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-
- Computer underground Digest Wed May 15, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 36
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
- News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.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, #8.36 (Wed, May 15, 1996)
-
- File 1--CIEC Bulletin 5/16/96 - Court Orders DOJ to Halt CDA 'Reviews' Pending
- File 2--LAWSUIT: Dalzell's Court Order
- File 3--Letter From Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) On Encryption
- File 4--Remaining Scientology Secret Scriptures Posted to Usenet
- File 5--(fwd) Level 30 -- [An Online Anti-Pornography Crusade]
- File 6--Judge Denies Bond to Accused Hacker
- File 7--New Internet Journal
- File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ApPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 16 May 1996 17:58:08 -0400
- From: jseiger@CDT.ORG(Jonah Seiger)
- Subject: File 1--CIEC Bulletin 5/16/96 - Court Orders DOJ to Halt CDA 'Reviews'
- Pending
-
-
- Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition Trial Update No. 12
- Special Update -- May 16 1996 5:56 pm ET
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- http://www.cdt.org/ciec/
- ciec-info@cdt.org
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- CIEC UPDATES intended for members of the Citizens Internet
- Empowerment Coalition. CIEC Updates are written and edited by the
- Center for Democracy and Technology (http://www.cdt.org). This
- document may be reposted as long as it remains in total.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ** 40,000 Netizens Vs. U.S. Department of Justice. **
- * The Fight To Save Free Speech Online *
- Contents:
-
- o Court Orders DOJ to Halt "Reviews" Under the CDA
- o Transcripts from All 6 days of Court Testimony Now Online
- o How To Unsubscribe from this list
- o More Information on CIEC and the Center for Democracy and Technology
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- (1) Court Orders DOJ to Halt "Reviews" Under the CDA
-
- In response to a complaint filed last week by the CIEC, a Federal Judge in
- Philadelphia Wednesday ordered the Justice Department to stop all "reviews"
- of complaints under the Communications Decency Act until the three-judge
- panel rules on the constitutionality of the law. The order was issued by
- Judge Stewart Dalzell, one of the three judges presiding over the case.
-
- CIEC and ACLU attorneys filed the compliant after several national
- newspapers reported last week that the FBI had opened an investigation of
- Compuserve for violations of the CDA. The FBI has since denied that any
- investigation is or was underway, though the stories sparked a great deal
- of confusion and created a significant public relations problem for the
- commercial online service.
-
- In the order Judge Dalzell stated that "the government's conduct in
- subjecting a content provider to private and public scrutiny for displaying
- material that is neither obscene nor child pornography clearly runs afoul
- of both this Court's orders and the government's promises."
-
- Closing arguments in the case concluded on Friday May 10, and a final
- decision on the constitutionality of the CDA is expected soon. While
- Wednesday's ruling by Judge Dalzell provides little insight into which way
- the court will rule on the constitutionality of the CDA, the speed with
- which the order was issued does show that the court appreciates the
- tremendous free speech and commercial concerns riding on this case.
-
- The full text of the seven page order, tramscripts from Friday's oral
- arguments, and with other relevant information, is available at the
- Citizens Internet Empowerment Coalition web page:
-
- http://www.cdt.org/ciec
-
- BACKGROUND ON THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT/AFA FOLLIES
-
- After a Philadelphia federal judge granted a temporary restraining order
- against the CDA in February, the government agreed not to prosecute or
- investigate anyone for violations of the CDA until the court challenge had
- been completed. However, recent events have called the government's
- commitment to the February agreement into question.
-
- In early April, the conservative American Family Association (AFA) filed a
- complaint with the Justice Department accusing Compuserve of violating the
- CDA for material in a forum called MacGlamour, despite the fact that the
- site was labeled for adults only and Compuserve provides its users free
- software to block access to unwanted material.
-
- Last week in response to pressure from the AFA, acting Chief of the DOJ
- Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section Terry Lord sent a letter to AFA
- director Patrick Truman indicating that the Department "has referred [the
- AFA] letter and accompanying materials to the Federal Bureau of
- Investigation for further review."
-
- The FBI denied it was investigating, which would have been a violation of
- the February court agreement, but said it was "reviewing" the AFA
- complaint. CIEC attorneys asked the court to clarify if such a "review"
- violated the government's promise not to investigate or prosecute under the
- CDA.
-
- In granting the motion for clarification, Judge Dalzell ordered Attorney
- General Reno, the Justice Department, and the FBI to stop all "reviews" of
- online indecency complaints pending a decision regarding the
- constitutionality of the Communications Decency Act.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- (2) Hearing Transcripts for All 6 Days of Testimony Now Online
-
- Transcripts for all 6 days of hearings, including last Friday's (5/10)
- closing arguments, are now available online at the CIEC web site:
-
- http://www.cdt.org/ciec
-
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- (3) How to Unsubscribe From This List
-
- As CIEC members, you have been invited to join this list in order to
- receive news updates and other information relevant to the CIEC challenge
- to the Communications Decency Act. To subscribe, visit
- http://www.cdt.org/ciec and join the Coalition.
-
- If you ever want to remove yourself from this list, send email to
-
- ciec-members-request@cdt.org
-
- with 'unsubscribe ciec-members' in the SUBJECT LINE (w/o the 'quotes').
- Leave the body of your message blank.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------
- (4) For More Information
-
- For more information on the CIEC challenge, including the text of the
- complaint and other relevant materials:
-
- * World Wide Web -- http://www.cdt.org/ciec/
- * General Information about CIEC -- ciec-info@cdt.org
- * Copy of the Complaint -- ciec-docs@cdt.org
-
- * Specific Questions Regarding the
- Coalition, incuding Press Inquiries -- ciec@cdt.org
-
- * General information about the
- Center for Democracy and Technology -- info@cdt.org
-
- --
- end ciec-update.12
- 5/16/96
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 16 May 1996 16:32:23 -0800
- From: telstar@WIRED.COM(--Todd Lappin-->)
- Subject: File 2--LAWSUIT: Dalzell's Court Order
-
- My apologies to one and all for yesterday's failed attempts to update
- you on Judge Dalzell's court order reaffirming the injunction that
- blocks the DoJ from "reviewing" potentially "indecent" violations of
- the Communications Decency Act.
-
- Many thanks to all those who alerted me to the problem of the
- mysteriously truncated messages. Such are the perils of life in this
- technological age.
-
- In compensation -- and in the true spirit of open government -- I'm
- passing along some highlights of Judge Dalzell's order. It's a
- powerful document that is worth getting to know.
-
- After all, for the time being, this text is our only bulwark against
- the censor-happy thugs from the American Family Association and their
- eager accomplices at the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Division of
- the U.S. Department of Justice.
-
- ( ... Assuming, of course, that this message doesn't get truncated
- too.)
-
- Work the network!
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- Section Editor
- WIRED Magazine
-
- (EDITOR'S NOTE: the unabridged text of this document is available at:
- http://www.cdt.org/ciec/CIS_DOJ_order.html )
-
-
- IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
- FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
-
- AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, : CIVIL ACTION
- et al.
- v.
-
- JANET RENO, Attorney General of :
- the United States, : NO. 96-963
- ___________________________________________________________________
-
- AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOC., : CIVIL ACTION
- INC., et al. :
- v. :
- UNITED STATES DEP'T OF :
- JUSTICE, et al. : NO. 96-1458
-
- ORDER
-
- AND NOW, this 15th day of May, 1996, upon consideration of
- plaintiffs' Motion to Clarify and Restate the Court's Orders
- Concerning Defendants' Actions Pending Resolution of Plaintiffs'
- Motions for Preliminary Relief, and the response of the Government
- thereto, and the Court finding that:
-
- (a) On February 15, 1996 this Court entered a Temporary Restraining
- Order enjoining "[t]he defendant, her agents, and her servants . . .
- from enforcing against plaintiffs the provisions of 47 U.S.C.
- 223(a) (1) (B) (ii), insofar as they extend to 'indecent,' but not
- 'obscene'" Internet content, see docket no. 14;
-
- (b) Thereafter, the parties entered a stipulation in which the
- Attorney General promised that "she will not initiate any
- investigations or prosecutions for violations of 47 U.S.C. 223(d)
- for conduct occurring after enactment of this provision until
- the three-judge court hears Plaintiffs' Motion for Preliminary
- Injunction... and has decided the motion" see docket no. 18;(1)
-
- (c) This Court approved the Stipulation on February 26, 1996,
- giving it the force of an Order of this Court;
-
- [ DELETED SECTION (A chronology of the AFA's dispute with CompuServe) ]
-
- (j) The plaintiffs in C.A. No. 96-1458 have now moved this court
- for an Order to clarify the February 15th Temporary Restraining
- Order and the February 26th Stipulation and Order to prevent the
- Department of Justice from "reviewing" Internet Content that falls
- within the scope of the prohibitions in those two Orders;
-
- (k) In its written response to the motion, the Government has
- emphasized that the Attorney General retains her full discretion to
- prosecute the CDA as it relates to obscenity and child pornography,
- see defs.' resp. at 5-6;
-
- (l) The Government echoed these arguments at oral argument on May
- 10, 1996, see Transcript of May 10, 1996 at 150, 154-55;
-
- (m) Although the Government is correct about the Attorney General's
- continued discretion under the obscenity and child pornography
- provisions of the CDA, this point misses the mark entirely, for the
- following reasons:
-
- i. Under the Government's view of this case, nude depictions of
- sexual organs alone are almost certainly not obscene,
-
- [ ... ]
-
- ii. The women in the photographs are almost certainly not minors;
-
- iii. At most, then, the Government has initiated a "review" of
- CompuServe purportedly for obscenity and child pornography based
- only on the availability of indecent material there;
-
- (n) Thus, neither actual obscenity nor child pornography provided
- the impetus for the Department of Justice's referral of CompuServe
- for "review" by the FBI;
-
- (o) Notwithstanding the Government's post hoc rationalization for
- the actions of the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Division,
- its conduct in subjecting a content provider to private and public
- scrutiny for displaying material that is neither obscene nor child
- pornography clearly runs afoul of both this Court's Orders and the
- Government's promises, as made in the Stipulation we approved on
- February 26, 1996;
-
- It is hereby ORDERED that:
-
- 1. Plaintiffs' Motion to Clarify and Restate the Court's Orders
- Concerning Defendants' Actions Pending Resolution of Plaintiffs'
- Motions for Preliminary Relief is GRANTED;
-
- 2. "Review" by the Attorney General or her agents, including the
- Federal Bureau of Investigation, of sexually oriented Internet
- content falls within this Court's Temporary Restraining Order of
- February 15, 1996 and the Stipulation this Court approved by Order
- on February 26, 1996, when that "review" is triggered by (1)
- content that is neither obscene nor child pornography, or (2)
- complaints of Internet content that, as described, constitute
- neither obscenity nor child pornography;
-
- 3. The Attorney General and her agents are ENJOINED from engaging
- in "review" of a content provider if that "review" is triggered by
- either of the two circumstances described in paragraph two of this
- Order; and
-
- 4. The Attorney General and her agents retain their full power to
- "review" complaints regarding Internet content that constitutes
- obscenity or child pornography, provided that, if, upon "review" it
- appears that the material complained of is neither obscene or child
- pornography, the "review" must then immediately cease.
-
- BY THE COURT:
-
-
- [signature]
-
- STEWART DALZELL, J.
-
-
- [Footnotes deleted]
-
-
- +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+=
- This transmission was brought to you by....
-
- THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK
-
- The CDA Disaster Network is a moderated distribution list providing
- up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the
- Communications Decency Act. To subscribe, send email to
- <majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: Senator_Leahy@LEAHY.SENATE.GOV
- Date: Thu, 02 May 96 12:04:07 EST
- Subject: File 3--Letter From Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT) On Encryption
-
- Please post where appropriate
-
- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
-
- LETTER FROM SENATOR PATRICK LEAHY (D-VT) ON ENCRYPTION
-
- May 2, 1996
-
- Dear Friends:
-
- Today, a bipartisan group of Senators has joined me in supporting
- legislation to encourage the development and use of strong,
- privacy-enhancing technologies for the Internet by rolling back
- the out-dated restrictions on the export of strong cryptography.
-
- In an effort to demonstrate one of the more practical uses of
- encryption technology (and so that you all know this message
- actually came from me), I have signed this message using a
- digital signature generated by the popular encryption program
- PGP. I am proud to be the first member of Congress to utilize
- encryption and digital signatures to post a message to the
- Internet.
-
- As a fellow Internet user, I care deeply about protecting
- individual privacy and encouraging the development of the Net as
- a secure and trusted communications medium. I do not need to
- tell you that current export restrictions only allow American
- companies to export primarily weak encryption technology. The
- current strength of encryption the U.S. government will allow out
- of the country is so weak that, according to a January 1996 study
- conducted by world-renowned cryptographers, a pedestrian hacker
- can crack the codes in a matter of hours! A foreign intelligence
- agency can crack the current 40-bit codes in seconds.
-
- Perhaps more importantly, the increasing use of the Internet and
- similar interactive communications technologies by Americans to
- obtain critical medical services, to conduct business, to be
- entertained and communicate with their friends, raises special
- concerns about the privacy and confidentiality of those
- communications. I have long been concerned about these issues,
- and have worked over the past decade to protect privacy and
- security for our wire and electronic communications. Encryption
- technology provides an effective way to ensure that only the
- people we choose can read our communications.
-
- I have read horror stories sent to me over the Internet about how
- human rights groups in the Balkans have had their computers
- confiscated during raids by security police seeking to find out
- the identities of people who have complained about abuses.
- Thanks to PGP, the encrypted files were undecipherable by the
- police and the names of the people who entrusted their lives to
- the human rights groups were safe.
-
- The new bill, called the "Promotion of Commerce On-Line in the
- Digital Era (PRO-CODE) Act of 1996," would:
-
- o bar any government-mandated use of any particular
- encryption system, including key escrow systems and affirm
- the right of American citizens to use whatever form of
- encryption they choose domestically;
-
- o loosen export restrictions on encryption products so
- that American companies are able to export any generally
- available or mass market encryption products without
- obtaining government approval; and
-
- o limit the authority of the federal government to set
- standards for encryption products used by businesses and
- individuals, particularly standards which result in products
- with limited key lengths and key escrow.
-
- This is the second encryption bill I have introduced with Senator
- Burns and other congressional colleagues this year. Both bills
- call for an overhaul of this country's export restrictions on
- encryption, and, if enacted, would quickly result in the
- widespread availability of strong, privacy protecting
- technologies. Both bills also prohibit a government-mandated key
- escrow encryption system. While PRO-CODE would limit the
- authority of the Commerce Department to set encryption standards
- for use by private individuals and businesses, the first bill we
- introduced, called the "Encrypted Communications Privacy Act",
- S.1587, would set up stringent procedures for law enforcement to
- follow to obtain decoding keys or decryption assistance to read
- the plaintext of encrypted communications obtained under court
- order or other lawful process.
-
- It is clear that the current policy towards encryption exports is
- hopelessly outdated, and fails to account for the real needs of
- individuals and businesses in the global marketplace. Encryption
- expert Matt Blaze, in a recent letter to me, noted that current
- U.S. regulations governing the use and export of encryption are
- having a "deleterious effect ... on our country's ability to
- develop a reliable and trustworthy information infrastructure."
- The time is right for Congress to take steps to put our national
- encryption policy on the right course.
-
- I am looking forward to hearing from you on this important issue.
- Throughout the course of the recent debate on the Communications
- Decency Act, the input from Internet users was very valuable to
- me and some of my Senate colleagues.
-
- You can find out more about the issue at my World Wide Web home
- page (http://www.leahy.senate.gov/) and at the Encryption Policy
- Resource Page (http://www.crypto.com/). Over the coming months, I
- look forward to the help of the Net community in convincing other
- Members of Congress and the Administration of the need to reform
- our nation's cryptography policy.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- Patrick Leahy
- United States Senator
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 14 May 1996 21:24:19
- From: anonymous@netcom.com
- Subject: File 4--Remaining Scientology Secret Scriptures Posted to Usenet
-
- In article <noringDr3F19.1M1@netcom.com you write:
-
- [Carefully note that followup discussion has been set to the
- newsgroups alt.religion.scientology and comp.org.eff.talk, so
- subscribe accordingly if you are at all interested in following this
- thread.]
-
-
- Last last week, a series of anonymous postings were made to the
- Usenet newsgroup alt.religion.scientology. Contained in these
- postings were the complete NOTS materials (NEDs for OTs), the last
- remaining, and highest level, secret materials ("scriptures") of the
- Church of Scientology (CoS).
-
- Late last year, the OT materials, a related set of high-level secret
- "scriptures" were similarly posted to Usenet. This action destroyed
- what was left of CoS' claims the OT materials were "trade secret" and
- may have cast doubt on the validity of the copyrights to some of
- them. Copies of the Fishman affidavit, a Federal court document
- which includes the OT materials as exhibits, can be read via several
- Web sites in the Netherlands, where the Dutch courts ruled earlier
- this year the Fishman affidavit could be maintained on Web pages
- there. The court ruling is being appealed by CoS and even if CoS
- gets the ruling overturned (unlikely), the trade secret status of the
- OT materials is all but lost, with ramifications for ongoing
- litigation here in the U.S. between CoS and several critics.
-
- The NOTS are considered even higher level than the OT materials, and
- CoS has gone through extraordinary lengths to try to suppress their
- dissemination on the Internet. In the last few months, Ms. Helena
- Kobrin, a Scientology attorney representing the Religious Technology
- Center, who defends the intellectual property rights to all the AT
- ("Advanced Technology") materials for the owner, the Church of
- Spiritual Technology, legally threatened any person who simply posted
- a *request* to purchase a *legal* copy of the NOTS materials! Her
- threats enraged the Internet community, and probably led someone who
- happened to possess the NOTS to scan and anonymously post them in
- order to end the egregious and unwarranted harassment of ordinary
- users.
-
- What is interesting about both the OT and the NOTS materials is that
- they are, as a whole, quite boring, even though there are a few
- glimmers of "excitement" here and there, such as in OT3 which depicts
- a "space opera" (Xenu, the Marcabs, hydrogen bombs, etc.) and in the
- OT8 (which CoS disputes is a forgery) which says that Jesus was a
- pederast. However, the value of these materials to CoS is obviously
- monetary; for a person to advance to these levels requires them
- paying hundreds of thousands of dollars or serving as a slave to the
- organization for many years. This is in contradiction to nearly all
- legitimate religions which essentially teach their spiritual "truths"
- for free or for a very nominal fee to cover expenses. The
- ramifications to CoS are obvious if their "secret" AT materials are
- disseminated and commented upon in public.
-
- Thus, it is clear by CoS' actions, as well as comments from former
- high-level Scientologists, that (from CoS' perspective) the posting
- of the NOTS is a disaster of the first magnitude, comparable to the
- impact on the tobacco industry by the recent leak of the "tobacco
- papers", and the impact on the Federal Government by the leak of the
- "Pentagon papers" during the Vietnam War.
-
- Following the posting of the NOTS, the infamous "CancelBunny"
- appeared, a throwaway account at Netcom used to cancel the NOTS posts
- (such cancellation is probably a violation of Federal Law). Thus,
- the NOTS postings have been cancelled and are no longer available at
- many sites except at those sites which do not honor cancels.
- However, if past experience with the OT levels is any indication, the
- NOTS might be reposted over and over again to minimize the actions of
- the "CancelBunny." No doubt tens of thousands of copies of the NOTS
- have already been downloaded and are sitting on computers all around
- the world. Pandora's box has been opened and public access and
- commentary of the NOTS in the public interest can no longer be
- stifled.
-
- The next few days and weeks should be watched very closely. It has
- been predicted that the anonymous remailers in the Netherlands
- (through which the NOTS were posted) may be put under extraordinary
- legal pressure to try to shut them down since they are the easiest
- means for a person to anonymously repost the NOTS (which CoS is
- deathly afraid of). Also look for CoS to get a court order to access
- the logs/records for all anonymous remailers in the U.S. in the hope
- (a long shot at best) of finding the person who posted the NOTS (they
- may have used a chain of remailers to post the NOTS), and possibly to
- help with discovery in other related litigation they are now involved
- in. Another benefit of such a court order is that it simply puts
- more pressure on anonymous remailers, and may cause many of them to
- simply "throw in the towel."
-
- It's also been suggested that CoS may accelerate their
- long-anticipated filing of a RICO suit against scores of net.critics,
- attornies, journalists (such as Leiby at the Washington Post) and
- other non-net.critics. The hope behind this RICO suit, which will
- ultimately fail since it has absolutely no merit, is that it will
- shut down, even if temporarily, critical discussion of CoS on the
- Internet. CoS has shown themselves by their actions to be a paranoid
- and schizophrenic organization who cannot tolerate or ignore even one
- word of criticism.
-
- I urge everybody reading this post to become familiar with what is
- occuring and to keep a close eye on events. Ron Newman maintains a
- wonderful Web page describing what's happened in the Scientology vs.
- Internet war in the last 18 months, and has links to many other
- sites, including Scientology's (while Scientology refuses to link to
- Ron's page in a show of good faith). It will give a good background
- as to what is currently happening. The URL to Ron's page is:
- http://www.cybercom.net/~rnewman/scientology/home.html
-
- The integrity of the anonymous remailers, an important component of
- cyber liberties, is being gravely threatened. And many people on the
- Internet who are exercising their Freedom of Speech to comment and
- criticize the Church of Scientology may come under severe attack --
- if CoS can get away with this, then other groups who also cannot
- tolerate any criticism or public exposure will be encouraged to
- follow in CoS' footsteps, with grave ramifications to the integrity
- of our net.freedoms.
-
- I urge the Internet community to closely monitor the unfolding events
- and to become active should CoS overstep the bounds of accepted
- decency and attempt to bully their way around the Internet. Read
- Ron's Web page, read the Usenet newsgroup 'alt.religion.scientology'.
- Become involved!
-
- Jon Noring
-
- --
- OmniMedia Electronic Books | URL: http://www.awa.com/library/omnimedia
- 9671 S. 1600 West St. | Anonymous FTP:
- South Jordan, UT 84095 | ftp.awa.com /pub/softlock/pc/products/OmniMedia
- 801-253-4037 | E-mail: omnimedia@netcom.com
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
- Join the Electronic Books Mailing List (EBOOK-List) Today! Just send e-mail
- to majordomo@aros.net, and put the following line in the body of the message:
- subscribe ebook-list
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 16 May 1996 23:30:36 -0500 (CDT)
- From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM>
- Subject: File 5--(fwd) Level 30 -- [An Online Anti-Pornography Crusade]
-
- ---------- Forwarded message ----------
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
- Please Note: Every effort has been made to post
- this announcement only in those groups and lists
- where there should be a natural interest in its subject
- matter. We apologize in advance if any readers
- believe it to be off-topic or otherwise inappropriate.
- It is a single post and it will not be repeated or followed
- with others. Thank you.
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- ANNOUNCING LEVEL30
- An Important New Internet
- Newsletter Dealing With
- Pornography and Censorship
- Issues
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- No matter what side of these issues you are on...
- DO NOT IGNORE THIS NEWSLETTER!
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
- About the Cost - FREE
-
- About the Subscription - To receive this biweekly
- (or more frequently) newsletter, simply send
- an e-mail message
- To: majordomo@databack.com
- Subject-- (leave blank)
- Message: subscribe level30
-
- About the Purpose - To instruct families on how to safely
- use the Internet, and to inform families, law enforcement,
- the media and other interested Internet organizations about
- breaking news in the fight to keep illegal pornography and
- child pornography OFF the Internet.
-
- About the Title - This is the Offense Level mandated by the
- United States Sentencing Commission for the trafficking of
- child pornography often found on the Internet in Usenet
- newsgroups. (Base offense level - 17; if the material involves
- a prepubescent minor, increase by 2 levels; if the offense
- involves distribution, increase by at least 5 levels; if the offense
- involves material that portrays sadistic or masochistic conduct
- or other depictions of violence, increase by 4 levels; and if a
- computer was used to transport or ship the visual depiction,
- increase by 2 levels.) (The Sentencing Table can be found at
- http://www.ussc.gov.)
-
- About the Author - Paul D. Cardin, P.A
-
- **Member of the Board of Directors of Oklahomans for Children
- And Families (OCAF).
- **Author of The Agincourt Project - the electronic expose that
- explains how Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are responsible
- for the distribution of illegal pornography and child pornography
- throughout America. (You may obtain a copy of The Agincourt
- Project via autoresponder e-mail by sending a blank e-mail
- message to noporn@mailback.com).
- ** Architect of the most effective and successful campaign in the
- United States today to stop the electronic distribution of illegal
- pornography and child pornography.
- ** National Directorship soon to be announced.
-
- About the Regular Features -
-
- **America#s Most Wanted - A list of public corporations that are
- the enemies of America#s children and families because of their
- continued electronic distribution of illegal pornography and child
- pornography.
- **(Your State Here)#s Most Wanted - A state by state list of ISPs
- that are the enemies of children and families because of their
- continued electronic distribution of illegal pornography and child
- pornography.
- **Commentary - Incisive and hard hitting analysis of the legal and
- constitutional issues facing the Internet today.
- ** Battle Reports - Updates from the front lines, from "war
- correspondents" across the country.
- ***** The court battles over the Communications Decency Amendment.
- ***** The status of OCAF against the Oklahoma ISPs.
- ***** The status of Loving v. Boren - is it a ridiculous waste of
- taxpayers money or will it be the definitive Internet court ruling?
- *****The status of other important electronic obscenity court cases.
- *****The status of battles yet to be engaged.
-
- About Special Reports -
-
- **Testimonies from the victims of pornography.
- ** Profiles of the men and women who are engaged in the battle
- to free our society from its plague.
- **Interviews with law enforcement officers, prosecutors, and ISPs.
-
- * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
-
-
- The Top Ten Reasons TO SUBSCRIBE To "Level30" -
-
- **Reason #10 - You are an INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDER who wants
- to stop violating federal and state obscenity and child pornography
- laws.
- **Reason #9 - You are a LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICER or PROSECUTOR
- who wants to learn how to stop ISPs from violating federal and state
- obscenity and child pornography laws
- ** Reason #8 - You are a PUBLIC OFFICIAL who wants to learn how to
- keep illegal pornography and child pornography off of publicly owned
- and operated computer systems.
- ** Reason #7 - You are a UNIVERSITY OFFICIAL or LIBRARY OFFICIAL
- who wants to learn how to keep illegal pornography and child
- pornography off of your university or library computer system.
- **Reason #6 - You are a SCHOOL OFFICIAL or TEACHER who wants to
- learn how to keep illegal pornography and child pornography off of
- your school#s computer system.
- **Reason #5 - You belong to a CHILD ADVOCACY or WOMEN#s RIGHTS
- group and you want to learn how to fight illegal pornography and
- child pornography on the Internet.
- **Reason #4 - You belong to a CHURCH or RELIGIOUS GROUP and you
- want to learn how to fight illegal pornography and child pornography
- on the Internet.
- **Reason #3 - You are a CORPORATE EXECUTIVE or PR OFFICER who
- wants to learn how to avoid extremely damaging publicity for your
- company.
- **Reason #2 - You are a REPORTER who wants to stay one step ahead of
- numbers 3 through 10 above
-
- And, finally.......
-
- **Reason #1 - You are a PARENT or GRANDPARENT who wants to learn
- more about how to keep the Internet safe for your children and/or
- grandchildren.
-
- SUBSCRIBE TODAY
-
- --------------64A53C482272--
-
- |Fidonet: Terry Liberty-Parker 1:382/804
- |Internet: Terry.Liberty-Parker@804.ima.infomail.com
- |
- | Standard disclaimer: The views of this user are strictly their own.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 29 Apr 1996 23:51:56 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Q*Bert <qbert@access.digex.net>
- Subject: File 6--Judge Denies Bond to Accused Hacker
-
-
- JUDGE DENIES BON TO ACCUSED HACKER
- St. Louis Post Dispatch (SL) - Saturday, April 6, 1996
- By: Tim Bryant Of The Post-Dispatch Staff
-
- After another prisoner said accused computer hacker Christopher
- Schanot was planning a quick escape from his parents' home near High
- Ridge, a federal magistrate decided Friday to keep Schanot in jail.
-
- Schanot was close to being released on bond when the prisoner told
- his story. In computer lingo, that kind of bad luck is called a
- crash.
-
- ..................
-
- Releasing Schanot, 19, under even the most stringent conditions
- would be "very risky," ruled U.S. Magistrate Judge Lawrence Davis.
- The judge ordered that Schanot remain in custody pending trial, set
- to begin June 10.
-
- Schanot's lawyer, federal public defender Norm London, told Davis
- that the alleged conversation between the young man and Esposito
- never happened.
-
- Schanot had been close to release on $150,000 bond earlier Friday.
- That was before Esposito told his lawyer about a conversation he
- said he had with Schanot on Thursday night in the jail in Jennings.
-
- ..................
-
- Esposito testified that after he asked Schanot about his bond
- hearing Thursday, Schanot replied that he planned to stay at his
- parents' house briefly, then flee.
-
- ..................
-
- Authorities say Schanot left the St. Louis area shortly after
- graduating in May from Vianney High School, where he had been an
- honor student. A federal prosecutor in Philadelphia has called
- Schanot a computer genius capable of entering almost any computer
- system.
-
- An indictment returned here March 14 accuses Schanot of hacking into
- the computers of Southwestern Bell, Bell Communications Research,
- Sprint and SRI International, a research and development contractor
- with government contracts.
-
- As part of the hearing Friday, the government played a tape-recorded
- telephone conversation several months ago between Schanot's father,
- Michael Schanot, and Netta Gilboa. Christopher Schanot had been
- living with Gilboa in the Philadelphia area.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 14 May 96 06:49:44 EST
- From: Computer Privacy Digest Moderator <comp-privacy@UWM.EDU>
- Subject: File 7--New Internet Journal
-
- From--Computer Privacy Digest Tue, 14 May 96 Volume 8 : Issue: 038
-
- From--cpsr-global@Sunnyside.COM
- Date--08 May 1996 07:20:40 -0700
- Subject--New Internet Journal
-
- Taken from CPSR-GLOBAL Digest 376
-
- Sender: Andy Oram <andyo@ora.com>
-
- A journal that may interest readers in many countries has just
- started: "First Monday" at http://www.firstmonday.dk. You can read
- it free on the Web (just register your name) or pay to get it by
- email. The issue I read had an interesting article on how digital
- cash could weaken the currencies of small countries.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost electronically.
-
- CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
-
- Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line:
-
- SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
- Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
-
- DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
-
- 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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- URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
-
- 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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-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.36
- ************************************
-
-
-