home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Computer underground Digest Sun Mar 20, 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 26
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe (He's Baaaack)
- Acting Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Koppa Ediqor: Phirho Shrdlu
-
- CONTENTS, #6.26 (Mar 20, 1994)
- **C
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost electronically.
-
- CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
-
- Or, to subscribe, send a one-line message: SUB CUDIGEST your name
- Send it to LISTSERV@UIUCVMD.BITNET or LISTSERV@VMD.CSO.UIUC.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, USA.
-
- 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 RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
- and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (203) 832-8441.
- 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
-
- FTP: UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (141.211.164.18) in /pub/CuD/
- aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
- EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud/ (Finland)
- nic.funet.fi
- 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: 12 Mar 94 08:24:31 EST
- From: David Johnson <worldwid@uunet.uu.net>
- Subject: Staying sInformed of Security Resources
-
- STAYING INFORMED: Resources for Privacy Seekers & Computer Security
- Buffs
-
- by David Johnson
-
- (Copyright 1994 under the International & Pan-American Copyright
- Conventions)
-
- Having conducted various types of security and investigative work that
- has taken me to ten Asian countries, I am quite familiar with various
- obstacles one must hurdle to obtain hard-to-find and elusive data.
-
- Even though our computers are valuable tools, adopting a multi-faceted
- approach to information gathering is the most effective way to cover
- all the angles.
-
- Use this listing to build your own private intelligence network.
-
- COMPUTER SECURITY PUBLICATIONS PRIVACY-RELATED PUBLICATIONS
-
-
- Auerbach Data Security Management Full Disclosure Magazine
- Information Systems Security Box 244
- Lowell, MI 49331 USA
- 210 South St. Voice: (800) 633-3274
- Boston, MA 02111 USA Voice: (616) 897-7222
- Voice: (800) 950-1218 Fax: (515) 897-0705
- Voice: (212) 971-5000
- Fax: (617) 423-2026
-
- International Privacy Bulletin
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave., S.E.
- Computer Security, Auditing & Controls Washington, DC 20003 USA
- 57 Greylock Rd.
- Box 81151
- Wellesley Hills, MA 02181 USA
- Voice: (617) 235-2895 Privacy and Security 2001
- 504 Shaw Rd., #222
- Sterling, VA 20166 USA
- Voice: (800) US-DEBUG
- Computer Audit Update Voice: (703) 318-8600
- Computer Fraud & Security Update Fax: (703) 318-8223
- Computer Law & Security Report
- Computers & Security
-
- Crown House, Linton Rd., Barking Privacy Journal
- Essex I611 8JU, England Box 28577
- Voice: (44) 81-5945942 Providence, RI 02908 USA
- Fax: (44) 81-5945942 Voice: (401) 274-7861
- Telex: 896950 APPSCI G
-
- (North American distributor)
- Box 882 Privacy Laws and Business
- New York, NY 10159 USA Box 23
- Voice: (212) 989-5800 7400 GA, Deventer, Netherlands
- Voice: (31) 57-0033155
- Fax: (31) 57-0022244
- Telex: 49295 KLUDV NL
- Computer Control Quarterly
- 1 Southbank Blvd., Level 8 (North American Distriubtor)
- S. Melbourne, Vic. 3205, Australia 6 Bigelow St.
- Voice: (03) 6121666 Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
- Fax: (03) 6295609 Voice: (617) 354-0140
-
-
- Computer Security Alert
- Computer Security Journal Privacy Times
- Box 21501
- 600 Harrison St. Washington, DC 20009 USA
- San Francisco, CA 94107 USA Voice: (202) 829-3660
- Voice: (415) 905-2370 Fax: (202) 829-3653
- Fax: (415) 905-2234
-
-
- COMPUTER SECURITY ORGANIZATIONS
- Computer Security Digest
- 150 N. Main St. Center for Computer Law
- Plymouth, MI 48170 USA 1112 Ocean Dr.
- Voice: (313) 459-8787 Manhattan Beach, CA 90266 USA
- Fax: (313) 459-2720 Voice: (213) 372-0198
-
- Computing & Communications Computer Security Institute
- (Law & Protection Report) 360 Church St.
- Box 5323 Northborough, MA 01532 USA
- Madison, WI 53705 USA Voice: (617) 393-2600
- Voice: (608) 271-6768
-
-
- Info Systems Security Assn.
- Data Security Manual Box 71926
- Box 322 Los Angeles, CA 90071 USA
- 3300 AA Dordrecht, Netherlands
- Voice: (31) 78-524400
- Voice: (31) 78-334911
- Fax: (31) 78-334254 Nat'l Center for Computer
- Telex: 29245 KAPG Crime Data
- 4053 JFK Library - CSULA
- (North American Distributor) 5151 State University Drive
- Box 358 Los Angeles, CA 90032 USA
- Hingham, MA 02018 USA Voice: (213) 225-1364
- Voice: (617) 871-6600
- PRIVACY-RELATED RESOURCES
- Information Systems Security Monitor
- U.S. Department of Treasury Worldwide Consultants
- Bureau of the Public Debt 2421 W. Pratt Blvd., #971
- AIS Security Branch Chicago, IL 60645 USA
- 200 3rd St. Voice: (800) 316-0801
- Parkersburg, WV 26101 USA (financial & personal privacy)
- Voice: (304) 480-6355
- BBS: (304) 480-6083
-
- Eden Press
- Box 8410
-
- InfoSecurity News Fountain Valley, CA 92728 USA
-
- 498 Concord St. Voice: (714) 556-2023
- Framingham, MA 01701 USA Fax: (714) 556-0721
- Fax: (508) 872-1153 (various books on privacy)
-
-
-
- Journal of Computer Security Consumertronics
- Drawer 537
- Van Diemenstraat 94 Alamagordo, NM 88310 USA
- 1013 CN Amsterdam, Netherlands Voice: (505)434-1778
- Voice: (31) 20-6382189 Fax: (505) 434-0234
- Fax: (31) 20-6203419 (technical invasion manuals)
-
- (North American distributor)
- Box 10558
- Burke, VA 22009 USA Privacy Hotline (800) 773-7748
- Voice: (703) 323-5554 (California only) 10am-3pm, M-F
-
- ******************************************************************************
- David Johnson International Researcher
- (San Jose, Costa Rica) Security Consultant
- E-mail: worldwid@uunet.uu.net Privacy Advocate
- ******************************************************************************
-
- *Note: The author welcomes questions, comments and ongoing correspondence on
- all topics relevant to privacy protection, espionage, and terrorism.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Mar 1994 21:59:30 -0500
- From: Gino Filicetti <death@TERRANET.CTS.COM>
- Subject: New E-Zine -- "Loud Lyrix"
-
- This is an ad for a brand new electronic 'zine now available on
- the Internet. Just send a message to the address below to be included
- on the mailing list.
-
- Internet: death@terranet.cts.com
- UUCP: generic!terranet!zoo.toronto.edu!death
-
- Editor-in-Chief: Death Incarnate (Gino Filicetti)
- Publisher: Death Incarnate (Gino Filicetti)
- Distributor: Death Incarnate (Gino Filicetti)
- Mailing Program: NONE! Everything is done by hand.
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- Loud Lyrix is a weekly publication dedicated to the spread of heavy
- metal lyrics throughout the world. Subscriptions are available
- at no cost electronically. Five to Ten songs are published every
- Tuesday. Along with the lyrics, a section of the zine is devoted to
- reactions of subscribers to previously posted songs. All subscribers
- are urged to send in lyrics from their own favorite bands for
- publication. All requests, submissions or comments must be sent to
- the above address.
-
- OUR PHILOSOPHY
-
- We here at Loud Lyrix believe that the true meaning of a song can only
- make itself known through the song's lyrics. It is for this reason
- that Loud Lyrix exists, we are committed to delivering all the best
- lyrics of heavy metal songs to Cyber-bangers around the globe. Long
- live metal!
-
- Join up now! To the fastest growing 'zine on the 'net!
-
- -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~M
- < !@# Death #@! | Msg Co-SoP: The Shadow's Lair [9o5] 569-1025 >~M
- < #@! Incarnate !@# | Internet Address: death@terranet.cts.com >~M
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 07 Mar 94 01:07:58 EST
- From: george c smith <70743.1711@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: Village Voice & Phlogiston
-
- "Village Voice Perfects Phlogiston Synthesis in Coverage of
- Cyberspace"
-
- by Mr. Badger (Andy Lopez)
-
- There are some things in life that must be seen in order to be fully
- understood.
-
- The December 21, 1993 Village Voice is a case in point. However, as
- old Voices aren't normally found outside of fish markets, here's an
- attempt to reproduce the lead to the cover story [republished in CuD
- 6.21] in that issue:
-
-
- R A P E
- I N C Y B E R S P A C E
- A TALE OF CRIME AND
- PUNISHMENT ON-LINE
- BY JULIAN DIBBELL (P. 36)
-
- With the first two lines in red, it was a cover that jumped off the
- flat of newspapers. The blurb under the directory of contents was the
- epitome of hard-hitting journalism:
-
- A Rape In Cyperspace
- The story of a man named Mr. Bungle, and how the ghostly
- sexual violence he committed in a digital otherworld
- challenged an on-line community to define itself.
- Julian Dibbell....................................... 36
-
-
- It only gets better.
-
- "They say he raped them that night. They say he did it with a cunning
- little doll, fashioned in their image and imbued with the power to
- make them do whatever he desired. They say that by manipulating the
- doll he forced them to have sex with him, with each other, and to do
- horrible, brutal things to their own bodies. And though I wasn't
- there that night, I can assure you that what they say is true, because
- it all happened right in the living room . . . of a house I've come to
- think of as my second home."
-
- I really would like to reprint more of the story, let you figure out
- what's going on, and have the same horse-laugh I did. But, in the
- interest of fair use and the desire to keep this to a reasonable size,
- let's abbreviate. The author, Julian Dibbell, has been a frequent
- user of the LambdaMOO, a MUD run inside of Xerox's Palo Alto research
- computer.
-
- For the blissfully ignorant, a MUD is a Multi-User Dungeon, a
- glorified electronic role-playing program. On MUDs such as LambdaMOO,
- you can choose your name and appearance and _interact_ <gag> in a
- digitized world with other characters. Personally, I find them
- identical to the old-fashioned, word-based role-playing games - such
- as the Dungeons & Dragons abomination - only more boring and
- repetitive.
-
- In this particular case, "Mr. Bungle" chose to use a sub-program in
- the MUD to write some foul things. So the user that created
- "Starsinger" suddenly saw the following flow across the computer
- screen:
-
- "As if against her will, Starsinger jabs a steak knife up her ass,
- causing immense joy. You hear Mr. Bungle laughing evilly in the
- distance."
-
- Other graphic sentences follow containing descriptions of other
- characters involved in graphic acts.
-
- What followed can only be understood if you accept that the game is a
- reality, of sorts, for most of its users. Unlike kindergarten, where
- the teacher would simply say that Johnny had been a bad boy and
- couldn't play anymore, these actions spawned an ongoing argument about
- justice in cyberspace. Oh, they weren't totally bonkers. No one
- accused Mr. Bungle of actual rape. But most felt he was guilty of
- more than crass behavior. Dibbell ascribes the deep feelings raised
- by the incident as . . . ah, heck, here's his explanation:
-
- "Netsex, tiny-sex, virtual sex - however you name it, in real-life
- reality it's nothing more than a 900-line encounter stripped of even
- the vestigial physicality of the voice. And yet, as any but the most
- inhibited newbie can tell you, it's possibly the headiest experience
- the very heady world of MUDs has to offer . . . Small wonder, then,
- that a newbie's first taste of MUD sex is often also the first time
- she or he surrenders wholly to the slippery terms of MUDish ontology,
- recognizing in a full-bodied way that what happens in a MUD-made world
- is neither exactly real nor exactly make-believe, but profoundly,
- compellingly, and emotionally meaningful."
-
- [Really incredible. Dibbell almost seems to be saying that the MUD
- means so much to people because it's a way to get off. I stand
- amazed.]
-
- You might think that the offended parties simply arranged to have the
- offender kicked off the system, but that would be forgetting just how
- much the users believe in this little play world. Users with high
- enough access to delete Mr. Bungle's account were reluctant to do so,
- because in the past such approaches have caused more user complaints
- than they resolved. In short, those who ran the game didn't want to
- ruin it by taking drastic action and those who played the game wanted
- the user removed. Well, most of them.
-
- This being cyberspace, there were conflicting views.
-
- Why didn't the other users simply use the command that would have
- blotted Mr. Bungle's messages from their screens? Was it really that
- serious anyway?
-
- Where does the body stop and the mind begin? What is the nature of
- reality? The arguments were going in circles during an extended
- meeting of up to thirty - count 'em, thirty - users. In the middle of
- the online babble, Mr. Bungle appeared and offered his defense: He
- was simply experimenting with users' reactions to extreme events. In
- Dibbell's view, this marked Mr. Bungle as a virtual sociopath. You
- can be rude, you can be snide, but the game is to be taken seriously,
- dammit!
-
- In the end, Mr. Bungle's account was deleted [surprise, surprise].
- What followed was the institutionalization of a process whereby users
- could have more input into controlling the MUD. To cap things, Mr.
- Bungle reincarnated as a new, chastened character.
-
- Dibbell draws flabbergasting conclusions about the future of society
- and he writes about it in this prose:
-
- " . . . the commands you type into a computer are a kind of speech
- that doesn't so much communicate as _make_things_happen_, directly and
- ineluctably, the same way pulling a trigger does. They are
- incantations, in other words, and anyone attuned to the techno-social
- megatrends of the moment - from the growing dependence of economies on
- the global flow of intensely fetishized words and numbers to the
- burgeoning ability of bioengineers to speak the spells written in the
- four-letter text of DNA - knows that the logic of the incantation is
- rapidly permeating the fabric of our lives."
-
- Just what is needed! Cyberspace is already filled with shysters,
- hucksters, idiots, and clowns. Now we start collecting animists.
-
-
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 17 Mar 1994 09:51:06 -0700 (MST)
- From: jeffj@NIS5.LANL.GOV(Jeffrey Johnson)
- Subject: New Gopher Service Available
-
- Now available!
- ----------------------------------
-
- We are now running our own gopher server to facilitate easy access to
- group information. Currently, there are plans to make the following
- available:
-
- Searchable abstracts of group publications
- Foreign travel reports
- A searchable listing of group email addresses
- Pointers to other handy LANL services
-
- At the moment you will not find much information published, but we're
- hoping that that will change. If you have any suggestions about what
- should be published, please let me know by sending email to
- jeffj@nis5.lanl.gov. Keep in mind that published information can be text-
- only and that it must be non-sensitive information only. For the moment,
- the information on our server can be read by anyone on the Internet.
- Graphics and sound files can also be distributed over the network, but no
- mixture of the three is yet possible. A World Wide Web server is coming
- soon, which will allow us greater flexibility in what we can publish on
- the network.
-
- Access through the LANL Server:
- +-------------------------------
- 1. Start your gopher software - it should automatically connect to
- the main LANL gopher server. (TurboGopher for Macs, HGopher for
- PC's running Windows)
- 2. Select 'Information by Division'
- 3. Select 'Nonproliferation and International Security'
- 4. Select 'NIS-5 Information'
-
- You should now be connected to the NIS-5 Gopher server. Feel free to
- explore. The 'Information by Division' section under the main LANL server
- also contains pointers to all current laboratory Gopher and World Wide Web
- servers, so this is a good place to find information about other groups
- who run servers.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 18 Mar 94 19:19:55 EST
- From: shadow@VORTEX.ITHACA.NY.US(bruce edwards)
- Subject: Opposing Clipper is "paranoia" with good Reason
-
- Ah, the clipper chip! Foiler of despots, nabber of drug demons,
- bane to every criminal! If we just can get the clipper and its
- extended family up and running, all will be well in the land of the
- free!
-
- The NSA, the FBI, and who knows what other acronymonous agencies
- tell us that all we need do, is to trust them! Swell. If there were
- a push to install TV monitors in all our bedrooms, with the same sworn
- proviso that the circuit would never be turned on unless there was a
- warrant, and with separate organizations (say, the ATF and the Moral
- Majority) holding the keys, we would all rise and recite the pledge of
- allegiance, I'm sure.
-
- I've made somewhat of a study of crime and criminals. There are a
- few smart criminals, who are rarely caught, and many stupid criminals,
- who are frequently caught. The majority of either will *never* think
- of, or be bothered with, encryption, and the clipper will have zero
- bearing on their activities or apprehension. Its existence will make
- no difference at all. The very smart ones may use PGP or something
- else, and again, clipper will be meaningless. Rogue governments? I
- am sure clipper gives Saddam sleepless nights as he ponders how to
- beat it! Because it will probably prove constitutionally impossible
- to outlaw widespread private encryption -- something big brother finds
- hard to swallow -- the clipper/encryption push seems to me to be about
- another kettle of sharks.
-
- In my opinion (and this I am sure is obvious to most everyone) the
- encryption, bugging-port, e-mail reading agenda pursued by government
- is no more than the first icy finger of the Empire, encircling the
- throat of cyberspace. The reality of an unfettered communications
- avenue accessed not just by a few cyberfreaks, but the great-unwashed
- as well, is just tooooo threatening to let go. Resist control. Leave
- the memes free to propagate and thrive, or die, as they deserve, not
- as the minders decide.
-
- While clipper does hurt US technology, for reasons clearly
- elucidated here, there, and everywhere, it really will have little
- direct effect on the rest of us. Its *indirect* effect is where the
- poison begins seeping in. It is the intended beach head of a general
- assault on cyberliberty that, if established, will be most difficult
- to repel! Act now, act forcefully, act intelligently, act while the
- trolls are still in the boats. When informed about clipper, polls
- indicate that folks are dramatically opposed to its idea. By the time
- this thing hits congressional hearings (and it surely will) the
- propaganda will be flying, thick and heavy. We need to be there
- first. Talk. Write newspapers and legislators. Call radio and TV
- shows. Respond on the net to cyberlib.org requests. Shoot this
- mother down before it breeds!
-
- ********
-
- Paranoid? You bet! Without reason? I don't think so ... Do you?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 16 Mar 1994 16:45:41 -0800
- From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: Access bills need support;capitol email-faxes;FEC online
-
- Mar.16, 1994
-
- FOUR CALIF ASSEMBLY BILLS WOULD OPEN & ASSURE ELECTRONIC PUBLIC ACCESS
-
- AB 2547 mandates that records specified in AB 1624 are public records.
- There was some question last year whether the codes were considered
- a public record. This is an especially important bill to those
- people who use the electronic access to legislative data. [AB 1624
- mandated that all public legislative records, state stautes and state
- constitution be available via the Internet without state charge.]
-
- AB 2524 mandates public electronic access to public records if
- the agency maintains such records in electronic format. The
- agencies are not required to put the data in electronic format
- nor are they required to buy equipment nor "translate" data to
- meet any special needs of the requestor. Whatever format the
- agency has the data is the format that should be made available
- to the public. Allows the agency to charge for the media on
- which the data is provided, just as they can for the paper copies.
- [Various agencies have refused to provide computerized copies of
- their computerized public records, offering only paper copies to
- meet the requirements of the current California Public Records Act.]
-
- AB 2525 makes those documents in which an agency states its position
- on pending legislation a public record, whether they are sent
- to a legislator or to the Governor. [The enrolled bill report is
- not a public record. The enrolled bill report is the final
- analysis on a bill done by the Gov's Dept. of Finance. Last year,
- DOF estimated a cost of $300,000 for implementing AB 1624. Bowen
- explained that their analysis was based on a merely-similar ballot
- initiative authored by UWSA, not AB 1624. Luckily, the Governor
- signed the bill anyway, but could have easily vetoed it on the false
- cost estimates contained in the non-public DOF report.]
-
- AB 2523 networks all state agencies and the judiciary and
- provides public access via network to public records.
-
- Support is needed ASAP. Opposition is expected on at least AB 2524
- and AB 2523, the latter due to cost.
-
- If you have questions, please call Bowen's aide, Mary Winkley, at
- 916-445-8528. All the bills except AB 2523 were scheduled for
- March 15 in the Assembly Governmental Organization Committee.
- AB 2523 was scheduled for March 16 in the Assembly Consumer
- Protection Committee, with other committee hearings to follow.
-
- Send supporting letters and faxes to:
- Hon. Debra Bowen, Assembly Member
- State Capitol, Room 3126
- Sacramento CA 95814
- fax/916-327-2201.
- They will make sure they don't get, uh, "lost," and will
- distribute them to the members of the committees.
-
- [My apologies for not getting this out sooner. *Too* much to do. :-( -jim]
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- ASK LEGISLATORS/STAFF TO TELL LOBBYISTS THEY WANT TO ACCESS TESTIMONY ONLINE
- From masinter@parc.xerox.com Mon Feb 28 20:41:11 1994
- From: Larry Masinter <masinter@parc.xerox.com>
-
- If you can get legislative staff assistants and legislative librarians
- to announce that they prefer to access `information that is online and
- available to the public', it might encourage various lobbying
- organizations to mount their own information online for the general
- public to access. I wouldn't mind having a Common Cause, American
- Cancer Society, and Tobacco Institute all trying to reach the public
- with their own web or gopher services.
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- FREELY FAX YOUR E-MAIL TO DECISION-MAKERS IN WASHINGTON DC
- From argek@dbserv2.teale.ca.gov Wed Mar 2 11:11:54 1994
- From: argek@dbserv2.teale.ca.gov (Gerald J. Klaas)
-
- GovAccess readers may be interested in an experiment going at town.hall.org.
- They have created an e-mail to FAX gateway that is operating in Washington DC.
- (and some other places:
- > - all of Australia (+61)
- > - Washington, DC (+1-202)
- > - most of Silicon Valley (+1-408, +1-415, +1-510)
- > - parts of Riverside, California (+1-818, +1-909)
- > - the University of Michigan (+1-313) )
-
- If anyone has a list of FAX numbers for representatives in Washington, I'd
- sure like to get a copy!
-
- For a copy of the FAQ regarding this experiment, send mail to
- tpc-faq@town.hall.org.
-
- Gerald | |
- ...... __o | BurmaShave |
- ..... _`\<,_ |____________|
- argek@dbserv2.teale.ca.gov______________________(*)/_(*)______|________|__
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- FREELY FAX YOUR E-MAIL TO DECISION-MAKERS IN SACRAMENTO CA
- From rgm!rabbit!gklaas@netcom.com Fri Feb 25 14:43:19 1994
- From: gklaas@rabbit.rgm.com (Gerald Klaas)
- Organization: Rabbit's Lincoln Burrow Sacramento, CA
- -
- I have created an e-mail to FAX gateway here in Sacramento.
- It runs on my home PC at night (during otherwise idle time)
- and is connected to the Internet by UUCP. Some of your
- GovAccess subscribers may be interested in using this gateway
- to "e-mail" State legislators here in the Capitol City, and
- are welcome to give it a try. (Disclaimer: No guarantees here,
- this is just a hobby.)
- -
- Anyone interested may get more information by sending e-mail
- To: request@rabbit.rgm.com
- Subject: 052
- -
- BTW: I have a list of FAX numbers available also.
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- ONLINE LEGISLATIVE-INFORMATION ACCESS IN ACTION
- From leita@netcom.com Tue Mar 1 19:43:27 1994
- > At work, two weeks ago, I got a call from a Berkely patron wanting to
- > know if we had a copy of a certain, recently passed bill having to do
- > with the funeral business. He had the number of the bill. I logged
- > onto the internet via our class account, gophered to UC Santa Cruz,
- > found, downloaded, and printed out the bill to leave for the patron - an
- > employee of a local funeral home - to pick up on his lunch hour. Took 5
- > minutes!
- --
- Carole Leita leita@netcom.com
- Reference Librarian, Berkeley Public Library
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- FEDERAL ELECTIONS COMMISSION SEEKS TO FURTHER ONLINE ACCESS
- From bkoball@well.sf.ca.us Fri Feb 25 10:16:23 1994
- From: Bruce R Koball <bkoball@well.sf.ca.us>
-
- Did you see this:
-
- > FEC ON-LINE. The FEC is asking Congress for $1.5 million in fiscal 1995 to
- > set up an on-line system for tracking how political candidates raise and
- > spend their donations. (Tampa Tribune 2/22/94 A2)
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- ADMINISTRIVIA CREDIT DUE: CHONGO SPOKE; JIMMIE LISTENED
- From chongo@ncd.com Mon Feb 28 20:11:44 1994
- From: chongo@ncd.com (Landon Curt Noll)
-
- First, I appreciate the GovAccess messages that you have been sending me
- on a regular basis. They are often both useful and interesting.
-
- I do have a recomendation that you might want to consider. I suggest that
- you add mode whitespace to your messages. This will make it easier to read.
-
- &&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&
-
- "Politics is not the art of the possible. It consists in choosing between
- the disastrous and the unpalatable." -- John Kenneth Galbraith
- [sent by ppjc@igc.apc.org <Paul George>]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 7 Feb 1994 15:05-0500
- From: The White House <75300.3115@COMPUSERVE.COM>
- Subject: 1994-02-07 United States FY95 Budget in Electronic Format
-
- THE BUDGET OF THE UNITED STATES
- NOW IN ELECTRONIC FORMAT
- Background
-
- The U.S. Department of Commerce in cooperation with the Office of
- Management and Budget(OMB) will produce the Budget of the United
- States Government, Fiscal Year 1995 in electronic format using
- compact disc-read only memory (CD-ROM) and on-line computer
- delivery methods. This marks the first time the entire budget
- has been available to the public in electronic format. Budget
- analysts, public policy researchers, state and local governments,
- libraries, and other members of the public will find the
- electronic version to be a useful addition and versatile
- alternative to the printed version of the budget. Users will be
- able to display exact images of the printed budget, search for
- the occurrence of keywords within the text, and copy or print
- desired portions of the text for further reference or use. And,
- the same documents will be accessible on personal computers
- running three popular operating systems -- MS-DOS, Windows, and
- Apple Macintosh -- thereby making this information available to
- the vast majority of personal computer users.
-
- Tentative talks on producing an electronic version of the federal
- budget were first conducted between technical staff at OMB and
- Commerce's Office of Business Analysis (OBA) in December, 1993.
- Several factors made this effort feasible. First, commercial
- software products became available in 1993 that facilitate the
- electronic transfer or delivery of finished documents. Creators
- of highly formatted documents originally intended for print
- distribution could now distribute electronic copies of the same
- documents with the original print format characters intact.
- Recipients of the electronic documents could see exact replicas
- of the original formatted text on their computers without the
- need to own a copy of the software that originally created the
- document. These programs greatly facilitate the creation of
- electronic catalogs, books, and other large information
- collections where formatted text is important.
-
- Second, OMB uses electronic text composition software that
- creates PostScript formatted output that is used by the
- Government Printing Office to produce the printed version of the
- budget. One portable document delivery software product , Adobe
- Acrobat uses PostScript formatted documents as the input to
- create Portable Document Format (PDF) files, which may be read by
- low-cost readers also distributed by Adobe. Given that the
- original budget documents are already in PostScript format, it is
- a relatively simple matter to convert them to PDF format and
- distribute them in electronic form.
-
- Third, the proper mix of skills and services existed on the
- Commerce/OMB team to bring this project to completion in a very
- tight time frame; this project was conceived, implemented, and
- delivered in 50 days. OMB prepared the budget in the proper
- format and acquired and learned to use the Acrobat software
- necessary to create the PDF files. OBA had significant
- experience in producing CD-ROM titles and offering information
- through other electronic distribution channels such as dial-up
- bulletin boards and the Internet, had staff in place to produce
- the budget CD-ROM quickly, was prepared to offer telephone
- ordering to ensure prompt delivery to the public, and could
- provide customer support.
-
- Finally, the new spirit of the federal government encourages
- agencies to take advantage of electronic tools to broaden access
- to federal information. New innovative methods to deliver
- government services to the citizen at low cost both to the
- government and the recipient are actively encouraged. The
- Commerce Department is taking a lead role in this endeavor. In
- short, the technical and organizational chemistry was just right
- to ensure success of this project.
-
- Electronic Versions of the Budget
-
- CD-ROM
-
- The CD-ROM versions of the Budget of the United States
- Government, Fiscal Year 1995 will be available to the public at
- the same time the printed budget is submitted to the Congress by
- President Clinton. The CD-ROM will contain exact page-image
- replicas of the same documents submitted to Congress. These
- include:
-
- o Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 1995
- o Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 1995,
- Analytical Perspectives
- o Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 1995,
- Historical Tables
- o Budget System and Concepts of the United States Government
-
- The Budget CD-ROM will be available for order from the Department
- of Commerce after official release for $30.00, $24 less than the
- comparable printed volumes. Discs will be available for pickup,
- by first class mail, and via overnight delivery ($10 additional.)
- The CD-ROM will include the budget documents as well as copies of
- the Adobe Acrobat Reader for MS-DOS and Windows operating
- systems. A set of diskettes containing the Acrobat Reader will
- be supplied to users of Macintosh computers.
-
- A supplemental volume, the Budget of the United States
- Government, Fiscal Year 1995, Appendix contains the detailed
- budget submissions for each agency. It will be transmitted to
- Congress later in February and will not appear on the Budget CD-
- ROM. However, the complete Budget including the Appendix will
- appear on the February 1994 issue of Commerce's National
- Economic, Social, and Environmental Data Bank (NESE-DB) CD-ROM
- which will be available in late February. In addition to the
- Budget, NESE-DB will contain PDF images of current Internal
- Revenue Service tax forms which may be reproduced exactly as the
- original printed forms and over 100,000 documents containing a
- core set of economic, social and environmental data. Information
- on the NESE-DB covers issues of widespread public interest such
- as Vice President Gore's National Performance Review and the
- Administration's proposed Health Care Reform legislation.
-
- o NESE-DB is published quarterly in the months of February, May,
- August, and November. Single issues are available for $95, an
- annual subscription costs $360. Purchasers of the original
- Budget CD-ROM will be given full credit for their original
- order and may obtain the February issue of NESE-DB for the
- discounted price of $65. Customers must mention they
- purchased the Budget CD-ROM when ordering the NESE-DB to
- obtain the discount.
-
- NESE-DB is also available for free public access in 960 federal
- depository libraries located throughout the Nation.
-
- Dial-up Bulletin Board
-
- ASCII versions of the Budget documents will be available on the
- Commerce Department's Economic Bulletin Board (EBB) shortly after
- official release to the public. PDF and ASCII versions of the
- Budget Appendix will be added to the bulletin board when they are
- released by OMB. There will be no charge for obtaining Budget
- documents via the Economic Bulletin Board. The EBB may be
- accessed using a personal computer and modem by calling:
-
- 2400 BPS : 1-202-482-3870 (N81)
- 9600 BPS: 1-202-482-2167 (N81)
-
- Users accessing the PDF versions of the Budget via the EBB must
- supply their own copy of software capable of reading PDF files.
-
- Internet
-
- Free access to the Budget documents in PDF and ASCII forms will
- also be available via the Internet. The Internet version of the
- EBB may be accessed by using the command
-
- telnet ebb.stat-usa
-
- These files will also be available for gopher access by issuing
- the command.
-
- gopher gopher.esa.doc.gov
-
- As in the case of the EBB users accessing the PDF versions of the
- Budget via the Internet must supply their own copy of software
- capable of reading PDF files.
-
-
-
- How to contact us:
-
- To order Budget and NESE-DB CD-ROMs:1-800-STAT-USA (1-800-782-
- 8872)
- For technical assistance:1-202-482-1986
- Fax orders:1-202-482-2164
-
- Electronic mail:tac@esa.doc.gov
-
- or write to:
-
- Office of Business Analysis
- Room H4885
- U.S. Department of Commerce
- Washington, DC 20230
-
- Technical contacts
-
- Ken Rogers (202) 482-0434
- Paul Christy (202) 482-0123
-
- Adobe, PostScript, and Acrobat are registered trademarks of Adobe
- Systems, Incorporated.
- Apple and Macintosh are registered trademarks of Apple Computer,
- Incorporated
- Windows and MS-DOS are trademarks of Microsoft Corporation.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #6.26
-