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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun June 12, 1994 Volume 6 : Issue 52
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Retiring Shadow Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Copy Dittoer: Etaoian Shrdlu
-
- CONTENTS, #6.52 (Sun, June 12, 1994)
-
- File 1--Reply to FBI "crimes against the court" (AABBS/CuD 6.45)
- File 2--Peacelink Italia urges help!
- File 3--Update on EF-Ireland (fwd)
- File 4--CFP: WORKSHOP ON LAW AND TECHNOLOGY
- File 5--URGENT: Please Tell Congress to Allow Encryption Export
- File 6--GovAccess.041: CIVICNET '94 Symposium, Jun.17 (Fri) [update]
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
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-
- 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.
-
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-
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-
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-
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-
- 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
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- 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
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- violate copyright protections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 9 Jun 94 17:46:32 PDT
- From: hkhenson@CUP.PORTAL.COM
- Subject: File 1--Reply to FBI "crimes against the court" (AABBS/CuD 6.45)
-
- In CuD 6.45 The Advocate <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com> replied to my
- posting in CuD 6.43 about reporting to an FBI agent serious crimes
- against the court,
-
- >You must be talking to a very junior FBI agent.
-
- 20 year vet.
-
- >because there are
- >lots of ways to remedy this problem. First, presentation of the
- >evidence to the clerk of the court.
-
- This *was* the very first thing we did, I gave *the* clerk of the
- court a copy of the original letter of complaint, along with a copy of
- it to give to the chief judge. Near as we can determine, the clerks
- just toss such letters. They deny any ability to do any kind of
- investigation, and will not even tell you if a letter actually was
- seen by a judge!
-
- >They can send the information to
- >the judge, who can convene a contempt hearing, and have information
- >developed by US Marshals, the FBI under order and release of US
- >Attorneys files. The Judge can also complain to the justice dept
- >office of professional responsibility or the Public Integrity Section
- >of the Criminal Division or The Inspector General of the DOJ.
-
- Two of the judges (Brazil and Caufield) deny that they have any power
- to bring about any kind of investigation.
-
- >The evidence can also be presented to the Chief judge of the district,
- >and these old men are not to be messed with. They are life Lords of
- >the bench, and unlikely to Like a political appointee of the Clinton
- >administration acting out of line.
-
- I tend to agree with you here, but I know of several other cases where
- judges were kept in the dark--one was kept from knowing that a case
- had even been assigned to him. The problem is how to get your message
- through the very good flappers. *I* tried to give a letter to a judge
- in open court and failed to get it to her. Any suggestions or help
- would be very helpful. Does anyone know someone with an email address
- who can call up and talk to a judge?
-
- >The third course is to call the Congressional over-sight commission.
-
- Good thought--I wonder if Don Edwards has enough energy left to take
- this one on? (However, I would bet I get the brushoff.)
-
- >They can have the GAO investigate as well as hold hearings, and
- >wouldn't the republican senators like to stick it to Janet Reno.
-
- I kind of doubt republicans would be interested since every one of the
- people involved are them. But I would be very happy to forward the
- lot of this stuff (by postal mail even) if anyone has an address I
- should send it to.
-
- >The fourth course is to send the information to Jack Anderson. he's
- >always good for a red hot pin to the eyeball.
-
- Excellent idea! Does Anderson have a net address?
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 10 Jun 1994 14:11:20 -0700
- From: Bernardo Parrella <berny@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: File 2--Peacelink Italia urges help!
-
- ALERT! PEACELINK ITALIA URGES HELP!
-
- Twenty-four days after the first major crackdown on Fidonet Italia BBSes, on
- Friday June 3, the Taranto Finance Police visited Taras Communications BBS,
- the main National Peacelink node and data-bank. Acting after a warrant
- issued by the Prosecutor of the same city, Giovanni Pugliese and his
- wife were charged for the possession of "illegally copied software and
- electronic equipment suitable to falsification." After searching their
- apartment for more than 5 hours (from 5 pm to 10.30 pm), Finance
- officials sealed off the PC and the modem running the BBS and seized
- bank-account receipts and 174 floppy disks - leaving behind the
- monitor. Because the Taranto node hosts most of the network archives
- and all the email traffic, at the moment the entire national Peacelink
- net is down.
-
- "Taras Communications BBS has never had anything to do with software
- piracy and is well know for its activities related to humanitarian,
- social and community issues," Giovanni Pugliese said. "Peacelink and
- its sister Fidonet Italia network had always pursued a very
- restrictive policy against any illegally copied software on their
- systems. Because Taras Communications BBS is the main National node of
- Peacelink network, its forced closure, hopefully very short, will
- result in a great damage for those hundreds of people - ranging from
- journalists to simple citizens - that were widely relying upon its
- everyday services."
-
- With more than 30 nodes throughout the country, several Fidonet
- gateways, and a project currently underway to connect directly to
- Comlink and the other APC Networks via the Bolzano node, Peacelink is
- completely dedicated to peace-actions, human rights and ecology
- issues. Founded in1992 as a specialized conference of Fidonet Italia
- network, Peacelink became quickly independent and well known even
- outside Italy. Recently the network hosted a national conference on
- peace-related matters, becoming also the only communication link for
- people in the former-Yugoslavia and the outside world. Peacelink was
- also working to put online a daily newspaper, "I Siciliani", focused
- on issues related to social problems of southern and insular parts of
- the country.
-
- The first phase of the crackdown (May 11-13) targeted Fidonet Italia
- network in several cities in the northern and cental regions of Italy.
- The Pesaro prosecutor, managing the biggest brach of the nationwide
- operation, ordered the searching of 119 BBSes and the closure of
- dozens of them - charging two people with software piracy. Another
- branch of the investigation, run by the Torino Finance Police, claimed
- a seizure "for a value of more than 4 billion of Italian lire (about
- US $2,5 million), including 17 personal computers; 13,690 floppy disks
- of illegally copied software," dozens of modems and electronic
- devices. Fourteen people in Torino and Terni were charged with
- "conspiracy with unknown for the crime of software piracy" - but no
- arrests were made.
-
- The new raid in Taranto occurred when sysops, users, media and
- citizens started working together to understand the real sense of such
- an operation. Several articles appeared (including BITMagazine,
- CommodoreGazette, L'Unita', La Repubblica), radio programs were aired
- (Radio Citta' Futura, Roma, Nova Radio, Firenze, Radio Popolare,
- Milano), public meetings are forthcoming (in Roma on June 27 and
- Pesaro on June 30), with politicians closely watching the events.
- Also, in the last few days the Pesaro judges ordered the first
- restitutions of the seized materials: about 20 sysops got back their
- computers and floppy disks (copied and under verification by
- investigators), while trials are under schedule.
-
- "Although rumours said that Peacelink was under inquiry since two
- years ago, just weeks before the assassination of anti-mafia judge
- Falcone, we didn't pay any attention to those voices," Alessandro
- Marescotti (Peacelink National coordinator) said. "I was wrong: the
- current raid against our main node and data-bank clearly shows that in
- our country someone has interest to shut down one of the very few
- organizations openly working against racism, war and mafia actions.
- Peacelink is dumb now, and so are the hundreds of volunteers,
- activists, journalists, citizens using its free services to make real
- changes in our society."
-
- Last week I posted the story about the new raid in Italy targeting the
- main Peacelink node, Taras Communication BBS in Taranto.
-
- Because, despite many efforts, at the moment Taras Communications is
- still dumb, Peacelink Italia decided to launch an urgent request of
- help to the International community.
-
- Peacelink is launching an urgent appeal to the International community
- to help its main node to be online again as soon as possible.
-
- The request is for a donation of the minimum indispensabile equipment:
-
- - one PC 486 (8MB RAM, 380 MB Hard Disk);
- - one modem (external, 38,400 bps, USRobotics or equivalent).
-
- Thank you very much.
-
- Peacelink - C.P. 2009 - 74100 Taranto - Italy
-
- Alessandro Marescotti: tel. (++39) 99-303.686; fax (++39) 99-459.5912
-
- Giovanni Pugliese: tel. (++39) 99-474.5147; fax (++39) 99-452.8463
-
- For better coordination, please contact:
-
- Bernardo Parrella - 1172 24th Street - Oakland, CA 94607 - USA
- tel. 510.444.8542 - fax 510.419.0546 - email: <berny@well.sf.ca.us>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 1 Jun 1994 17:31:24 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 3--Update on EF-Ireland (fwd)
-
- [Note: this is an informational fwd., not an official EFF statement.]
-
- [If you see something like "<accute>O" that means "O with an accute accent
- over it".]
-
- From--Tom Murphy <devore@maths.tcd.ie>
- Date--Mon, 30 May 1994 23:04:09 +0200
-
- [From the _Irish_Times_]
- ON THE NEW FRONTIER
-
- Today marks the public launch of Electronic Frontier
- Ireland, the new lobby group to promote digital culture and
- protect the rights of those partaking in it. Michael
- Cunningham and Fiachra <acute>O Marcaigh report
-
- .........................................
-
- SUCH IS the pace of technological change nowadays that it has rapidly
- outstripped the ability of legal systems to catch up _ creating many
- grey areas on computer use and misuse, privacy and computer access.
- It's one of the main reasons Tom Murphy gives for taking the
- initiative to form Electronic Frontier Ireland (EFI).
-
- This legal uncertainty leaves individuals unsure of their rights, he
- argues, opening the way for shock-horror hacker scares, and hasty,
- repressive legislation or legal crackdowns in which all sorts of
- rights are ignored.
-
- In conversation it quickly becomes apparent that Murphy,
- who works as a programmer at a Dublin insurance company,
- believes in computers and communications technologies. Not
- just in the machines, or their productivity, but in all
- the social, educational and cultural opportunities that
- they open up.
-
- When he talks about people having their computer access cut
- off aribitrarily, a note of horror enters his voice. But
- then when asked about the new organisation's top
- priorities, he stresses positive steps to safeguard and
- expand the possibilities of the digital revolution, in
- several broad areas such as:
-
- The promotion of Internet and bulletin board usage;
-
- The improvement of Irish communications structures;
-
- Clarification of the laws surrounding computer usage, and
-
- Safeguarding electronic privacy by setting up a ``key
- repository'' to allow people to encrypt their e-mail.
-
-
- How it started
-
- Murphy's own experience of the Internet began as an
- undergraduate at Trinity College six years ago. ``This is
- where my interest came from. And I've always been involved
- in role-playing gaming,'' he says. These two strands
- collided after ``Operation Sundevil'' in 1990, when
- anti-hacker raids by US law enforcement agencies spread
- ever wider, taking in bulletin boards and a range of
- ordinary, completely innocent users.
-
- Among the latter was Steve Jackson Games, a publisher of
- role-playing games. Murphy was among its many fans around
- the world, and was naturally surprised when its doors were
- broken down and computers confiscated in the search for an
- allegedly stolen computer document.
-
- In the US, the raids sparked the formation of the
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) to defend the civil
- rights of computer users. But here in Ireland it was still
- ``very distant at the time,'' he recalls.
-
- Due to the circumstances in which the EFF was formed, and
- its high profile in successfully defending some people
- facing huge penalties for alleged hacking, there was an
- impression that its main purpose was to defend people
- caught up in hacking cases. Murphy argues that the Irish
- situation is very different.
-
- ``We didn't really have people in the Irish policing system
- booting down the doors. EFI is mainly not about that but
- about promoting computing culture,'' he says. ``The problem
- is that there's a lot of journalists out there who can't
- sell an article about ordinary computer usage but can about
- some 14-year-olds hacking into military systems or
- whatever.
-
- ``The EFF in the States have to fight against a suspicious
- and hostile government. We want to mould things before it
- ever gets to that stage, so that we can educate our
- government and the general public. We want to get it right
- first time and not have to try and change a bad set of
- laws.''
-
-
- Access
-
- Meanwhile, other issues of rights, privacy, and access to
- networks were beginning to trickle onto the political
- agenda. ``It had been mulling over in my mind _ I'm the
- kind of person who supports Amnesty International, I'm wary
- of censorship in general,'' he says, recalling instances of
- people being kicked off systems in Ireland for things
- they'd said.
-
- Then after seeing an article about US Government policy on
- the encryption methods available to individuals, he mailed
- Stanton McCandlish at EFF about whether there was a similar
- group in Ireland. He also posted a message on tcd.talk, a
- computer mailing area in Trinity College for staff,
- students and some graduates.
-
- ``I got a number of replies, people saying very quickly
- that it's not about hacking but about rights _ rights and
- freedom of speech and privacy on the one hand and on the
- other about more people using the Internet etc. The
- Internet is now attracting people from more walks of life
- and getting far easier to use _ it shouldn't be just for
- techie anoraks, an elite few with the knowledge, but about
- the basic right to communicate.''
-
- While EFI will not be expecting everybody to get free
- Internet access, it will be campaigning for it to be cheap.
- Among its long-term aims is that every library in Ireland
- should provide Internet access. Another issue is the
- allocation of resources; for example, the much
- talked-about plans for EU structural funds envisage
- concrete highways rather than digital ones. ``We could get
- a national network through connections in public libraries
- and so on,'' he says.
-
-
- Privacy
-
- The US Government is currently attempting to promote one
- method for encryption of digital communications: a hardware
- standard based on a single computer chip which it says will
- protect communications _ but which will also allow
- law-enforcement agencies to overcome the encryption with a
- ``back door'' built into every chip. This has sent major
- ripples throughout the international computing community,
- with concern about the erosion of personal rights. Legal
- uncertainty surrounds the main alternative _ softwar e such
- as PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) which provides users with
- powerful encryption techniques of their own and also allows
- people to ``sign'' a letter electronically, proving that it
- originated with them.
-
- To Murphy the case for ordinary users having their own
- means of encryption for e-mail is straightforward.
-
- ``What do you do when you mail a normal letter?'' he
- asks. ``You write it, you sign it with your signature,
- and then what? You put it in an envelope, you lick the
- envelope and seal it, and maybe even sign the back of it,
- then bring it to your post office and presume that the
- post office is not going to open your mail. If it did, it
- would be an enormous scandal.
-
- ``We already take that sort of privacy for granted. We want
- to get the same level of privacy and authenticity for
- electronic mail as ordinary mail. Basically PGP is the
- envelope, and PGP signatures are your signatures at the end
- of the (electronic) letter.''
-
-
- Legislation
-
- The EFI argues that legislation in Ireland, just as in most
- other countries, has been slow to catch up with the digital
- explosion, in an era where a book, say, can now be
- electronically sent from one side of the planet to the
- other in seconds. ``Will judges be able to handle _ with
- the current laws _ the newer technologies and their
- cultures? Take the publishing laws. These were based on
- physical printing presses, and you knew where they were.
- But everything is so much quicker now _ the Data Protection
- Act is not based on the speed at which you can delete
- information.''
-
- For example, he says that when people resort to that Act to
- ask for computerised information about themselves which
- might be inaccurate or misleading, a company can quite
- easily hide the particular database, change the
- information or simply deny its existence. ``Computers
- work an awful lot faster than the law,'' he says,
- returning to the Operation Sundevil cases where US
- Government agents kicked down doors and sometimes bent
- the rules ``because the old laws were insufficient''.
- There is a pressing need to change the law to ensure
- that the rights which people enjoy in other areas are
- guaranteed to computer users. To this end the EFI
- intends targeting the Law Reform Commission rather than
- looking for changes in the Constitution.
-
-
-
- The future
-
- The EFI has taken shape over several months of busy
- networking. There were delays in getting the association
- on its feet, ironing out legal and policy details. E-mail
- messages bounced back and forth to the EFF in the US at the
- rate of three a day. Electronic Frontier Australia (which
- began a few months ahead of EFI) also helped with advice.
- ``We're trying to get it right first time, spelling out
- clear short, medium and long-term aims,'' he says. The
- organisation is now about to be incorporated as a
- non-profit company, it has a charter, an interim committee
- and a clear idea of where it's going.
-
- About 50 people have already signed up before today's
- official launch. Many of the people who responded to the
- first e-mail postings canvassing interest in the idea
- also volunteered their professional skills. Murphy is
- particularly pleased that Eoin O'Dell, a TCD lecturer
- specialising in information technology law, has joined
- the committee as its legal adviser. There is no
- membership fee for ordinary individuals (unlike the EFF
- in the States, which charges $40) because EFI wants to
- encourage the widest possible membership base. They have
- a treasurer but no cash _ voluntary donations are
- welcomed and there will be a fee for corporate
- membership. ``The main problem we have is to educate the
- public and the politicians about the net and BBSes and
- what they offer Ireland. I can never understand why
- Ireland has not embraced the Internet _ given our
- geographical isolation _ but this is changing and it was
- the imminent change that forced the creation of EFI. We
- want to mould the future politics of the Internet within
- Ireland.''
-
-
- EFI can be contacted by e-mail at EFI-Membership@efi.ie or
- by post at 5 Seamount Heights, Malahide, Co Dublin.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 10 Jun 1994 15:42:58 GMT
- From: fabio vitali <fabio@CIRFID.UNIBO.IT>
- Subject: File 4--CFP: WORKSHOP ON LAW AND TECHNOLOGY
-
- CALL FOR PROPOSALS
- WORKSHOP ON LAW AND TECHNOLOGY
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
-
- 17th IVR '95 WORLD CONGRESS, BOLOGNA (Italy), JUNE 16-21, 1995
- "Challenges to Law at the End of the 20th Century"
-
- DEADLINE FOR PROPOSAL OF THEMES: JUNE 30, 1994
- DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACT OF PAPERS: AUGUST 31, 1994
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Please redistribute this message to anyone who might be interested
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The International Association for Philosophy of Law and Social
- Philosophy will hold its 17th world congress in Bologna (Italy) on
- June 16th to 21st, 1995. The IVR world congress is the most important
- congress on Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy, and takes place
- every 2 years in various parts of the world.
-
- The 17th world congress will be devoted to the changes, new functions
- and roles of law at the end of our century, bearing in mind the
- crucial events that have characterized the last decade. New forms of
- sovereignty and citizenship are appearing in Europe; new
- international orders are prevailing in the world; problems of
- nationality, religion and ethnic groups are also evolving in new
- ways. Technology and the media have an enormous impact on law and
- justice, which are called upon to carry out very demanding tasks. The
- traditional theory of the sources of law has to be largely
- re-examined, and many issues of rights are at stake. A part of the
- congress will be devoted to reports on the current state of research
- in legal and social philosophy in different countries or cultural
- areas.
-
- Distinguished lecturers will address the topics characterizing the
- main sessions:
- - Rights and Other Legal Protections
- - New Forms of Sovereignty and Citizenship
- - New and Ancient Sources of Law
- - Law and Technology
- Parallel sessions, symposia and workshops will provide a comprehensive
- coverage of these main themes.
-
- The 17th IVR World Congress will consider including one or more
- workshops dedicated to the reciprocal influences of technology and
- law, with particular reference to the field of computer science.
- The exponential growth of large-scale, international computer network
- poses new relevant legal problems, from copyright to privacy to
- computer crimes; new network services aid law scholars and
- professionals in their job; advanced AI research finds in the law
- domain interesting topics of study; the large masses of legal
- documents require innovative paradigms for handling, storing and
- retrieving data: information retrieval, hypertext and advanced data
- bases are interesting candidates.
-
- Contributions are welcome on the following suggested topics and others
- that may be considered interesting. A partial list of subjects is:
- - legal issues in international networks
- - artificial intelligence and law
- - hypertext for law
- - legal databases and information retrieval systems
- - privacy and technology
- - computer crimes
-
- Authors are invited to send statements of interest and submit
- abstracts of possible papers by AUGUST 31, 1994. Further
- suggestions of other topics, possible speakers, and possible
- demostrations of relevant products needs to be received no later than
- JUNE 30, 1994 to the address below. Please note that, in order to
- speed the processing of messages, all correspondence should have
- "IVR 95" as part of the subject.
-
- For all corrispondence about the Conference please refer to:
- Fabio Vitali
- CIRFID - University of Bologna
- Via Galliera 3,
- 40121 Bologna (Italy)
- tel: +39 (0)51 261062; fax: +39 (0)51 260782;
- e-mail: fabio@cirfid.unibo.it
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 10 Jun 1994 17:01:04 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@EFF.ORG>
- Subject: File 5--URGENT: Please Tell Congress to Allow Encryption Export
-
- Forwarded message:
- From--gnu@eff.org (John Gilmore)
- Subject-- URGENT-- Please Tell Congress to Allow Encryption Export
-
- House Intelligence Committee holds key to Crypto Export
- ask@eff.org June 9, 1994 *DISTRIBUTE WIDELY*
-
- Today, the U.S. State Department controls the export of most
- encryption, working closely with the National Security Agency (NSA) to
- limit products that provide real privacy, from cell-phones to PC
- software. A bill introduced by Rep. Maria Cantwell would instead give
- authority over non-military crypto exports to the Commerce Department.
- Commerce has much more reasonable regulations, with "First
- Amendment"-style unlimited publishing of publicly available software,
- including PGP, Kerberos, RIPEM, RSAREF, and mass-market commercial
- software. The bill also prevents the Commerce Dept. from tightening
- the regulations even if NSA somehow gets its tentacles into Commerce.
-
- A few months ago, you-all sent over 5600 messages to Rep. Cantwell in
- support of her bill, H.R. 3627. As a result, on May 18, the bill
- passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee by being incorporated into
- the Export Administration Act of 1994, H.R. 3937.
-
- Now the battle has become more intense. This portion of H.R. 3937 has
- been referred to the House Intelligence Committee with the intent to
- kill or severely maim it. We need your help again, to urge the
- Intelligence Committee to keep crypto export liberalization intact.
-
- The House and Senate Intelligence Committees, the only watchdogs for
- the NSA, tend to follow the agency's wishes when they wave the magic
- "national security" wand. They need plenty of input from the public
- that tells them that the nation will be *more* secure with good
- encryption, even though the NSA will be less happy.
-
- Not just computer users, but all users of telephones, cable TV, health
- care, and credit information systems would benefit from this change.
- The security of these applications is built on the foundation laid by
- the operating systems and network protocols on which they run. If
- this bill is passed, you will see high quality encryption built into
- Microsoft Windows, into the MacOS, into major Unix workstations, into
- the Internet, into cellular phones, into interactive television. The
- software already exists for confidentiality, privacy, and security of
- local and networked information, but it's not built-in to these
- systems because of the export ban. Today, each company could build
- two operating systems, one gutted for international use, but this
- would be costly and confusing for them and their customers, and would
- not allow international networks such as the Internet or telephones to
- be made secure and private. With this bill, these limits disappear.
-
- Furthermore, the Clinton Administration plans to permit high volume
- exports of Clipper products, while continuing to require tedious
- paperwork for truly secure encryption products. The bill would give
- Clipper and other crypto software more even-handed treatment.
-
- The bill also eliminates a senseless situation on the Internet.
- Today, crypto software can only be freely distributed from non-U.S.
- archive sites. It would eliminate that problem as well as the threat
- of prosecution against U.S. freeware authors of crypto software.
-
- This is the dream we've all been working toward. Here's how you can
- help to make this dream a reality. The Intelligence Committee must
- make its decision on the bill before June 17, so time is critical:
-
- 1) Fax a short letter TODAY to the chair of the Intelligence
- Committee, Representative Dan Glickman (D-KS). Ask him in your own
- words to leave the encryption provisions of H.R. 3937 intact. Use a
- positive tone ("Please support...") rather than a flame or a rant.
- One paragraph is fine. State your title and organization if you will
- look more important or better informed than the average citizen. Rep.
- Glickman's committee fax number is +1 202 225 1991. This is the best
- option, since individual letters are given the most weight by members
- of Congress, particularly when sent on letterhead paper.
-
- 2) If you are unable to fax a letter, send an e-mail message to Rep.
- Glickman at glickman@eff.org. Software or staff at the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation will either fax it in, or print it out and
- hand-deliver it for you.
-
- 3) Send a copy of this message to everyone you know in Kansas, and
- personally urge them to write to Rep. Glickman today. Letters from
- constituents get a lot more weight, since they are from people who
- could actually vote for or against him in the next election.
-
- 4) If your own Representative is on the Intelligence Committee, send
- him or her a copy of what you sent Rep. Glickman. There's a list of all
- such Reps. below. Even if we lose this battle, you will have started
- educating your own Rep. about crypto policy.
-
- 5) Become a member of EFF. Our strength comes from our members' strength.
- Send a note to membership@eff.org asking how to join.
-
- Thanks again for your help! You can check at any time on the current
- status of the campaign at the location below. Send any comments on
- this campaign to campaign@eff.org.
-
-
- John Gilmore
- Chairman, EFF Crypto Committee
- EFF Board of Directors
- Member of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility
- Member of International Association for Cryptologic Research
-
-
- House Intelligence Committee Members
- ------------------------------------
-
- Subcommittee phone: +1 202 225 4121
- Subcommittee fax: +1 202 225 1991 <== send your fax HERE <==
-
- p st name phone fax
- ___________________________________________________________________________
- D KS Glickman, Daniel +1 202 225 6216 private Chair
- D WA Dicks, Norman D. +1 202 225 5916 +1 202 226 1176
- D CA Dixon, Julian C. +1 202 225 7084 +1 202 225 4091
- D NJ Torricelli, Robert +1 202 224 5061 +1 202 225 0843
- D TX Coleman, Ronald D. +1 202 225 4831 +1 202 225 4831
- D CO Skaggs, David E. +1 202 225 2161 +1 202 225 9127
- D NV Bilbray, James H. +1 202 225 5965 +1 202 225 8808
- D CA Pelosi, Nancy +1 202 225 4965 +1 202 225 8259
- D TX Laughlin, Gregory H. +1 202 225 2831 +1 202 225 1108
- D AL Cramer Jr, Robert (Bud) +1 202 225 4801 private
- D RI Reed, John F. +1 202 225 2735 +1 202 225 9580
- D MO Gephardt, Richard A. +1 202 225 2671 +1 202 225 7452
- R TX Combest, Larry +1 202 225 4005 +1 202 225 9615
- R NE Bereuter, Douglas +1 202 225 4806 +1 202 226 1148
- R CA Dornan, Robert K. +1 202 225 2965 +1 202 225 3694
- R FL Young, C. W. (Bill) +1 202 225 5961 +1 202 225 9764
- R PA Gekas, George W. +1 202 225 4315 +1 202 225 8440
- R UT Hansen, James V. +1 202 225 0453 +1 202 225 5857
- R CA Lewis, Jerry +1 202 225 5861 +1 202 225 6498
- R IL Michel, Robert H. +1 202 225 6201 +1 202 225 9461
-
- The full text of this alert is stored at:
-
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Alerts/export.alert
- gopher.eff.org, 1/Alerts, export.alert
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/export.alert
- BBS (+1 202 638 6120, 8N1): "Alerts" file area, export.alt
- FREQ 1:109/1108 (from any system, no need to be nodelisted): export.alt
-
- The actual text of this part of H.R. 3937 is at:
-
- ftp: ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/hr3937_crypto.excerpt
- gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export, hr3937_crypto.excerpt
- http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/hr3937_crypto.excerpt
- BBS: "Privacy--Crypto" file area, hr3937.crp
- FREQ 1:109/1108: hr3937.crp
-
- For current status on the bill:
-
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Alerts/export_alert.update
- gopher.eff.org, 1/Alerts, export_alert.update
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/export_alert.update
- BBS: "Alerts" file area, export.upd
- FREQ 1:109/1108: export.upd
-
- A general Web page on crypto export policy is at:
-
- http://www.cygnus.com/~gnu/export.html
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 11 Jun 1994 14:07:42 -0700
- From: Jim Warren <jwarren@WELL.SF.CA.US>
- Subject: File 6--GovAccess.041: CIVICNET '94 Symposium, Jun.17 (Fri) [update]
-
- Jun.11, 1994
-
-
- Peninsula CivicNet '94
- Friday, June 17, 1994
- San Mateo, California
- [Please COPY, POST & CIRCULATE, widely!]
-
- If you are in the forefront of community services or civic groups
- - or want to be - then Peninsula CivicNet '94 should interest you.
-
- Peninsula CivicNet '94 is a one-day symposium on the San Francisco
- Peninsula, co-sponsored by more than a dozen government, educational,
- library and civic organizations.
-
- It beings together many of those who are in the forefront of community
- services or civic groups - or want to be - including citizens, civic
- leaders, business people and entrepreneurs, educators, librarians and
- information workers, and especially elected, appointed and career
- local and state government officials, administrators and staff.
-
- CivicNet '94 focuses on uses and potentials; *not* technological issues.
-
- It includes formal presentations, break-out sessions and opportunities
- designed to facilitate one-on-one and small-group exchanges.
-
- GovAccess.040 offered extended comments; this #041 updates the details.
-
- Seating is limited but space remains available - as of this update.
- $30 Registration (includes sessions & box lunch)
-
- Friday, June 17, 1994, 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.
- Theater, College of San Mateo, 1700 W. Hillsdale Blvd., San Mateo CA
- Co-Chairs: columnist/advocate Jim Warren and the Hon. Warren Slocum
-
-
- PCN'94 PROGRAM
-
- 8:00 a.m. - Registration and materials pickup
- 8:30 a.m. - Welcome by Peter Lansberger, CSM President
-
- 8:40 a.m. - Civic Networking: An Overview of Peninsula Potentials
- Jim Warren, computing columnist & open-govt. advocate
-
-
- 9:15 a.m. - The Power of Civic Networking: Real-World Successes - I
-
- An On-Ramp to the Information Highways
- Wally Dean, CityNet CEO & Mayor Pro Tem, Cupertino CA
-
- Experiences from the Nation's First City-Run Civic Net
- Ken Phillips, founding Director, Santa Monica PEN;
- [now] Dir., Regional Info. Sys., Marion County OR
-
- Democracy on a Private Community Network
- Noah Salzman, Help-line Coord., Planet BMUG, Berkeley
- break
-
-
- 10:30 a.m. - The Power of Civic Networking: Real-World Successes - II
-
- Collaboration in Silicon Valley's Public Access Link
- Marc Siegel, Acting Exec. Dir., SV-PAL, Mtn. View CA
-
- Experiences in Supporting Civic/Social Constituencies
- Mark Graham, Pres., Pandora Systems, San Francisco
-
- Opportunities in the Information Age
- Doug Cortney, Asst. Editor, Clarinet Comm., San Jose
-
-
- 11:30 a.m. - Community Networking for Diversity
-
- Women Using the Online Community
- Ellen Pack, President, Women's WIRE, San Francisco
-
- Latinos on the Information Superhighway
- Al Milo, Director, Public Library, Fullerton CA
-
- Plugged In: Access and Equity Issues for Kids
- Bart Decrem, Exec. Dir., Plugged In, East Palo Alto CA
-
- 12:30 p.m. - Informal "f2f" meetings - face-to-face - over box lunches
-
-
- 1:30 p.m. - Civic Networking in San Mateo County: Plans & Developments
-
- New Capabilities for the Peninsula Library System
- Linda Crowe, Dir., San Francisco Peninsula Library Sys.
-
- A Peninsula Connection to Statewide Networking Policy
- K. G. Ouye, City Librarian & Chairperson of the
- Calif. PUC Task Force on Telecomm. Infrastructure
-
- SAMNET - An Interactive Cable Network in San Mateo County
- David Hosley, General Manager, KCSM-TV/FM, Coll.of SM
-
- City/School Technology Efforts in San Carlos
- Brian Moura, Asst. City Mgr./Finance Dir., San Carlos CA
-
- The So. San Francisco On-Ramp to the Information Highways
- Daryl Jones, Comm. Systems Mgr., So. SF Police Dept.
-
- Technology Plans for San Mateo County
- Dorothy Yetter, SMC Chief Info. Ofcr. & Dir. of Tech.
-
-
- 2:30 p.m. - Parallel breakout sessions for focused f2f discussions
- Community and civic organizations and activists
- Librarians and libraries
- Education, schools and educators
- Governmental representatives and public agencies
- Businesses, business users and civicnet entrepreneurs
- Demonstration of mid-Peninsula public-agency system(s)
- [structured to permit attendees to join several breakouts]
- break
-
- 3:45 p.m. - Summary Reports from the Breakout Sessions (in Theater)
-
- 4:30 p.m. - Symposium Wrap-up - Where Do We Go From Here?
-
-
- Please cut, complete & mail BY JUNE 14th (or call for alternatives).
- Peninsula CivicNet '94 Registration Form
-
- [Please print or type]
- Name _________________________________________________________________
- Title (if any) _______________________________________________________
- Organization (if any) ________________________________________________
- Contact address ______________________________________________________
- City _____________________________________ State __ Zip __________
- Phones: Day _________________ Eve _____________ Fax _____________
- E-mail address (if any) ______________________________________________
- Symposium registration is $30 (includes all sessions and box luncheon)
-
- For registration questions, please call Symposium Administrator
- Ruth Nagler, at 415-345-1221 or 415-349-5538 (Library message center).
-
- To facilitate non-electronic "networking," a roster of attendees will
- be published after the symposium. If you wish to limit or exclude your
- listing, please check one:
- [ ] Do not include my name in the roster.
- [ ] Include me but do not publish my phone numbers.
-
- Enclosed is my check for $______ for __ reservations.
- Please make checks payable to "Peninsula Library System" or "PLS" and
- mail to: Pen. CivicNet '94, PLS, 25 Tower Rd, San Mateo CA 94402.
- ======================================================================
-
-
- GovAccess readers: A week or two after CivicNet '94 concludes, GovAccess
- will again focus on other issues re net-based and computer-aided govt-access.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #6.52
- ************************************
-
-
-