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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun Nov 26, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 91
- 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, #7.91 (Sun, Nov 26, 1995)
-
- File 1--Re: CyberAngels
- File 2--Guardian Angel NOVEMBER NEWSLETTER
- File 3--Re: CuD, #7.89 - Govt & Net Censorship
- File 4--French agreement to use Netscape Navigator
- File 5--ACLU Cyber-Liberties Update -- 11/22/95
- File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 1995)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 20:42 EDT
- From: "E. ALLEN SMITH" <EALLENSMITH@MBCL.RUTGERS.EDU>
- Subject: File 1--Re: CyberAngels
-
- Dear Sirs:
-
- While some proposed activities of the "CyberAngels" are
- difficult to object to, others are threats to violate the civil
- liberties of users of the Internet. These can be classified into
- two categories: violations of freedom of speech and press, and
- violations of the rights of interaction of consenting adults. The
- former would include their threatened actions regarding: allegedly
- obscene material; "indecent" materials that they feel are too
- available to persons under the age of 18; anonymous (and, one would
- suspect, pseudonymous) speech; allegedly harassing speech; and
- political ("hate") speech. Those regarding the activities of
- consenting adults would, according to their phrasing, include any
- actions illegal in the state or country in question, such as
- homosexual activity in many U.S. states. In addition, the record of
- the Guardian Angels suggests that they will step over even the
- bounds that they publicly set for themselves.
-
- I would like to make a suggestion to the readers of the
- Computer Underground Digest, and to other users of the Internet, as
- to the best way to deal with this organization. This idea is to use
- one problem (the "CyberAngels") to counter another (net-abuse such
- as spamming). Simply forward copies of spamming (done via email,
- USENET, or other means) to the "ganetwatch@aol.com" address, and
- ask them to deal with the problem. Some of it is definitely
- included under the "fraud" category in their statement (i.e.,
- pyramid schemes such as "MAKE MONEY FAST"), and others are at the
- minimum deprivation of service and possibly true harassment. I am
- hopeful that the volume of mail received on this count will be
- great enough that they will be unable to carry out any improper
- actions. If they fail to try to do anything about the spamming
- problem, then they can be exposed as frauds themselves. Other forms
- of net-abuse that may be emailed to them would include falsified
- rmgroup and cancel messages (if these were not committed by the
- CyberAngels themselves, of course).
-
- This suggestion may be combined with the "cyberspawn" cancel
- mechanism on Usenet, through a daemon at various sites
- automatically mailing the spam to "ganetwatch@aol.com" prior (if
- this is wanted) to cancellation. A form of it can also be used
- against any other organization seeking informants via computer
- networks.
- Sincerely Yours,
- -Allen Smith (EALLENSMITH@MBCL.RUTGERS.EDU)
-
- This message may be freely redistributed on the Internet, on other
- computer networks, and on BBSes if it is left completely intact and
- the distributor is not a Guardian Angel. I encourage doing so.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 14 Nov 1995 06:41:15 -0600
- From: bladex@BGA.COM(David Smith)
- Subject: File 2--Guardian Angel NOVEMBER NEWSLETTER
-
- This is somewhat long, but attached is the November newsletter of the
- Guardian Angels CyberAngels Internet Monitoring Project. I did not write any
- of this, but am forwarding it as an item of interest.
-
- Most notable is the allegation of contacting 50 separate sysadmins and
- providing them with evidence about individual users trading child pornagraphy.
-
-
- >From--GANetWatch@aol.com
- >Date--Tue, 14 Nov 1995 13:38:26 -0500
- >Subject--NOVEMBER NEWSLETTER
- >Apparently-To--<bladex@bga.com>
- >
- >CYBERANGELS
- >INTERNET MONITORING PROJECT
- >November 1995 Newsletter
- >********************
- >Hi! And a special welcome to the many of you who are new on our newsletter
- >mailing list this month. SECONDLY - if you are on this list by mistake...our
- >apologies. Our mailing list got damaged and we had to rebuild it from
- >scratch! Let us know (again!) if you wish to unsubscribe. Sorry!
- >
- >Firstly let me (Gabriel) introduce my colleague to you. His name is Patrik
- >Olterman, and he is originally from Sweden. Like me he is a veteran Guardian
- >Angel, and is now working with me coordinating the CyberAngels project. FYI
- >we are both based in Hollywood, CA. No, not the nice part :) Oh, and in the
- >Guardian Angels he has a nickname. We call him "Harlequin".
- >
- >The past month has been excellent for the project. Firstly all thanks to
- >SAFESURF - to Ray Soular and Wendy Simpson - for donating us a home page on
- >the www. This made our project global for the first time. Safesurf and
- >CyberAngels are working together as two concerned groups, to help protect
- >our cyberneighborhood. Ray and Wendy are truly are good people. THANKS you
- >guys! We encourage all our volunteers and newsletter members to check out
- >Safesurf's home pages and to subscribe to their newsletter. You can reach
- >them via hyperlink from the CyberAngels home page at
- >
- >http://www.safesurf.com/cyberangels/
- >or go directly to http://www.safesurf.com/wave/
- >
- >Read especially Safesurf's "Declaration of an Independent InterNet" We
- >support it 100% !
- >
- >By the way, if you have already visited our homepage, VISIT IT AGAIN! :) We
- >will be changing and developing it, and adding more links, as we develop our
- >project. We would certainly welcome your suggestions as to how we can
- >improve things.
- >
- >Oh, before I forget...we wished everyone a Happy Halloween...but that message
- >was written by Harlequin, who is Swedish, and he spelled it wrong! :( He
- >wrote "Haloween". I guess he was thinking of Angels :)
- >********************
- >INTERNET AND COMPUTER EXPO IN FLORIDA
- >
- >We will be down in Florida for the 1,2 and 3 December, with a booth at the
- >InterNet and Computer Expo '95. This is thanks to a donation (worth $1000!)
- >of space there by Frank Rocco, one of the organizers. Thanks Frank! FYI
- >CyberAngels is an all volunteer project, coordinated from a Macintosh
- >Powerbook 150 (honest!), and we do not have many resources. But we need to
- >spread the message, so help us in any way you can! You can contact the I & C
- >Expo on 1 305 941 2400, or 1-800-330-1900, or email to
- >expos@InterNetmarketing.com. The expo by the way will be at Broward County
- >Convention Centre, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, USA. We hope to meet some of
- >you there!
- >********************
- >CYBERANGELS REACH AUSTRALIA
- >
- >One of the results of our global reach for volunteers, after Safesurf's www
- >homepage donation, was that we started receiving volunteers from Australia.
- > There also followed 6 radio shows all over Australia, and an article in the
- >Sydney Morning Herald, explaining our work. Child Pornography on the
- >InterNet seems to be very much an issue of the day in Australia. And so it
- >should be - everywhere. Welcome to all our new friends from Down Under!
- >
- >Check out especially: http://www.australia-today.com
- >
- >One of our new volunteers is running it :) Hi Hans! Hans is very much
- >involved in DOING something positive. He wrote as follows (and Im quoting
- >you Hans because this letter was public - hope thats ok):
- >
- >>I am no wowser, adult material does not faze me, but when I >see detailled
- >instructions on how to rape a four year old, >together with photographs of
- >the actual event, even I feel >that something needs to be done. Not to
- >mention how to make >bombs, break into houses and cars and how to kill
- >someone >efficiently with a knife.
- >>I am not making this up - it's all there.
- >>From your responses I know that many of you have seen this >material also.
- >>Please keep in touch, we need concerned people like you to >keep these kind
- >of excesses in check. Censorship is not the >answer. History shows this has
- >never worked. Let us try to at >least shield our children from this sort of
- >material, they'll >grow up soon enough.
- >>Together we can make a difference, let's do it.
- >>Hans von Lieven, editor Australia Today.
- >
- >Please, everyone, visit Hans' website and write letters of support to him.
- > Let him know how much we appreciate his standing up and making a commitment
- >to a safe Internet.
- >********************
- >INTERNET PATROLS LAST MONTH
- >
- >We have been DELUGED with information and education about what is happening
- >all over the Net in the past month. Special mention must go to one of our
- >CyberAngels, whose userid is Techphob. Tech has been patrolling all KINDS of
- >dark alleys and dangerous cyberhoods, and the information he is accumulating
- >earns him a special mention as our CYBERANGEL OF THE MONTH. Not only has he
- >been assembling huge lists of the red light area of the InterNet, and
- >painstakingly researching them, which is not a pleasant task. TECHPHOB, when
- >you die you will go to CYBERHEAVEN. :) Keep up the excellent work. And if
- >one person can do so much, think what we can ALL do if we work together.
- >
- >We have reported a number of Child Pornographers (50) to Sysadmins this
- >month. This was done only after we received from them graphic images
- >(unsolicited) of child pornography. We forwarded the email, including the
- >attached files, to respective ISPs with the question "Is this a violation of
- >your TOS? And if it is, what disciplinary steps will you take?" Letters we
- >have received back all share our concern and promise stern action.
- >
- >Child pornographers are claiming "freedom of speech / expression" to justify
- >their evil trade. Well we are claiming "freedom of speech / expression" to
- >try and stop it! Thank you to all our volunteers who did NOT look the other
- >way but stood up and said NO. Remember, each electronic image represents a
- >real life destroyed.
- >
- >Many people are unsure when they find things whether to contact ISPs
- >(InterNet Service Providers) themselves, by writing to relevant System
- >Administrators, or to forward the information to us at CyberAngels Central -
- >well do both! We can not possibly investigate everything that you all find,
- >so take the step and speak up if you feel there is a TOS (Terms of Service)
- >violation. Write to the ISP and explain the situation and ask the question
- >"Is this a violation of your TOS?". Remember, we will not report anything
- >we do not investigate ourselves. We do not operate on hearsay. So if you
- >find something, give us full information as to how we may find it.
- >
- >An educational story to finish this section. One of our CyberAngels drew our
- >attention last month to a very nasty posting in alt.teens on the Usenet. We
- >checked itout and then wrote to the Sysadmin. It was a posting from a 16
- >year old girl and was extremely nasty (obscene). Not only that but the
- >userid indicated that the server was at a girls school in England. I wrote
- >to the Sysadmin and asked the question "Are you aware that one of your girls
- >is posting this kind of material to this newsgroup?" He investigated the
- >matter, and it turned out apparently that the postings came not from a 16
- >year old girl at all, but from an older, MALE, member of the teaching staff.
- >********************
- >FLAMES
- >
- >With global exposure, and an increasing number of online and offline
- >magazines featuring CyberAngels, comes flames. And we would like to take
- >this opportunity to thank everyone who flamed us in the past month. Some of
- >your flames were extremely educational and helped us ENORMOUSLY. We try to
- >reply to all our flames (no matter how rude they are), because we find it a
- >very educational activity.
- >
- >A copy of our FAQ was sent to CUDigest (an online magazine), and it started
- >some serious debates via email. We have so far received an equal number of
- >flames and volunteers. :)
- >
- >Special mention must go to an ongoing debate about anonymous remailers, which
- >was an area where we were less informed. Thanks to an154280@anon.penet.fi
- > for lots of very helpful suggestions. For those of you interested in the
- >debate about anonymity we have two suggestions: firstly we have a HUGE FAQ
- >on "Identity, Privacy and Anonymity on the InterNet", written by L.Detweiler,
- >and if any of you want it, please write to us and ask for it (WARNING it is
- >138k!) Secondly you can write to help@anon.penet.fi for their FAQ on their
- >anonymous service, which is also very educational.
- >********************
- >AN INTERACTIVE SECTION
- >
- >We need to learn more about "kill files". Who knows about them and who is
- >willing to share? We will print whatever info we get in the next newsletter.
- >
- >Secondly, if any of you have ANYTHING relevant you would like to see printed
- >in our next newsletter, then please submit it to us. Let us know if you want
- >your name on it or not. Let's start sharing information and stories among
- >our members. Do you really want to listen to Gabriel month after month? ;)
- >
- >Send us press articles etc, especially translations from countries where
- >english is not spoken, about the InterNet and what is happening. Let's hear
- >some good news about all the excellent organizations working for a safer
- >InterNet!
- >
- >Another question - what is X-Band? We think it is a game playing BBS, but we
- >are not sure. Anyway, no one on X-Band can receive email longer than 5
- >lines. So does anyone out there know what it is? We have received several
- >letters from X-Band inhabitants, and we are very interested in
- >it...Someone...educate us!
- >********************
- >USEFUL INTERNET ORGANIZATIONS
- >
- >For those of you who want to learn more about the issues and arguments of
- >cyberspace and censorship/regulation, we would refer you to the following
- >groups (in addition to ourselves and Safesurf ) :
- >
- >1) Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), describes itself as "a non-profit
- >civil liberties organization working in the public interest to protect
- >privacy, free expression and access to online resources and information"
- > They are at http://www.eff.org
- >
- >2) InterNet Society, at http://www.isoc.org
- >
- >For those of you interested in US legislation, you can obtain a list from the
- >ACLU of recent government legislation relating to the Net (Thanks CyberAngel
- >Anndell!).
- >For a synopsis of all the online censorship bills passed or considered by
- >American states this year, send a message to infoaclu@aclu.org with "Update
- >of State Bills" in the subject line of the message.
- >
- >For those of you outside the USA, please send us similar information from
- >your countries!
- >********************
- >CYBERANGELS MOVING EMAIL ADDRESS SOON!
- >
- >We are busy right now setting up an account with Wavenet.com in Los Angeles,
- >so will soon have a different email address (although we will maintain
- >ganetwatch@aol.com). From the 20th November you can email us at
- >
- >angels@wavenet.com
- >
- >and this is the email address we would prefer you to use. Thanks!
- >********************
- >Below is an article many of you will not have read.
- >
- >CYBERANGELS
- >In "Wanted" Magazine
- >
- >"I'm looking for pictures of girls 11 to 14. Let's trade." Starts the man
- >the other men know only as Flesh.
- >"Hey everyone trade with me". Matt follows up. "I always return hard to
- >find, controversial pictures!"
- >A guy known as Pedoman spoke next. "Let's trade pictures I have ton's of
- >hard ones".
- >"If you got girls 11 - 14 I'm for trading".
- >"I want 1 - 5".
- >"Yum yum give me some".
- >"Any good girl-girl action (under 16)? Adds a new party.
- >"If people send me pics I'll return a movie".
- >"I have some Preteen pics to trade" This from Pedoman.
- >"Tell me how young, and send me one first. I'll get you what you want".
- >
- >This is a real conversation that occurred on August 5th 1995 over computer
- >phone lines in a live talk area of America On Line, (one of the most popular
- >computer servers in the Nation). The Guardian Angels recorded it as part of
- >a new program to expose computer criminals, help the police keep an eye on
- >cyber sickies and close down their deviant electronic town meeting/support
- >group/strategy session.
- >
- >The Program is called Cyber Angels and like the Guardian Angel street patrols
- >it's on the cutting edge. Cyber Angels has a huge potential because it draws
- >on an untapped source for it's members; ordinary Internet surfers. It trains
- >them to be observant while they "surf", looking for criminal or abusive uses
- >of the computer network. Hate crimes, pedophile networks, sexual harassment
- >(stalking) and credit card fraud are just some of the crimes flourishing on
- >the under secured Internet and fair game for the Cyber Angels.
- >
- >More than just an enforcement group the Cyber Angels will train Users to help
- >look out for their own community; the computer community. Why shouldn't the
- >same laws of human decency and respect for others apply to the Internet as
- >well as any street in the U.S.?
- >
- >Strangely thousands of educated, non pedophiles are opposed to us trying to
- >do this.
- >
- >4 million people already belong to America on Line's (A.O.L.) computer clan.
- > Hundreds more join every day as people succumb to the super glut of
- >propaganda about the Information Superhighway and rush to find out what they
- >are missing. A huge family all right however so far it seems nobody wants to
- >do anything about dirty Uncle Fester who's up in the attic panting and
- >drooling over an X-rated picture of the "Little Rascals".
- >
- >In fact, based on the recorded conversation above, not only does the family
- >turn a blind eye to Uncle Fester they also let him use the den for a weekly
- >game of poker with like minded friends using a deck of cards with a "kids and
- >their loving pets" theme.
- >
- >Even worse, Mom and Dad sometimes let Uncle F. baby-sit the kids.
- >
- >Authorities have made sporadic attempts to lock up these computer pedophiles
- >but the successes of these campaigns have just gone to show how blatant and
- >widespread the problem is. Like an exterminator who crushes a hundred
- >cockroaches just by walking across the kitchen floor.
- >
- >Last year U.S. federal authorities served warrants on 35 men who had
- >contacted a Danish computer service that provided pictures that were illegal
- >in the U.S., of young kids having sex. Out of the 35 men who were
- >questioned and had their houses searched, 10 readily admitted to having
- >molested children.
- >
- >Yet despite these successes the family continues to shelter Uncle Fester.
- >When we tried to follow-up after we gave America On Line (A.O.L.) the
- >recording of the conversation above, they informed us that not only were the
- >identities of the conversants confidential, so was any details about any
- >disciplinary action A.O.L. had or hadn't taken against them. A.O.L. admits
- >that there are many more cases of children being targeted for crimes and
- >abuse through the computer that are unrecorded, still it refuses to
- >reconsider it's promotional policy of providing any new user with 10 free
- >hours. This promotional tactic allows anyone to sign on with a fake credit
- >card and have ten hours using or abusing the Internet with complete
- >anonymity. Because A.O.L. sends out discs through the mail and distributes
- >them through selected magazines there is no limit to the number of free 10
- >hour trials computer abusers can get.
- >
- >But the Administrators of A.O.L. aren't the only obstacle. It seems the
- >Internet has it's own freedom fighters. A fearless band of well meaning
- >defenders who take a good idea to it's absurd extreme. Like environmental
- >granola terrorists who will injure loggers or bomb hunting retreats to save
- >the spotted owl, these Champions of Cyber feel that freedom of speech as
- >proposed by the founding fathers was intended to allow child rapists to hold
- >public gab sessions, discuss their disgusting deeds and depraved desires and
- >just generally work themselves up into a pedophilic lather. Personally, I
- >prefer a little preventative medicine, a little stitch in time that saves
- >sending out the blood hounds to try and locate a snatched 5 year old before
- >she ends up in a garbage bag in a dumpster.
- >
- >A private investigator who was upset by the use of the world wide computer
- >network of computer pedophile predators assumed the identity of a teenage
- >girl to show how simple it was to draw out the computer predators. A Nevada
- >man quickly fell into the trap not only sending explicit sexual messages to
- >what he thought was a 14 year old girl but traveling to a Milwaukee motel
- >room for an arranged sexual liaison where he was met and charged by federal
- >authorities.
- >
- >At our own Web Site the Cyber Angels will act as public advocates, posting
- >information about Users who commit cyber crimes or try to arrange physical
- >rendezvous with children. Just like Megan's law in New Jersey and similar
- >laws in other states allow us to warn parents who and what to watch for if
- >they want to keep their kids safe.
- >
- >Users who have witnessed or discovered some abuse of the 'Net can also visit
- >our Web Site to find out what they should do with their concern. Should they
- >pass their information on to the Federal authorities? Post it on our
- >bulletin board? And how about some instruction in how not to react? On the
- >street you can get shot for trying to get in the last insult of an argument,
- >on the 'Net you don't run the risk of death but you are only motivating some
- >hate nutcase if you do anything more than lodge your disgust and then ignore
- >them. Then there will be the Chicken Little cases that we need to reach;
- >maybe someone enters a chat room where a discussion is being held between
- >some gay men and nobody has ever told this guy that there is a difference
- >between homosexual and child molester . Well then our Web Site can let him
- >know that the sky is not falling.
- >
- >We want to pressure computer system operators to better police their own
- >service users. A.O.L. needs to learn that it is partially responsible for
- >what goes on in it's "house". Hey, call me cynical but it's hard to have
- >trust in A.O.L.'s integrity and humanity when they assign their well paid
- >corporate lawyers to answer our concerns about the 'Net.
- >
- >Less lawyers and more law. So the Cyber Angel program will filter all the
- >information that it receives from patrolling members and concerned Users and
- >pass the useful information on to the authorities to act on. Then we
- >publicize the arrests because just building the reputation of the 'Net as a
- >protected environment where the law applies just like everywhere else will go
- >a long way in discouraging some guy with a new swastika tattoo from
- >terrorizing some other User.
- >
- >Right now the Internet has a reputation. A noticeable absence of Police and
- >thousands of young potential victims or recruits left to wander by themselves
- >by their parents. Users and Abusers can operate with complete anonymity, is
- >it any wonder that pedophiles, racists and other criminals have approached
- > the computer era with clammy hand rubbing glee?
- >
- >These Abusers with their Hitler salutes and baby oil got the computer jump on
- >everybody but Bill Gates and now they are entrenched. Cyber space is
- >infested with "Aliens" who are lurking in not so dark corners, waiting for a
- >victim to happen by and training the fledgling "Aliens" how to hunt. The
- >Cyber Angels are just recruiting the Sigourney Weavers.
- >
- >We have already attracted over two hundred recruits to our Cyber Angel
- >program. Like the original Guardian Angel program it has the power of
- >algebra on it's side. Basically there are more law abiding Users on the
- >Internet then law breaking Abusers, it's just a matter of the good guys
- >working as hard as the bad and the ugly.
- >
- >So should we bother? Should we act on our disgust at the black polyester
- >sock, pant and drool crowd that are soiling their fruit of the looms over
- >traded photos of 8 year old children? Or is this the kind of free speech the
- >founding fathers meant to protect with the first amendment? Should I be
- >angry and try to stop the distribution of a video game where the object is to
- >cram the most Jewish prisoners into my crematorium and win the "game"?
- > Should anyone even be offended that the same "champions of the people", who
- >brought you the Time magazine article on Cyberporn have now written their own
- >get rich quick computer manual called "The Pornographers Handbook: How To
- >Exploit Women, Dupe Men & Make Lots of Money."?
- >
- >Only if our principles have gotten lazy. Just by definition we should be
- >interested in anything that interests Pedophiles as much as the Internet.
- > Where ever the sexually criminal play there should be watchdogs following
- >them. people should be vigilant so they can not befriend and then attack
- >their little victim. Hate mongers must have their twisted lies refuted and
- >exposed to ensure that potential recruits get both sides of the story before
- >they get sucked down that whirlpool of biased sewage.
- >
- >Maybe just as important, Users that "play" at crime on the Internet need a
- >wake-up call. The future of the 'Net is in their hands also. They may be
- >young and adventurous now but are they going to want their future children to
- >encounter the kinds of "harmless" harassment, "fun and games" fraud and "it
- >was just a joke until someone loses an eye" mail box bombing or computer
- >virus campaigns?
- >
- >The Guardian Angels have adopted an old saying "All that is required for the
- >triumph of evil, is that good men and women remain silent and do nothing".
- > That's as true today on the internet as it ever was anywhere else.
- >
- >Sebastian Metz
- >********************
- >HELP US! WE NEED YOUR DONATIONS TO EXPAND OUR PROJECT!
- >
- >Listen...thanks to YOU this InterNet monitoring project has really taken off,
- >and we are getting more volunteers every day. That means more and more
- >people around the world are taking the PROACTIVE step of patrolling your part
- >of cyberspace and assuming a greater responsibility for the quality of your
- >cyberhood. That means WE ARE ALL MAKING A DIFFERENCE! We are helping many
- >people, especially kids, enjoy the wonderful creation that is the InterNet,
- >in greater safety and security.
- >
- >NOW...we need to expand our resources. There are now two of us working as
- >fulltime volunteers to coordinate the project, and WE NEED YOUR HELP.
- >
- >Firstly we need two big fast applemacs with 28.8 modems. If we can't find a
- >donor, we will need to buy them. If you can help us with these resources in
- >any way, please email us.
- >
- >Secondly, we are a volunteer organization and we need money to help us to
- >cover our increasing online bills, not to mention to develop our WWW home
- >pages. The great strength of our work together is that it is a team effort.
- >E.g. if everyone on our mailing list sent us *$10.00*, this would enable us
- >to expand the project to a higher level for 1996. Please send any donations
- >as checks or money orders (payable to "CyberAngels") to: CyberAngels, PO Box
- >1102, Hollywood, CA 90078, USA. Thank you in advance for that particular
- >help. We really need it!
- >
- >We have designed a special CyberAngels T-shirt, and are offering it to our
- >supporters for the sum of $25.00. This is of course a donation to the work,
- >but in this case you will receive an excellent T-shirt that you could not buy
- >anywhere! Details of this will soon be up on our Web page. If you are
- >interested, send that $25.00 to the above snail address. :)
- >
- >By the way, anyone sending in a donation of $50.00 or more will be listed on
- >our home pages in our CyberAngels Supporters Hall of Fame. Dig deep!
- >
- >BTW, anyone with a WWW site - you can help us enormously by putting a link
- >from your page to ours...This way we spread the word faster!
- >********************
- >AND FINALLY
- >
- >>From Harlequin and myself (Gabriel), that's all until our next newsletter.
- > We have a wonderful project going on here, that is really helping to change
- >the InterNet. Don't ever think that the Net is too big to change. All it
- >takes is individuals coming together with determination. We thank you all.
- > And keep those patrols going on! And spread the word! Get your friends
- >involved too, and build this work! Remember:
- >
- >CYBERSPACE NEEDS CYBERANGELS!
- >
- >Gabriel & Harlequin
- >
-
- David Smith * "We truly believe that even though we live in an
- evil
- bladex@bga.com * world, if you can stand up with a stronger
- will, then you
- President, EFF-Austin * can't be beaten down. This is the true spirit
- of the
- Board of Directors, CTCLU * EFF-Austin member" -- John Woo
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 13 Nov 1995 23:59:03 +0100
- From: Patrick C. Ernzer <ernzer@paranoid.pfalz.de>
- Subject: File 3--Re: CuD, #7.89 - Govt & Net Censorship
-
- just some thoughts that crossed my mind, and wich I thought I would
- share with you.
-
- there was a time when the US where great and wonderful to me (this was
- when I was young and easily impressed by things as Silicon Valley and
- the NASA). Then came the time to keep up with news and such, and
- gradually the US became in my view a place where the best, the worst
- and especially the most silly things were possible (e.g. the sexual
- harassment laws of the US, wich are laughably extreme in the views of
- most Europeans). But now it has finally happened, a very powerful
- group (The Religious Right) has clearly gone too far.
-
- I don't mean to insult the US in general, but if the bill, the
- Religious Right wants to pass, does pass, then the US risk to be left
- out from the international community. IMHO (untill Europe imitates the
- US, as always 10 years or so later) the US will simply left out from
- the internet. Rather than risking having bigots laws on one's back and
- being sued all the way to the end of the known galaxy, people will
- IMHO just avoid the US.
-
- Are those who want to pass the bill aware of this? I doubt it. I would
- really miss all the people I am in contact with in the US, but then
- again I don't want to get in trouble just because if my language or my
- general moral views. (No, I'm not a child abuser, but the sense of
- humor I inherited by living in France for many years will probably be
- enough to get me into trouble. Just imagine telling a sick baby joke
- with a sexual conotation to sb residing in the US will get me and my
- ISP or university in deep trouble instead of just generating a "bah,
- that was not really funny, you know.")
-
- What will happen to the US if all major firms relocate to other
- coutries because of the legislation being just laughably strict? I
- don't want to paint gloomy end-of-world-scenes regarding the US, but
- IMHO there is a danger of this.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: JeanBernard_Condat@EMAIL.FRANCENET.FR(JeanBernard Condat)
- Subject: File 4--French agreement to use Netscape Navigator
- Date: 21 Nov 1995 08:49:06 GMT
-
- Bonjour,
-
- All over the French newgroups, you can read the uncredibled news this
- morning: the secret SCSSI (Service Central de la Securite des Systemes
- d'Information) from the Premier Ministre' desk in Paris have given the
- complete
- agreement to use Netscape Navigator. The document is like that:
-
- Titre: "Autorisation de fourniture et d'utilisation generale de moyens
- de cryptologie No. 2500"
- Signe: 7 Novembre 1995
- Par: Jacques VINCENT-CARREFOUR pour la DISSI
- Reference: 509/DISSI dossier numero 950038
-
- L'autorisation est fournie aux seuls produits Netscape Navigator suivants:
-
- N. DOS WINDOWS CD ROM
- N. DOS WINDOWS KX 23
- N. MACINTOSH CD ROM
- N. MACINTOSH RX23
- N. NT/INTEL CD ROM
- N. NT/INTEL RX23
- N. NT/ALPHA
- N. X-WINDOWS
- N. WIN/95 16 BIT CD ROM
- N. WIN/95 16 BIT RX 23
- N. WIN/95 32 BIT CD ROM
- N. WIN/95 32 BIT RX 23
-
- Elle est egalement fournie aux distributeurs de la liste suivante et a
- eux seuls:
-
- Sun Microsystems Computers
- Digital Equipment
- Silicon Graphics
- Novell
- Siemens Nixdorf
- Olivetti
- Bull
- Zenith Data Systems
- Apple Computers
- Hewlett Packard
- Compaq
- Azlan
- Softway
- France Telecom
- Grolier Interactive Europe
- General Games
-
- Some remarks can be do: it's no "s" to X-Window in the list of authorized
- products. This
- agreement "is good until 1st October 1997 for selling and use in France
- only." This autho-
- rization will be late to be given because of some discussions with other
- hurge software
- publishers that don't have receive the same paper.
-
- It's the first time in France that an US specific software will be accepted
- in the cryptographic
- field by our Government. Bravo -:>]
-
- -- Jean-bernard Condat
- Computer Security Expert (Paris, France)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 22 Nov 1995 18:01:45 -0500
- From: ACLUNATL@AOL.COM
- Subject: File 5--ACLU Cyber-Liberties Update -- 11/22/95
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- November 22, 1995
- ACLU CYBER-LIBERTIES UPDATE
- A bi-weekly e-zine on cyber-liberties cases and controversies
- at the state and federal level.
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- IN THIS ISSUE:
-
- * New York Civil Liberties Union Opposes Discipline of Cornell Students
- for Offensive Online Speech
-
- * Seattle Negotiates New Franchise Agreement with Cable Network to Offer
- Internet Access; ACLU of Washington Gives Testimony on Privacy Implications
-
- * Watch Out for Cyber-Liberties Infringements in Counter-Terrorism
- Legislation; House May Consider Bill in Early December
-
- * Update and ACTION ALERT on Federal Online Indecency Legislation
-
- * Online Discussion Groups on Electronic Access Issues
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- STATE PAGE (Legislation/Agency/Court Cases)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- * New York Civil Liberties Union Opposes Discipline of Cornell Students for
- Offensive Online Speech
-
- The latest controversy over appropriate use of the Internet at universities
- erupted last week after four Cornell students made a list of "75 reasons why
- women should not have freedom of speech" and the list got loose on the
- Internet. Responding to e-mail and phone complaints about the message,
- Cornell considered disciplinary action against the students.
-
- The NYCLU wrote a letter to Cornell on Thursday, November 16th, urging
- Cornell not to proceed with disciplinary action. The letter said, "Freedom
- of expression, especially in the academic forum, is designed to encourage
- truth-seeking by protecting the challenge and response of intellectual
- discourse. . . . It is understandable that university officials should be
- concerned about the increase in the use of sexist language. . . . However,
- no matter how troubling or offensive the message is, the administration of
- Cornell University should not depart from principles of freedom of expression
- when addressing the issues surrounding this dispute." The letter went on to
- note that "the marketplace theory of free expression appears to be in full
- swing as the wrong-minded e-mail message has apparently already provoked
- thousands of angry messages' both to Cornell and to the particular four
- students."
-
- On Thursday afternoon, Cornell announced that it would not pursue any
- disciplinary action against the students.
-
- For a copy of the letter that NYCLU sent to Cornell, send a message to
- infoaclu@aclu.org with "NYCLU Letter to Cornell" in the subject line. For
- more information, contact Beth Haroules, Staff Attorney, NYCLU, at
- 212-382-0557.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- * Seattle Negotiates New Franchise Agreement with Cable Network to Offer
- Internet Access; ACLU of Washington Testifies at Hearing on Privacy
- Implications
-
- Cities across the country are beginning to renegotiate franchise agreements
- with cable networks who want to get into the Internet access business. Civil
- libertarians must work to ensure that strong privacy protections are included
- in these agreements.
-
- The City of Seattle is currently negotiating a new franchise agreement with
- TCI of Seattle, Inc., and the ACLU of Washington urged the city to include
- provisions to protect consumer privacy. In a letter dated November 9th,
- ACLU-W said that "franchisees should be prohibited from collecting any data
- on individual use of the cable network, including Internet access, except
- that data minimally needed for billing purposes. . . . [T]he franchisee
- should be precluded from collecting information about which other Internet
- sites are accessed through the cable network, which newsgroups are read,
- which real-time interactive forums are participated in, or any other
- information that could be used to compile a data profile of the subscriber."
- The letter also urged the city to require technological protections, like
- encryption, to guard against unauthorized tapping.
-
- For a copy of the letter, send a message to infoaclu@aclu.org with "cable
- franchise agreement" in the subject line. For more information, contact Doug
- Klunder, ACLU-W Information Technology Committee, dougk@eskimo.com.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- FEDERAL PAGE (Congress/Agency/Court Cases)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- * Watch Out for Cyber-Liberties Infringements in Counter-Terrorism
- Legislation; House May Consider Bill in Early December
-
- The House of Representatives is scheduled to debate a broad counter-terrorism
- bill in early December. (The Senate passed a similar bill in June 1995.)
- While the counter-terrorism bill contains many unconstitutional provisions,
- the net community should be particularly alert to the following:
-
- 1. The pending House counter-terrorism bill contains a funding mechanism for
- vastly expanded wiretap capabilities for federal law enforcement (authorized
- by the Digital Telephony law passed by Congress last year). The FBI's scheme
- would give government an unprecedented ability to intrude on privacy through
- increased wiretaps. The net community should oppose this and any other
- funding scheme for the FBI's wiretap proposal. (See our 11/8 issue of the
- Cyber-Liberties Update for an ACLU statement and action alert on the federal
- wiretap proposal.)
-
- 2. The version of counter-terrorism legislation already passed by the Senate
- contains a revised Feinstein Amendment, which makes it a felony "to
- distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the
- manufacture of explosive materials, if the person intends, or knows that such
- explosive materials or information will likely be used for" criminal
- purposes. While the legislation applies to all media, it grew out of Senator
- Feinstein's vilification of the Internet at the Senate's May 11th
- counter-terrorism hearings. The House version of counter-terrorism
- legislation does not currently contain language like the Feinstein Amendment,
- but the online community should stand ready to oppose any effort to include
- such unconstitutional provisions in the final House bill.
-
- For a copy of the ACLU's letter to the Senate in opposition to the original
- Feinstein Amendment, send a message to infoaclu@aclu.org with "Feinstein
- Amendment" in the subject line.
-
- For further information on the ACLU's opposition to counter-terrorism
- legislation (which would also expand the FBI's powers in electronic
- surveillance and other areas), visit the ACLU's Constitution Hall on America
- Online, at keyword ACLU.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- * Update and ACTION ALERT on Federal Online Indecency Legislation
-
- The Conference Committee on the telecommunications bill is currently
- considering whether to remove provisions that would make "indecency" and
- other speech a crime in cyberspace. The Christian Coalition and other
- anti-free-speech groups continue to heavily lobby the Conferees to make the
- new speech crimes even stricter than the Exon Amendment. To counter this
- backlash, the online community must overwhelm the Conference Committee with a
- loud and clear message -- that parental empowerment tools and not big
- government censorship are the only effective means to address children's
- access to online content.
-
- While the Conference Committee is home for Thanksgiving, we urge you to call
- the Conferees in your state. To find a list of the home office phone numbers
- for the Conferees, see the current ACTION ALERT at http://www.vtw.org/
-
- The ACLU continues to prepare for a constitutional challenge to the online
- censorship provisions if they become law. Please contact Ann Beeson,
- beeson@aclu.org, if your organization is interested in being a plaintiff in
- this ground-breaking litigation that will define First Amendment rights in
- cyberspace.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Online Discussion Groups on Electronic Access Issues
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- The following discussion groups are actively debating government information
- and access issues:
-
- GOVPUB -- issues related to publishing local and state government information
- online
- Subscribe: listserv@vm1.nodak.edu
- Message: subscribe govpub
-
- GOVACCESS -- citizen access to government information
- Subscribe: majordomo@well.dom
- Message: subscribe govaccess
-
- PUBPOL-D -- substantive discussion of public policy issues
- Subscribe: listserv@vm1.spcs.umn.edu
- Message: subscribe pubpol-d [your name]
-
- COMMUNET -- issues related to community and civic networks
- Subscribe: listserv@uvmvm.uvm.edu
- Message: subscribe communet [your name]
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- ONLINE RESOURCES FROM THE ACLU NATIONAL OFFICE
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Stay tuned for news on the ACLU's world wide web site, under construction at
- http://www.aclu.org. America Online users should check out our live chats,
- auditorium events, *very* active message boards, and complete news on civil
- liberties, at keyword ACLU.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- ACLU Cyber-Liberties Update
- Editor: Ann Beeson (beeson@aclu.org)
- American Civil Liberties Union National Office
- 132 West 43rd Street
- New York, New York 10036
-
- To subscribe to the ACLU Cyber-Liberties Update, send a message to
- infoaclu@aclu.org with "subscribe Cyber-Liberties Update" in the subject line
- of your message. To terminate your subscription, send a message to
- infoaclu@aclu.org with "unsubscribe Cyber-Liberties Update" in the subject
- line.
-
- For general information about the ACLU, write to infoaclu@aclu.org.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 5 Nov 1995 22:51:01 CDT
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 6--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 5 Nov, 1995)
-
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-
- CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
-
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-
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-
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-
-
- The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #7.91
- ************************************
-
-