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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun Oct 15, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 81
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #7.81 (Sun, Oct 15, 1995)
-
- File 1--REVISED ACM DL'96 (Conference News)
- File 2--O'Reilly's "Essential System Administration, 2nd Edition"
- File 3--Announcement: Alert Mailing List
- File 4--Community Democracy Online in Palo Alto
- File 5-- A Day in the Life of Cyberspace (fwd)
- File 6--New Web site on government censorship
- File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: 3 Oct 1995 16:56:23 -0700
- From: inouye-a@GARNET.BERKELEY.EDU(Alan Inouye)
- Subject: File 1--REVISED ACM DL'96 (Conference News)
-
- NOTE--THIS HAS BEEN REVISED!!
- 1. Changed submission due dates
- 2. New address for workshop submissions
-
-
-
- Call for Participation
-
- ACM DL'96 --- Digital
- Libraries '96
-
- First ACM International Conference on
- Digital Libraries
-
- Bethesda, MD
- March 20-23, 1996
-
- ACM Digital Libraries '96 is an international conference
- devoted to advancing the state-of-the-art in digital
- libraries. The ACM DL series continues the sequence of
- Texas conferences: DL'94 in College Station and DL'95 in
- Austin. The leaders of those events are helping with DL'96
- organization and program efforts. The meeting will be co-
- located with Hypertext '96 in 1996 and with ACM SIGIR
- '97 the following year. DL '96 will immediately follow
- Hypertext '96 at the Hyatt Regency
- in Bethesda, Maryland. The site is located near the
- Washington D.C. Metro and provides easy access to the
- many attractions in the Baltimore-Washington area.
-
- The DL series is sponsored by ACM, through SIGIR and
- SIGLINK. Other ACM SIGs have joined in cooperation,
- including: SIGAda, SIGART, SIGBIO, SIGCAPH,
- SIGCOMM, SIGCUE, SIGDA, SIGMIS (formerly SIGBIT),
- and SIGOIS.
-
- In-cooperation sponsors include:
-
- ASIS (American Society for Information Science),
- CNI (Coalition for Networked Information),
- IEEE CS (IEEE Computer Society)
- KSI (Knowledge Systems Inc.),
- LITA (Library and Information Technology Association),
- LoC (Library of Congress),
- NAL (National Agricultural Library),
- NLM (National Library of Medicine),
- SLA (Special Libraries Association).
-
- Three sessions at the conference have been reserved for the
- working groups of the Digital Library Forum. These
- groups are studying aspects of interoperability in digital
- libraries. During the sessions, members of the groups will
- describe the objectives of the groups, describe progress to
- date, and lead discussions of the issues. The exact list of
- topics has not been finally chosen, but will likely include
- open architectures for digital libraries, archiving and
- digital preservation, and the National Computer Science
- Technical Reports Library.
-
-
-
- Technical Program
-
- We seek papers, posters and videos on the one hand--and
- proposals for tutorials and workshops on the other hand--
- on topics related to Digital Libraries, including but not
- limited to the following list:
-
- * architectures, reference models, standards
- * authoring and electronic publishing
- * cataloging, indexing, preserving
- * collaborative environments
- * collecting, capturing, filtering
- * distributed data, knowledge and information
- representation and systems
- * economic and social implications and issues
- * education, learning and related applications
- * evaluation methods and user testing
- * handling of graphics, GIS, multimedia information
- * hypertext and hypermedia systems (especially including
- WWW) and support
- * information storage and retrieval
- * intellectual property rights
- * modeling and simulation
- * networked information discovery
- * networking systems, protocols, security
- * publisher plans and concerns
- * user interfaces
- * visualization, browsing, searching
-
- Papers
-
- Technical papers present original reports of innovative and
- substantive new work that has not been published or
- submitted for publication elsewhere. Papers are refereed by
- a pool of reviewers for the conference proceedings,
- published by ACM. Because of the tight time schedule,
- designed to ensure that the latest results will be discussed,
- there will be little time for revision, so submissions should
- be in near-final form.
-
- Important Dates:
- Oct. 17, 1995 --- Papers due to Program Chair
- Dec. 1, 1995 --- Authors notified about PC decisions
- Jan. 1, 1996 --- Papers due to Program Chair
-
- Submissions: Papers must be written in English and
- contain a maximum of 6000 words (excluding figures). If
- possible, use 10 point Times Roman, single-spaced, with
- no more than a total of 12 pages. The proceedings will be
- printed in typical ACM 2-column format, and articles will
- have a limit of 10 pages. If submissions are made with
- paper, 6 copies must be provided. If submissions are made
- electronically, the Subject line must say DL96 PDF
- Submission and Adobe's Portable Document Format must
- be used.
-
-
- Send submissions to arrive by October 17, 1995 to:
-
- Edward A. Fox
- Dept. of Computer Science
- 660 McBryde Hall
- Virginia Tech
- Blacksburg VA 24061-0106
- Phone +1-540-231-5113
- FAX +1-540-231-6075
- Email: fox@vt.edu
-
- Tutorials
-
- Tutorials will precede the conference and serve to introduce
- attendees to principles in the field, develop bridges
- between the computer science and library/information
- science communities, or examine advanced topics in depth.
- Tutorials will be scheduled for 2.5 hour slots on Wednesday
- afternoon and evening, March 20, 1995. Tutorials are
- invited on topics such as the following:
-
- Principles and practices of library science (Abstracting,
- Indexing and Classification)
- User behavior and information needs analysis (User Needs
- and Services)
- Information Retrieval and Hypertext (Searching,
- Browsing)
- Open System Design for the Internet
-
- Submissions should include a 200-word abstract, a 1-page
- topical outline of the course content, and describe course
- objectives, intended audience, and the qualifications of
- instructor(s). Proposers are encouraged to contact the
- tutorials chairperson to discuss planned proposals.
- Proposals will be evaluated on the basis of background of
- the instructor(s) and the contribution of the tutorial to the
- overall conference program.
-
- Submit four copies of the proposal by October 17, 1995 to:
-
- Edie Rasmussen
- SLIS
- University of Pittsburgh
- 135 N. Bellefield Avenue
- Pittsburgh, PA 15260
- Phone (412) 624-9459
- Fax (412) 648-7001
- erasmus@lis.pitt.edu
-
- Posters
-
- Poster presentations allow researchers to present late-
- breaking results or significant work in progress. Posters
- will be refereed. Poster sessions allow authors and
- conference participants to discuss the research in detail in
- one-on-one or small group settings.
-
- Submissions should consist of an extended abstract of at
- most two pages emphasizing the problem, what was done
- or is being done, and why the work is important. Include:
- title, name and affiliation of the author(s) and complete
- contact information. Note that the extended abstracts of
- the posters will be published in the conference
- proceedings.
-
- Submit four copies of the proposal by November 1, 1995
- to:
-
- Beth Davis-Brown
- National Digital Library Program
- LIBN/O/NDL (1000)
- The Library of Congress
- Washington, DC 20540
- Phone (202)-707-3301
- Fax (202)-707-0815
- bbro@loc.gov
-
- Videos
-
- Videos allow researchers and developers to illustrate the
- dynamics of operational and prototype systems. Videos
- will be refereed and selected videos will be shown at a
- session during the conference so authors can verbally
- annotate their work.
-
- Submit videos that are a maximum of 5 minutes in length.
- VHS format (NTSC) is required for review, and Hi-8, SVHS,
- or Betacam SP are the formats required for final
- submissions. It is likely that an author-supplied or
- conference-prepared digital video version will be prepared
- also and made available, so be sure that suitable releases
- can be provided for all submissions. Also, please prepare a
- one-page summary of the video which will be published in
- the conference proceedings.
-
- Submit two copies of the videotape and written summary by
- October 17, 1995 to:
-
- Charles Goldstein
- National Library of Medicine
- 8600 Rockville Pike
- Bethesda, MD 20894
- Phone (301) 496-1936
- Fax (301) 480-6183
- chuck@nlm.nih.gov
-
- Workshops
-
- Workshops provide an opportunity for up to 25
- participants to discuss issues in both research and applied
- areas for one day. Workshop attendance is normally by
- invitation based on attendees' response to a call for
- workshop participation. Organizers should draft a call
- describing the workshop and submit a three-page proposal
- containing: an outline of the theme and goals of the
- workshop, a description of the intended audience, an
- overview of activities planned for the workshop, estimates
- of number of participants, and a brief description of the
- organizer backgrounds and experience.
-
- Submit four copies of the proposal by October 17, 1995 to:
-
- Maria Zemankova
- c/o Ed Fox
- Dept. of Computer Science
- 660 McBryde Hall
- Virginia Tech
- Blacksburg VA 24061-0106
- Phone: (703) 306-1926
- Fax: (703) 306-0599
- mzemanko@nsf.gov
-
-
- Conference Committee
-
- General Chair
- Gary Marchionini (University of Maryland at College
- Park)
- Technical Program Chair
- Ed Fox (Virginia Polytechnical Institute and State
- University)
- Tutorials
- Edie Rasmussen (University of Pittsburgh)
- Workshops
- Maria Zemankova (National Science Foundation)
- Posters
- Beth Davis-Brown (Library of Congress)
- Videos
- Charles Goldstein (National Library of Medicine)
- Treasurer
- Lawrence Fitzpatrick (Personal Library Software Inc.)
- Publicity
- Nancy Van House (University of California Berkeley)
- Registration
- Linda Hill (University of Maryland at College
- Park/CESDIS)
- Local Arrangements
- Lida Larsen (University of Maryland at College Park)
- Industry Liason
- Roberta Rand (National Agriculture Library)
-
- Technical Program Committee
- William Arms, CNRI, USA
- Robert Akscyn, Knowledge Systems, USA
- Robert Allen, Bellcore, USA
- Daniel Atkins, U. Michigan, USA
- Ann Bishop, U. Ill. Urbana-Champaign, USA
- Christine Borgman, UCLA, USA
- Su-Shing Chen, NSF, USA
- W. Bruce Croft, U. Mass. Amherst, USA
- Steve DeRose, Electronic Book Tech., USA
- Timothy Finin, U. Md. Balt. County, USA
- James French, U. Virginia, USA
- Mark Frisse, Washington U., USA
- Richard Furuta, Texas A&M U., USA
- Hector Garcia-Molina, Stanford U., USA
- Henry Gladney, IBM Almaden Res., USA
- Ephraim Glinert, Rennselear Poly., USA
- John Guidi, U. Md. College Park, USA
- Thomas Hickey, OCLC, USA
- Nancy Ide, Vassar College, USA
- Rob Kling, U. Ca. Irvine, USA
- Ron Larsen, U. Md. College Park, USA
- John Leggett, Texas A&M U., USA
- Enrica Lemut, Istituto Matematica Applicata C.N.R., Italy
- Michael Lesk, Bellcore, USA
- David Levy, Xerox PARC, USA
- Clifford Lynch, U. California, USA
- Cathy Marshall, Texas A&M U., USA
- Cliff McKnight, Loughbourough, UK
- Fran Miksa, U. Texas Austin, USA
- Eugene Miya, NASA Ames, USA
- Sung Myaeng, Chungnam National U., S. Korea
- A. Desai Narasimhalu, National U. of Singapore
- Gultekin Ozsoyoglu, Case W. Reserve U., USA
- Roy Rada, Washington State U., USA
- P. Venkat Rangan, U. Ca. San Diego, USA
- Pamela Samuelson, U. Pittsburgh, USA
- Bruce Schatz, U. Ill. Urbana-Champaign, USA
- John Schnase, Washington U., USA
- Terence Smith, U. Ca. Santa Barbara, USA
- Scott Stevens, Carnegie-Mellon U., USA
- Chris Welty, Vassar College, USA
- Terry Winograd, Stanford U., USA
-
-
- For further information, see
- http://fox.cs.vt.edu/DL96/
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 6 Oct 1995 11:22:59 -0700
- From: Sara Winge <sara@ora.com>
- Subject: File 2--O'Reilly's "Essential System Administration, 2nd Edition"
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- October 6, 1995
-
- PRESS--FOR REVIEW COPIES, CONTACT:
- Sara Winge
- 707-829-0515
- sara@ora.com
-
- O'REILLY RELEASES 2ND EDITION OF "ESSENTAIL SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION"
- Updated Classic Covers All Major UNIX Platforms
-
- SEBASTOPOL, CA--O'Reilly & Associates has released the second edition
- of "Essential System Administration," its bestselling guide for UNIX
- system administrators. This new edition has been updated for the latest
- versions of all major UNIX platforms (including Sun OS 4.1, Solaris
- 2.3, AIX 4.1, Linux 1.1, Digital UNIX OSF/1, SCO UNIX version 3, HP/UX
- versions 9 and 10, and IRIX version 6), and the entire book has been
- thoroughly reviewed and tested on all of the platforms covered. In
- addition, coverage of networking, electronic mail, security, and kernel
- configuration has been expanded substantially.
-
- Originally published in 1991, "Essential System Administration" was the
- first book to take an in-depth look at the fundamentals of UNIX system
- administration in a real-world, heterogeneous environment. The book
- approaches UNIX systems administration from the perspective of the
- system administrator's job -- the routine tasks and troubleshooting
- that make up the sysadmin's day. When faced with the challenges of
- dealing with frustrated users, convincing an uncomprehending manager
- that new hardware is needed, rebuilding the kernel, or simply adding
- new users, system administrators will find help in this book. It covers
- back up and restore, organizing and planning file systems, TCP/IP
- networking, and setting up email. In addition, it explains core system
- administration tasks such as setting up printers, adding terminals and
- disk drives, and securing the system. But "Essential System
- Administration" is not for full-time systems administrators alone.
- Linux users and others who administer their own systems will benefit
- from its practical, hands-on approach.
-
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR
-
- AEleen Frisch has been a system administrator for 15 years. Currently,
- she spends some of her time looking after a very heterogeneous network
- of UNIX workstations and PCs. She also writes the "Systems Wrangler"
- column for RS/Magazine, which focuses on system administration on AIX
- systems. AEleen has a B.S. in literature from Caltech and a Ph.D. in
- cultural studies from Pitt.
-
- ABOUT O'REILLY & ASSOCIATES
-
- O'Reilly & Associates is recognized worldwide for its definitive books
- on the Internet and UNIX, and more recently for its development of
- online content and software. O'Reilly developed the Global Network
- Navigator (GNN), a pioneering web-based publication which it sold to
- America Online in June 1995. O'Reilly is a major developer of Win32
- software for the Internet. WebSite, O'Reilly's web server software for
- Windows 95 and Windows NT, was released in May 1995.
-
- Working closely with developers of new technologies, O'Reilly's editors
- are "computer people" who use the software they write about. The
- company's planning and review cycles link together authors, software
- developers, computer vendors, and technical experts throughout the
- industry in a creative collaboration that mirrors the strengths of the
- open systems philosophy itself.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 9 Oct 1995 18:07:28 +1494730 (PDT)
- From: Christopher Klaus <cklaus@ISS.NET>
- Subject: File 3--Announcement: Alert Mailing List
-
- The Alert will be covering the following topics:
-
- - Security Product Announcements
- - Updates to Security Products
- - New Vulnerabilities found
- - New Security Frequently Asked Question files.
- - New Intruder Techniques and Awareness
-
- To join, send e-mail to request-alert@iss.net and, in the text of your
- message (not the subject line), write:
-
-
- subscribe alert
-
- To remove, send e-mail to request-alert@iss.net and, in the text of your message
- (not the subject line), write:
-
- unsubscribe alert
-
- This is a moderated list in the effort to keep the noise to a minimal and
- provide quality security information.
-
- If your site is interested in network security, we put out several
- FAQes (Frequently Asked Question) that cover the following main areas
- of topic:
-
- Vendor Contacts
- - Who is the security contacts at IBM, HP, Dec, Motorola, etc.
- - Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/vendor.html
-
- Patches
- - List of all security related patches catergorized by OS type.
- - Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/patch.html
-
- Compromise
- - Check list of things to do if your machines are compromised.
- - Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/compromise.html
-
- Anonymous FTP Security
- - How to correctly set up FTP and check for vulnerabilities.
- - Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/anonftp.html
-
- Sniffers
- - What they are. How they work. How to detect them. And solutions.
- - Web page: http://iss.net/iss/sniff.html
-
- Security Mailing Lists
- - A comprehensive list of security mailing lists.
- - Web page: http://iss.net/iss/maillist.html
-
-
- If possible, it might be a good idea for you to add links to the above
- web pages on your own Web server and point people who need to know
- some of the network security issues to the web page. It is
- possible to point to all of the FAQ pages at:
-
- http://iss.net/iss/faq.html
-
- --
- Christopher William Klaus Voice: (770)441-2531. Fax: (770)441-2431
- Internet Security Systems, Inc. "Internet Scanner lets you find
- 2000 Miller Court West, Norcross, GA 30071 your network security holes
- Web: http://iss.net/ Email: cklaus@iss.net before the hackers do."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 28 Sep 1995 13:54:57 -0700
- From: Marilyn Davis <madavis@IGC.APC.ORG>
- Subject: File 4--Community Democracy Online in Palo Alto
-
- Please repost as appropriate
- ============================
-
-
- Announcing: The first evening meeting of the
-
- Palo Alto Community Network
-
-
-
- Topic: CREATING DEMOCRACY
-
- A Plan for Palo Alto's Electronic Communities
-
-
- Speaker: Marilyn Davis, Ph.D.
- Palo Alto Resident and Developer of eVote
-
- When: OCTOBER 10 -- Tuesday, 7:30 pm
-
- Where: Palo Alto Cultural Center Auditorium
- 1313 Newell Rd. at Embarcadero
-
- Contact: Marilyn Davis (415) 493-3631 madavis@igc.org
-
- "As the world grows smaller and our hierarchical systems prove
- increasingly inadequate, we must create new, cooperative, and more
- nurturing systems of human organization in cyberspace. It's our only
- chance to overcome the threat of environmental and social demise."
- ... Marilyn Davis
-
- Ms. Davis views our current democracies as futile attempts to
- facilitate equally shared decision-making on a large scale. She
- believes that all humans share a longing for a fair system and that
- cyberspace is unfolding as a manifestation of that longing.
-
- In cyberspace, we *can* facilitate equally distributed, broad-based
- decision-making --- Should we?
-
- As the developer of eVote, vote-serving software for online groups,
- Marilyn will demonstrate a prototype of the theoretically *perfect*
- community server: a web-accessible, graphical meeting package with
- branching discussion trees, outline support, and user-generated
- polling.
-
- She will describe the relatively small development task this community
- software requires: a synthesis of three existing software applications
- -- A WWW browser/server; Participate, meeting software; and eVote.
-
- * * *
-
- The Palo Alto Community Network, or PA-COMNET, is a group of Palo Alto
- area residents who share a common interest in using Internet-based
- online communications to build a better community.
-
- PA-COMNET meets continuously by means of an email list. To join, send
- an email message to majordomo@svi.org with no subject line but a
- message that says: subscribe pa-comnet
-
- ++++++++++
-
- Catch Marilyn on TV: Palo Alto Cable Channel 6
-
- Monday Oct 2 5:30pm
- Monday Oct 6 5:00pm
- Monday Oct 9 6:30pm
-
- Marilyn Davis and Carl Loebner discuss the future of democracy as
- aided by technology on "The Democracy Project", a series produced for
- Public Access TV in San Jose.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 6 Oct 1995 23:51:09 -0500 (CDT)
- From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM
- Subject: File 5-- A Day in the Life of Cyberspace (fwd)
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
- Date--Mon, 2 Oct 95 23:16:42 -0400
- From--Michael Hawley <mike@pia.media.mit.edu
-
-
- As part of the Media Lab's 10th Anniversary, we are assembling
- snapshots of Cyberspace. We would like *you* to be part of the
- first global portrait of human life in the digital age. This site
- will collect bits from October 1 through October 10. Results will
- be published on the Web, in a subsequent book, and will become part
- of a permanent archive.
-
- Stop and think: five years ago, the internet for most people felt
- like tin cans and string. Two years ago the Web and Mosaic were
- just beginning to be noticed. Now, every day, something utterly
- mindblowing turns up with a point and a click. This is a pivotal
- era, and a perfect time to ask the digital world to pause, and
- ponder the implications of digital media on future world culture.
-
- WANTED: DIGITAL PIONEERS ===========================================
-
- We are searching for compelling stories about digital life.
-
- For example, we received an amazing message about how the Net is
- being used to protect endangered mountain gorillas. As part of
- NASA's Mission to Planet Earth, the space shuttle Endeavour made
- radar scans of the gorillas' habitat near the Virunga volcano, in
- central Africa. With handheld GPS satellite instruments, which
- anti-poaching rangers have been trained to use in the field, daily
- readings of gorilla movements and poacher activities are sent from
- a portable ground station in the mountains to another satellite,
- HealthSat II, and then over the Internet to the 3-D tracking system
- based at Rutgers University. There are only 650 mountain gorillas
- left in the world, and this system is helping to save them.
-
- What we need are *your* bits -- your stories, in text, sound, and
- picture. How are global digital media affecting your life? Changing
- the fabric of world society? Touching human interests? What might
- the picture look like in 5 years? 50 years? Let us know, and quickly.
-
- COUNT TO TEN =======================================================
-
- During the days from 10/1 to 10/9 we focus on several themes:
-
- 1 Privacy -- Anonymity, Security, Privacy & Trust in a Digital Society
- 2 Expression -- Digital Art, Entertainment & Community Creativity
- 3 Generations -- Kids & Childhood, Seniors, Life Stories and Family
- 4 Wealth -- Advertising, Barter, Commerce and Personalized Trade
- 5 Faith -- Religion and Politics and their Net Effects
- 6 Body -- Sex, Health, Your Body and Technology
- 7 Place -- Our Sense of Place in a Post-Digital World
- 8 Tongues -- Languages in the Global Village
- 9 Environment -- Coexistence and Coevolution of Natural and Virtual Worlds
-
- For example, in "Generations" we'd like to hear from the youngest
- kids on line, and connect them with the oldest senior citizens.
- During the day on "Place" we'd like to collect images from every
- netcam on earth, and bits from every country on earth with some
- tie to the Net. Do you communicate with a friend in Antarctica or
- Bosnia by e-mail? Did you find life-saving medecine in time, thanks
- to the Net? Was your wedding online? Your newborn child?
-
- 10/10: A DAY IN THE LIFE OF CYBERSPACE =============================
-
- Then, on 10/10, live from the Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
- teams of professional editors and World Wide Web hackers working
- in "mission control" at MIT will collect, edit, and publish the
- best of those bits on the net. Taken together, these bits will
- create a mosaic of life at the dawn of the digital revolution that
- is transforming our planet.
-
- HOW TO DO IT =======================================================
-
- 1. Through the World Wide Web: http://www.1010.org
- 2. By e-mail, send specific remarks to:
- cyber@1010.org --- general reflections on digital life
- privacy@... --- comments regarding privacy, anonymity
- expression@... --- art, entertainment & community creativity
- generations@... --- kids, seniors, life stories, family
- wealth@... --- advertising, barter, commerce, personalized trade
- faith@... --- religion and politics
- body@... --- sex, health, our bodies & technology
- place@... --- geography, telecommuting, mobility, virtual v. physical
- tongues@ --- languages and communications on line
- environment@... --- mixing of natural and digital worlds
- 3. By ftp (to send sounds, pictures):
- ftp to ftp.1010.org, login anonymous
- cd pub/incoming
- "put" your bits.
- Please pick a unique filename, and also give us
- a file called "<mybits.README" to explain who you
- are and what your data is.
- 4. For more information, mail to: info@1010.org
-
- ABOUT YOUR BITS ====================================================
-
- You are writing a community book.
-
- Your input is being used to illuminate the stories of digital life.
- Your bits will become part of a global, public, community event --
- a canvas that we all paint together. The visualizations and time
- capsules, as well as selected responses will be archived and may
- be published by the MIT Media Lab or its agents in the future. Some
- material will be selected, edited, and arranged for redisplay on
- the Web on 10/10 and may appear in book form later. You retain
- all copyrights to your entries but by submitting them are granting
- MIT a perpetual non-exclusive right, without cost, to use your
- entries in all forms for purposes that will advance public
- understanding of this event.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 11 Oct 1995 14:55:40 -0400
- From: Andy Oram <andyo@ORA.COM>
- Subject: File 6--New Web site on government censorship
-
- The Web sites I've seen on Exon etc. seem to be getting out of date,
- or just focus on one or two details. So, with help from Cyber-Rights
- members (a CPSR working group) and some other people, I wrote a new
- Web page to present the main issues in a punchy, direct way. The
- title is "Government Censorship Threatens the Information
- Infrastructure." It refers to other Web pages for details.
-
- Please let everyone who might be interested know about this URL.
-
- http://jasper.ora.com/andyo/cyber-rights/free-speech/
-
- Thanks to everybody who contributed information and ideas,
- particularly Craig Johnson.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 19 Apr 1995 22:51:01 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)
-
- 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
-
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- End of Computer Underground Digest #7.81
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