 7. SUPPORT -- DON'T SUPPRESS -- DEVELOPMENT OF HIGH-TECH SMALL BUSINESS
-
- Don't get us wrong--we support high-tech. But only in big corporations.
- These garage operations, "loose cannons" if you will, scare the bloody
- crap out of us. The idea that ordinary people can, unsupervised and in
- private, create, develop, and manipulate data seen and read by other
- ordinary people--using high-tech means, no less--strikes at the very
- core of our benevolent purpose. That purpose is to protect you and
- other citizens from unnecessary contact with data and devices that you
- need not know anything about. We, and our corporate contributors--er, I
- mean the corporations who are under our thumb--oops, rather the high
- tech industry will handle everything and take care of you.
-
- > 8. FREE LAND-FILL PAPER VS. FEES FOR RECYCLABLE ELECTRONS
-
- Green stuff is only for serving our agenda. Do not try to use that
- "green" nonsense on us. We invented the hype so we could raise your
- taxes. We are pleased that it has been effective. But do not attempt to
- con your government. We invented the practice.
-
- > 9. PRECEDENTS FOR ELECTRONIC SPEECH, ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLY, ELECTRONIC PRESS
- > I understand you plan to exclude subscription newspapers from your fee-for-
- > fee mandate.
-
- Mr. Warren, as I explained earlier, the mindless newspapers are our
- friends. Your rabble-rousing "electronic publishers" say things we
- don't like, and have a "readership" that we would just as soon not see the
- material. Remember the key word "access". Access is something that all
- of us in government would just as soon you and all the other bozo
- constituents NOT have.
-
- > 10. YOUR PRECEDENT FOR THE PEOPLE'S RIGHT TO PETITION THEIR GOVERNMENT
-
- Hey, if we had our druthers, we would turn that off in a minute. All we
- have between us and you clowns is a mountain of paperwork and
- procedures. Are you seriously asking us to strip that away? You think
- we WANT to hear from you between elections? Get real, son.
-
- (End of comments as tongue-in-cheek government spokesperson.)
-
- While the above may be pulling at the corners just a little, it is my
- personal opinion that there is contained more truth than fiction. There
- are two things to always remember about government bureaucrats: cost is
- never an issue; and none wants you to know what really goes on in
- government. After all, you pay the bill and what you don't know won't
- hurt you.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 8 Sep 1993 17:41:21 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
- Subject: File 5--'Zine Watch: CRYPT, GRAY AREAS and BOARDWATCH
-
- CRYPT NEWS LETTER
-
- The Crypt Newsletter is an electronic document which delivers deft
- satire, savage criticism and media analyses on topics of interest to
- the editor and the computing public. The Crypt Newsletter also
- reviews anti-virus and security software and republishes digested news
- of note to users of such. The Crypt Newsletter ALSO supplies analysis
- and complete source code to many computer viruses made expressly for
- the newsletter. Source codes and DEBUG scripts of these viruses can
- corrupt - quickly and irreversibly - the data on an IBM-compatible
- microcomputer - particularly when handled imperfectly. Ownership of
- The Crypt Newsletter can damage your reputation, making you unpopular
- in heavily institutionalized settings, rigid bureaucracy or
- environments where unsophisticated, self-important computer user
- groups cohabit.
-
- Files included in the latest issue (#17):
-
- CRPTLT.R17 - this electronic document
- TEST.PAK - Aristotle's PAK "device" bomb demonstrator
- TREKWAR.ASM - TREKWAR source code
- YB-X.ASM - YB/Dick Manitoba virus source code and analysis
- CLUST.ASM - TridenT Cluster virus, advanced stealth example, and analysis
- VECTOR.ASM - Kohntark's interrupt vector lister utility, in source code
- YB-X.SCR - scriptfile for YB
- TREKWAR.SCR - scriptfile for TREKWAR
- CLUST.SCR - scriptfile for CLUSTER
- VECTOR.SCR - scriptfile for Kohntark's vector lister
-
- To obtain a subscription or more information, contact Urnst
- Kouch at:
- 70743.1711@compuserve.com
-
- ********************************************************************
-
- GRAY AREAS
-
- The Fall (Vol 2, #3), 1993, issue of Gray Areas is out and looks even
- better than before. This time there's a review of DEFCON I, an
- interview with the head of the Recording Industry Association of
- America's piracy unit (complete with photos of busts of record
- counterfeiters), articles on drug laws in Amsterdam and the U.S., an
- interview with a woman who performed phone sex, an interview with the
- leader of the Church of the SubGenius, Ivan Stang, more on UFOs and
- photos of a KKK rally.
-
- This issue of Gray Areas builds on previous themes of intellectual
- property rights and copyright ownership. There are two pieces of
- exclusive communication from the Grateful Dead's legal counsel as well
- as two pieces of exclusive communication from people who sell
- unauthorized, bootleg Grateful Dead video tapes and unauthorized,
- counterfeit Grateful Dead T-shirts. Photos of other T-shirts which
- show cartoon characters using drugs and which spoof the Jurassic Park
- logo are also shown and discussed.
-
- Other criminals come forward too. There is correspondence printed
- from someone who broke into drugstores to steal prescription drugs,
- someone who sneaks into cemeteries at night and a software pirate
- confesses why he does it.
-
- Gray Areas is doing a tremendous job uniting criminals and deviants
- with those who enforce the law and who follow it to the letter. Gray
- Areas prints all points of view and is careful to be fair to all
- sides.
-
- The issue is available from: Gray Areas, Inc. P.O. Box 808,
- Broomall, PA 19008-0808. It is $5.00 (ask for #4) or $18 for four
- issues (you may start with #1 at no extra charge if you specify you
- are a CuD reader). Please note that Gray Areas is a paper magazine
- with no newsgroup or on-line mailing list. They welcome submissions
- from the computer underground and may be reached on-line at:
- grayarea@well.sf.ca.us
-
- ********************************************************************
-
- BOARDWATCH MAGAZINE
-
- Boardwatch specializes in BBS news and notes, and covers everything
- from BBS law and policy to personalities and software.
- We found three articles in the September issue of Boardwatch of
- exceptional interest. First is the list of the "Readers' Choice" for
- the top 100 BBSes in the US; second is an indepth article on the modem
- price wars and tips on finding the best values for the buck; third is
- a nifty story on genealogical research on-line. As always, Lance
- Rose's column, "Legally Online" is priceless. This month, Lance
- describes the power of online communication in union activities as a
- Hollywood writer's union squabble concludes more-or-less amicably.
- Subscriptions to Boardwatch are $36 a year and available at:
- Boardwatch Magazine 8500 W. Bowles Ave, Suite 210 Littleton, CO 80123
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 1 Sep 1993 15:31:05 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
- Subject: File 6--Other BBSes Carrying CuD
-
- Date--Sat, 17 Jul 93 09:24:00
- From--victor.volkman@HAL9K.COM(Victor Volkman)
-
- In regards to your recent issue (BBSes which carry CUD):
-
- I run a BBS with dialup access from 1200 to 14400 baud which carries the
- CU-DIGEST newsgroup. I also have some back issues archived off in file
- directories. The BBS is free to the public and can be reached on
- +1 313 663 4173 or 663 3959. A total of six v.32bis phone linews are
- available.
-
- ******************************************************************
-
- Date--Mon, 19 Jul 93 19:49:18 EST
- From--jgraham@DOLMEN.BITNET(James R. Graham)
-
- I just wanted to inform you that The Portal Dolmen BBS
- at (812)334-0418 in Bloomington, Indiana is now carrying
- Computer Underground Digest.
-
- It is available for download from the file area "Computer Underground
- Digest".
-
- Thanks,
- Jim Graham
- Sysop
-
- *******************************************************************
-
- From--South of Hell BBS
-
- South of Hell has over 4000 ANSi art, 300 VGAs/Intros, and art
- from virtually EVERY art group in the Underground art scene. It
- just added some H/P sections. Its an affiliate of iCE, ACiD, and
- CHAOS. It is the Southern HeadQuarters of UNiSON, GwAr, MAJiCK,
- and TDX. We distribute for CuD, SWaT, SCi, DoM, and SPEED. So
- for ALL the latest grafix, call South of Hell, 305-360-0575.
- Also a large Virtual Reality .GIF section.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 8 Sep 1993 15:47:32 -0400
- From: cudarch@eff.org (Brendan Kehoe)
- Subject: File 7--Phrack now only available on the CuD shadow archives
-
- PLEASE NOTE: Issues of Phrack Magazine are now ONLY available on the
- mirror sites. The main archive in /pub/cud on ftp.eff.org can no
- longer house them. In the past few months, the Phrack archives alone
- have constituted a startling percentage of the bandwidth used by the
- EFF's net connection. This is definitely unacceptable, since they are
- donating the space, system resources, and network connectivity to the
- CuD archives.
-
- There are a number of shadow sites which have the issues of Phrack
- available; please look to one of them. To avoid future problems on
- those sites, I urge people to retrieve the Index first, and then get
- the issues that have the information you need. One part of the
- problem with Phrack's bandwidth is directly attributable to people who
- would retrieve ALL of the issues at once---that is 3Mb of traffic to
- you and me. Please remember that your actions on the Net do have an
- effect, however indirect they may appear to be.
-
- Anyway, the shadow sites are:
-
- UNITED STATES: 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)
-
- I would personally like to thank the EFF for their continued support
- and very patient handling of this matter. Also, the folks who
- maintain the shadows of the main archive continue to be invaluable in
- the upkeep and widespread availability of the CuD archives.
-
- Brendan Kehoe
- CuD Archivist
-
- ((MODERATORS NOTE---We share Brendan's gratitude to EFF for providing
- archive space. But, Brendan's efforts over the years, while invisible
- and thankless, have been invaluable for those utilizing the files that
- he as diligently maintained. We've often wondered where he found the
- time to write his useful guidebook: Zen and the Art of the Internet)).
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, Sep 6 1993: 12:21:55 EDT
- From: eff@eff.org
- Subject: File 8--EFF Position Opening--DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS
-
- Position Announcement
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- DIRECTOR OF COMMUNICATIONS
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation, based in Washington, DC, is a
- public interest organization that brings together legal, technical,
- and policy expertise to address the democratic potential and social
- impact of new computer and communications technologies. EFF has
- rapidly expanded its influence in the national public policy arena,
- helping to find common ground among the concerns of government,
- industry, and the public interest. EFF promotes the broad social and
- economic benefits offered by new information and communication
- technology while safeguarding principles of freedom, openness,
- competitiveness, and the civil liberties of individual citizens.
-
- EFF is seeking an experienced Director of Communications to articulate
- and communicate EFF's messages to a range of audiences. The Director
- of Communications will work closely with the Membership Coordinator,
- who will implement plans for membership development, and an Online
- Activist, who will be responsible for getting EFF 's message out on
- electronic networks.
-
- We're looking for an experienced wordsmith and ideasmith who can write
- and edit a range of policy, press and promotional materials, help
- develop a communication and membership strategy, define audiences, and
- develop themes that speak to those audiences through the electronic,
- broadcast, and print media. You must be an energetic, hands-on, team
- member who loves to write on a range of topics with style, depth, and
- political sensibility, and you should be comfortable with public
- speaking. Knowledge of public policy, technology issues, and
- experience in a public interest setting preferred.
-
- Applicants should be computer literate and have experience managing
- multiple projects, deadlines, and collaborations. Minimum B.S./B.A.
- plus 5 years professional experience in a related field such as
- journalism, politics, advertising, business communications, news or
- public relations. A sense of humor is required. Excellent salary and
- benefits, and lively, committed coworkers.
-
- This position is in Washington, DC. No phone calls, please. To
- apply, send resume, brief writing sample, cover letter and salary
- requirements by September 27 to our recruiter:
-
- Lisa Breit & Associates
- 54 Rich Valley Road
- Wayland, MA 01778
-
- You may apply by e-mail (ASCII only please). Address to:
- lbreit@eff.org
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation is an equal opportunity employer.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 8 Sep 93 11:50:49 EDT
- From: news@CLARK.DGIM.DOC.CA(#Usenet News)
- Subject: File 9--Canadian Document Database
-
- The Department of Industry and Science, Government of Canada, is
- pleased to announce the launch of an on-line document database.
- This pilot project currently makes nine telecommunications-related
- documents available in both official languages, English and French.
-
- **** ftp access
- All documents are available in ASCII format, uncompressed via
- anonymous ftp from:
- debra.dgbt.doc.ca pub/doc/
- for the most recent index of files retrieve "00readme"
-
- *** Listserv access
- These files are also available via Listerserv for people with e-
- mail access only. The address is
- listserv@debra.dgbt.doc.ca
- To retrieve the most recent index of documents available send the
- following command alone in the body of the message:
- get isc 00readme
- ******
- Titles available:
- A Guide for the radiotelephone operator
- 1986, English 56 p / French 58 p
- Decoding the Law on Decoding
- 1991, English 13 p / French 13 p
- Convergence, Competition and Cooperation
- 1992, English 287 p / French 311 p
- Telecommunications in Canada: An overview of the Carriage
- Industry 1992, Eng 36 p / French 38 p
- Telecommunications: New Legislation for Canada
- 1992, Eng 25 p / French 28 p
- New Media New Choices
- 1992, English 43 p / French 47 p
- Telecommunications Privacy Principles
- 1992, English 8 p / French 8 p
- A Spectrum Policy Framework for Canada
- 1992, English 29 p / French 30 p
- Digital Radio: the sound of the future
- 1993, Eng 29 p / French 31 p
- +----------------------------------------------------------
- Industrie et Sciences Canada, du gouvernement du Canada, a le
- plaisir d'introduire une base de donnees des documents. Cette base
- du dinnees du project pilote comprend prisentement neuf documents
- relies aux telecommunications, dans les deux langues officielles du
- Canada, francias et anglais
- *** Aces par ftp
- Tous les documents sont accessibles en format ASCII non comprime,
- par "anonymous ftp" a:
- debra.dgbt.doc.ca pub/isc/
- pour obtenir l'index le plus recent prendre le fichier "00lisez"
- *** Aces par Listserv
- Ces fichiers sont egalement accessibles par Listerserver aux
- personnes munies de l'acces par courrier electronique seulement.
- L'adresse est la suivante :
- listserv@debra.dgbt.doc.ca
- Pour obtenir l'index le plus recent des documents disponibles
- envoyez la commande suivante isolement dans le corps du message :
- get isc 00LISEZ
- ****
- Fichiers disponible
- Guide du radiotelephoniste
- 1986, Anglais 56 p./francais 58 p.
- Comment decoder la legislation sur le decodage
- 1991, Anglais 13 p./francais 13 p.
- Convergence, concurrence et cooperation
- 1992, Anglais 287 p./francais 311 p.
- Les telecommunications au Canada : Survol de l'industrie de
- la distribution, 1992, Anglais 36 p./francais 38 p.
- Les telecommunications : nouvelle legislation canadienne
- 1992, Anglais 25 p./francais 28 p.
- Nouveaux medias ... Nouveaux choix
- 1992, Anglais 43 p./francais 47 p.
- Principes de protection de la vie privee dans les
- telecommunications
- 1992, Anglais 8 p./francais 8 p.
- Cadre de la politique canadienne du spectre
- 1992, Anglais 29 p./francais 30 p.
- La radio numerique : La voie du futur
- 1993, Anglais 29 p./francais 31 p.
-
- | Casey Barton (a guy ) cebarton@napier.uwaterloo.ca (613)236-7792 |
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 3 Sep 1993 16:46:06 EST
- From: Dave Banisar <banisar@WASHOFC.CPSR.ORG>
- Subject: File 10--UK Privacy International Conference
-
- UK Privacy International Conference
- ANNOUNCEMENT
-
- ONE DAY PUBLIC CONFERENCE
-
- INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS IN PRIVACY
- AND DATA PROTECTION
-
- 30th SEPTEMBER, 1993, MANCHESTER, UK
-
- A roundtable hosted jointly by Privacy International
- and the Law School of the University of Manchester
-
- Topics include :
-
- Privacy concerns with Caller ID and digital phone services
-
- Privacy implications of Electronic Health Care Patient Record
- Systems and medical smart cards
-
- Cryptography, and communications surveillance
-
- Implications of the European Commission data protection directive
-
- The establishment of guidelines for handling police files in
- emerging democracies in Central and Eastern Europe
-
- Weaknesses in the UK Data Protection Act
-
- 8.30 AM - 2.00 PM, Thursday 30th September 1993 Room 2.22, The Law
- School, University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL
-
- For more information, please contact :
-
- Simon Davies at Privacy International in London on (44) 81 402 0737 or
- fax (44) 81 313 3726 (email : Davies @privint.demon.co.uk )
-
- or
-
- Dave Banisar at Privacy International in Washington on (1) 202 544
- 9240, fax (1) 202 547 5482 (email : Banisar@washofc.cpsr.org )
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 8 Sep 1993 15:11:06 -0700
- From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: File 11--CALIF E-ACCESS BILL (AB #1624) PASSES!!!
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following post from Jim Warren came in a few
- minutes prior to sending out #5.70--it looks as if the inglamorous and
- nitty-gritty perseverance of trench fighting paid off in passing a
- signficant electronic access bill. Although not dramatic, the bill
- has significant implications for expanding cyberspace, and the
- strategic model used in California should be applied elsewhere. Jim
- Warren and all the others who participated in the effort should be
- commended. SUPER JOB!!))
-
- +++++
-
- Today, AB1624 passed the Assembly 78-to-0 on the consent agenda, thus
- concurring with the amendments that had been made in the Senate after
- the Assembly passed it the first time.
-
- Unless Gov. Pete Wilson vetos it within 12 days, it will become law,
- taking effect Jan. 1, 1993. Who knows, perhaps Benovelant Ol' Bion
- Gregory, the Chief Legislative Counsel who's been peddling our data to
- a few private distributors for years, might even make our legislative
- data available to us mere citizens, before he's required by law to do
- so. Would be a nice show of good faith and efficiency. (He's had a
- 1.544-megabit/sec, T-1 Internet connection since last May and has at
- least one Internet host that "pinged" active, months ago.)
-
- ** FAX & CALL WILSON ASAP, PLEASE **
-
- In a one fax-page, tell why you want him to sign AB1624, give your
- title and organizational affiliation(s), perhaps mention groups with
- whom you are in touch that are interested in the bill, etc.
- GOV. PETE WILSON; VOICE/916-445-2814; FAX/916-445-4633
- GOVERNOR'S OFFICE, STATE CAPITOL, SACRAMENTO CA 95814
-
- It probably wouldn't hurt to mention that you know
- (a) his Deputy-Chief-of-Staff, Bill Hauck, is also Executive Vice
- President of State Net, one of the two largest for-profit distributors
- of this information, and
- (b) Rick Brandsma - one of Wilson's appointees to the Fair Political
- Practices Commission - is Senior Vice President of State Net, but
- (c) State Net has clearly stated in at least two public meetings that
- they do not oppose AB1624 [which I personally, happen to believe], and
- (d) you hope Gov. Wilson doesn't veto AB1624 if for no other reason
- that the *apearance* of conflict-of-interest this would create for
- him, Hauck and Brandsma. [I have also heard high praise for Brandsma
- from several Sacramento insiders whom I respect and trust.]
-
- WILSON'S GENERAL SERVICES DEPT SPENDS $300,000 FOR ELECTRONIC LEGIS INFO
-
- In 1992, when Legislative Counsel received about $295,000 for sale
- of our public records to State Net and Legi-Tech on magtape, Wilson'
- State Dept. of General Services paid State Net and Legi-Tech about
- $285,000 for electronic access to legislative info, including but not
- limited to data covered by AB1624. Cal.DGS could save at least some
- of that expense by using AB1624 free access.
-
- CITY/COUNTY/LOCAL AGENCIES PAY ANOTHER $600,000 FOR ELECTRONIC LEGIS
- INFO
-
- In 1992, State Net received about $300,000 from cities through a
- master contract with the League of California Cities for providing
- cities with electronic legislative data, plus another $300,000-or-so
- from counties through a similar contract with the California State
- Association of Counties (CSAC) - data that included and/or was based
- on information that will be free in electronic form to everyone under
- AB1624.
-
- Other ublic agencies and districts - parks, ewers, water, district
- attorneys, public defender, etc.- undoubtedly paid still more to
- access AB1624 data, especially including current codes (enacted
- statutes).
-
- SIGNIFICANT SAVINGS POSSIBLE FOR STATE & LOCAL AGENCIES - AND THEIR
- TAX-PAYERS
-
- Without cost to the tax-payer - since it uses current computers and
- network connections - AB1624 can undoubtedly save state and local
- agencies significant loot (if they choose to use its free Internet
- access - ahhh, another issue and another fight :-).
-
- LOOSE ENDS
-
- As is usual with most bills, AB1624 was amended numerous times - the
- last being in the Senate on Aug.30. I don't know of an electronic
- copy of its final form that is available for free across the Internet.
- If I get one - or can grit my teeth long enough to rekey it from my
- paper copy - I'll distribute it to this [rather huge] list.
-
- In an earlier Update, I said the Gov had until Oct. 12th to veto the
- bill. Error: That's only at the end of a two-year legislative
- session. This is the end of the first year; he has only 12 days to
- kill the bill - and WE THUS HAVE FEWER DAYS IN WHICH TO EFFECTIVELY
- URGE HIS SUPPORT.
-
- TSK! Several days ago, Legi-Tech reversed its publicly-expressed
- position in which it didn't oppose AB1624, and filed a formal letter
- opposing it. This makes that McClatchey newspapers subsidiary the
- only opponent of AB1624. Sad. Strange. [If they e-send an
- explanation, I'll echo it to this list.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.70
-