home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- Computer underground Digest Wed May 29, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 40
- 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, #8.40 (Wed, May 29, 1996)
-
- File 1--PERSPECTIVE: "Act Locally!"
- File 2--bonfire: organizing online
- File 3--cDc has a plan for your life!-5/27
- File 4--about Friday's "Congress and the Internet" Beltway hearing
- File 5--Re: Civil Liberties and Encryption
- File 6--More Information about Getting Online (Conference)
- File 7--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: Fri, 24 May 1996 02:14:04 -0500 (CDT)
- From: telstar@wired.com
- Subject: File 1--PERSPECTIVE: "Act Locally!"
-
-
- Yesterday I conducted an interview with U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy
- (D-Vermont). The interview was done in audio format as one of HotWired's
- "Wiredside Chats," and all in all, I thought it went pretty well.
-
- I mean, I'm no Larry King, but it's great to explore the frontiers of the
- Internet as a true mass communications medium.
-
- At one point in the interview, I asked Senator Leahy if the Internet
- community should be doing more to promote our interests within Congress.
- The Senator responded as follows:
-
- "Well, you've got to put faces on the Internet community," Leahy said.
- "One important thing is to try and get a dozen or so people together, then
- make an appointment to go visit the home office of your legislators. Meet
- them for a cup of coffee to demonstrate what people are really doing with
- the Internet."
-
- Sagely advice.
-
- I'm of the opinion that the Net community has been largely invisible as a
- political force. As a result, Congress has found it easy to pass
- shit-stupid Internet legislation, because they don't feel that they'll be
- held accountable to a constituency of Internet voters.
-
- In such an environment, it should come as little surprise that we had the
- Communications Decency Act rammed down our throats earlier this year. And
- if we don't get our act together soon, there's plenty more nasty
- legislation that'll we'll have to grapple with. Encryption restrictions.
- Copyright proposals. FCC regulation. You name it. They'll all be coming
- down the pipes in the months and years ahead.
-
- One solution to this problem, of course, is local political action. Simple
- things - like writing letters or meeting with your legislators - can make a
- BIG difference.
-
- The following article by Rich Burroughs puts all these issues in useful
- perspective. In addition, Rich's article also comes with a handy-dandy
- "clip n' save" guide to getting organized locally.
-
- Read on... think about it... and of course....
-
- Work the network!
-
- --Todd Lappin-->
- Section Editor
- WIRED Magazine
-
- (P.S. You can tune in to a RealAudio recording of my interview with
- Senator Leahy by stopping by at:
- http://www.hotwired.com/netizenaudio/96/21/index3a.html)
-
- =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
- =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
-
-
- "ACT LOCALLY"
-
- By: Rich Burroughs <richieb@teleport.com>
-
- From=20"Cause for Alarm,"
- May, 1996
-
- http://www.teleport.com/~richieb/cause/may96.shtml
-
-
-
- If "act locally" becomes the net.activist's meme of choice in late 1996,
- it will be largely due to the efforts of Jon Lebkowsky, among others.
-
- Lebkowsky, a former co-founder and CEO of Fringe Ware, now hosts HotWired's
- Electronic Frontiers Forum Thursdays at 7 PM Pacific time at Club Wired.
- He's also a founding member of EFF-Austin and is currently vice-president
- of that organization, in addition to writing his zine, Cyberdawg Barking.
-
- Why is Lebkowsky all riled up? "The Exon bill, from which the CDA evolved,
- hit me pretty hard," he said. "I realized that=8Arepressive political group=
- s
- were organizing effectively while progressives and civil libertarians were
- in disarray. I had been throwing all my time into a commercial effort, but
- I was finished with that project, ready to shift gears=8A. Then HotWired
- offered me the Electronic Frontiers Forum, and I found myself totally
- immersed again in cyberactivism."
-
- Anyone who's attended Lebkowsky's Thursday night jams (which have featured
- such activist luminaries as Mike Godwin, Ann Beeson, and Steve Jackson) has
- probably heard him grumble about the need for more grass roots action. He
- urges people to start their own local organizations because, "Only local
- groups can monitor local politics=8A. Freedom can be threatened as readily =
- on
- a municipal as a state or national level, so it's as important to have a
- network of empowered activists organizing cities as it is to have activists
- working 'inside the Beltway'."
-
- In fact, at least 16 states have proposed some sort of Net censorship
- legislation, including California, Washington, New York, Connecticut, and
- Georgia. National organizations are lucky to have the resources to even
- track all of the state bills that are being proposed, let alone to combat
- that legislation on a case-by-case basis. A local group can try to head
- these threats off at the pass by mobilizing local support and mounting a
- grass roots opposition. Stanton McCandlish, an Online Activist for EFF and
- another proponent of local groups, observed that "It matters more to a
- typical Bostonian that a (hypothetical) EF-Massachusetts is acting on
- behalf of the [Massachusetts] public on a state or even local issue, than
- it does that some organization in DC is doing something similar on the
- national level. It's closer to home."
-
- Local groups can influence national politics, as well, by contacting their
- Congressional representatives on their home turf. Jonah Seiger, a Policy
- Analyst for CDT, feels that one of the biggest challenges facing online
- activists is putting a human face on the Net user. "It's amazing when you
- think about it that 115,000 people signed the petition for Leahy, [and] the
- day of protest generated 20,000 to 30,000 phone calls in one day," Seiger
- said. "But what's missing from that=8Awhen I talk to members of Congress an=
- d
- their staff, is the sort of image of who these people are. There's
- this=8Aidea that the Internet community, for better or for worse, is=8Aeith=
- er
- college kids or these freaked-out libertarian hackers with long hair and
- beards. Those are wonderful people, all of them, but they're not the only
- part of the Net community."
-
- The answer to this dilemma is making personal contact with your
- legislators. "Go to your town meetings when your representative is in town
- talking about the issues," Seiger added. "Go there=8Aintroduce yourself, sa=
- y,
- 'Hi=8AI'm an avid Internet user and I voted for you in the last election, a=
- nd
- I have some concerns about some of the policy choices that Congress has
- made=8A.' Introduce them to your ISP, introduce them to a web publishing
- house, introduce them to somebody who's trying to make a living, even if
- it's just one person, using the Net. Let them see that, in fact, this is a
- constituency that they can respond to and be rewarded for responding to."
-
- Lebkowsky points out that making those kind of personal connections, in
- "meatspace," means a lot. "It'll be sometime before the average guy or the
- average politician comprehends 'virtual life.' My experience tells me that
- community never quite kicks in so long as it is strictly virtual=8Ait's onl=
- y
- when we meet as meat that we connect on all levels," he said.
-
- As for how to start a local organization, Lebkowsky is, "working on a guide
- for local orgs that I'll distribute freely online, and later I'll beef it
- up so that it can be published as a book," he said. "Otherwise, folks
- needing help can email EFF-Austin's directors <eff-austin-directors@io.com>
- and check out our web page at http://www.eff-austin.org.
-
- Also check web pages for other orgs: http://www.eff.org,
- http://www.cdt.org, http://www.vtw.org, http://www.epic.org, etc."
-
- Here's some advice to consider when starting your own group (from Lebkowsky
- and McCandlish):
-
-
- -- Establish an online presence. Find an ISP or other system that will
- provide a comp account.
-
- -- Set up an email list (majordomo, listserv, etc.) for members and
- interested persons.
-
- -- Create a web page and perhaps a gopher. Include a membership form on the
- web page.
-
- -- Recruit members online and in meatspace. Keep dues low.
-
- -- Organize your constituency online and offline; keep their loyalty; work
- them into activity - you want activists, not lurkers.
-
- -- Build resources for the public - especially an online library of
- documents. Give back to the community that supports you in more ways than
- one.
-
- -- Seek those with experience where you need it - communicating online,
- dealing with policymakers, public relations, fundraising, design and
- publication, legislative and legal analysis, fiscal management. Proceed to
- learn these skills internally, as well.
-
- -- Get to know the press. Learn to use the traditional media effectively.
-
- -- Get to know the police. EFF-Austin has a police liaison (Bruce
- Sterling). One of his jobs is to ensure that the police know who we are and
- will call us for consultation.
-
- -- Research, research, research. Learn your issues and their legalities
- like the back of your hand. Become an authoritative voice on the matters
- that concern your organization.
-
- -- Educate legislators about the issues. Educate the press and public as we=
- ll.
-
- -- Take public positions. Craft statements, press releases and action
- alerts. Keep your constituency and the public updated on hot issues.
-
- -- Organize events to highlight the issues.
-
- -- Work with, not against, other organizations. Build coalitions, work
- cooperatively.
-
- -- Deal reasonably with criticism.
-
- -- Minimize costs.
-
-
- ###
-
- +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
- 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.
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 05:17:06 -0700 (PDT)
- From: jonl@well.com
- Subject: File 2--bonfire: organizing online
-
- Bob Anderson and I have set up an email list, bonfire, specifically
- for discussions (or meta-discussions) of the issues of organizing
- local online activist orgs. This is related to the evolution of a
- organizer's guide that will eventually be placed online somewhere
- (and may be included in a published anthology).
-
- Who knows where this will go? Please join us:
-
- To subscribe send mail to:
-
- bonfire-request@podbox.austin.tx.us
-
- With this is in the body of the message
-
- ADD address
-
- To get a copy of the 'Organize Locally' rough draft
- send mail to the same address with this in the body:
-
- FAQ
-
- --
-
- Jon Lebkowsky <jonl@wired.com> http://www.well.com/~jonl
- Electronic Frontiers Forum, 7PM PST Thursdays <http://www.hotwired.com/eff>
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 27 May 96 06:22:16 EDT
- From: Swamp Ratte <sratte@phantom.com>
- Subject: File 3--cDc has a plan for your life!-5/27
- _ _
- ((___))
- [ x x ] cDc communications
- \ / Press Release
- (' ') May 27th, 1996
- (U)
- Est. 1986
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: sratte@phantom.com
-
- PRAISE HER BLESSED NAME
-
- Death is good. Recent events in Great Britain only underscore the
- lack of true understanding of the so-called Mad Cow imbroglio. This
- situation is _not_ a disaster. As was prophesyed by the enlightened
- ones, "a sign would come from the verdant isle...where many hooves
- would point to the heavens and...countless beasts would be cast into
- a great fire." It was further revealed that, "...their baleful
- agony would choke the nation as their souls flew free from their
- mighty torment."
-
- What was foretold has come to pass. The milk of deliverance is at
- hand. The lactic jihad has begun.
-
- CULT OF THE DEAD COW (cDc) has preserved the Bovine mysteries
- throughout the ages. We have worked in secret. We have kept faith
- with the lustrous truth, knowing that one day our time would come.
- The dawn has broken. Let those who have hungered for meaning gather
- now. CULT OF THE DEAD COW has moved from the margins to the
- epicentre. And as was further prophesyed, "ye shall make it known
- on the great device" and send your message "throughout the world
- inside itself".
-
- It is now time for us to begin our universal ministry on the world's
- most powerful medium. We are not here to make billions of dollars
- from the digisphere as the godless are. We are here to tell the
- truth. CULT OF THE DEAD COW has arrived to tell all humankind that
- the COW will seize its rightful dominion and be honored above all
- idols and pretenders. Let the torment of their fiery demise be an
- instruction to us all. How far are you from the furnace? Who will
- hear your cries? CULT OF THE DEAD COW is that bridge between you
- and eternity. THE COW is your comfort and solace and a giving
- helper to all who call.
-
- In the coming weeks and months while all of England's moneychangers
- mourn their loss, think of this. There are far more important
- things in this world than the loss of lucre. Think of your immortal
- soul and your place in the cosmos. Do not let millions of innocents
- writhe in deepest agony for naught. It is the foulest affront to
- THE COW to be sold like a slave and butchered without care. Ponder
- these things and know that CULT OF THE DEAD COW will free you from
- noxious ignorance and be a lamp to your eternal salvation. We will
- have more to say.
-
- Fools better recognize: CULT OF THE DEAD COW is the publishing
- division of cDc communications. Established in 1986, cDc is the
- largest and oldest organization of the telecommunications
- underground worldwide. You thirst for our body of work, you know
- you do. Find it at:
- web://www.l0pht.com/cdc.html, ftp/gopher from cascade.net, or old-school BBS
- from 806.794.4362 entry:kill. For further information, contact:
- email:sratte@phantom.com or snail:pob 53011, lubbock, tx, 79424, usa.
-
- ####
-
- Copyright (c) 1996 cDc communications and OXblood Ruffin.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 28 May 1996 13:30:33 -0700
- From: jwarren@WELL.COM(Jim Warren)
- Subject: File 4--about Friday's "Congress and the Internet" Beltway hearing
-
- Last Friday (5/24) morning, east coast time, a congressional subcommittee
- held a hearing on Congress and the Internet. And they accepted testimony
- by email -- to an AOL address (cyberrep@aol.com) -- from anyone who
- happened to discover that the hearing was scheduled and happening.
-
- As far as I know, *no* committee staffer nor committee member made *any*
- attempt whatsoever to spread announcement of the hearing across the net
- that was its focus. If such a non-Beltway announcement was even attempted,
- it certainly wasn't successful.
-
- Nonetheless, whether it was intended or not, by the committee chair or its
- members, a DC insider leaked word of the hearing out beyond the Beltway
- <gasp!> -- at least to a *few* of us -- and I had entire *hours* of
- advanced warning in which to draft the following submission to the
- committee.
-
- I caught on C-SPAN, how this was reported by the committee chair -- the
- briefist of excerpts of the most innocuous, least substantive (least
- controversial :-) recommendations that I submitted.
-
- What he read was part of what I wrote, but very different from the *real*
- meat of my testimony -- that wasn't nearly as long as one committee
- member's [Beilenson, Democrat-CA] rambling chit-chat about how much he
- enjoyed visiting Colorado a few years back. (Now *that's* really pertinent
- to Congress and the Internet; isn't it? And then they wonder why so many
- of us are so bitterly cynical about how Congress and the Beltway insiders
- operate!)
-
- --jim
-
- <circulate freely>
-
- [emailed 5:02pm *Pacific* time, on 5/23/96, for 5/24 morn East Coast hearing]
-
- From--jwarren@well.com (Jim Warren)
- Subject--comments from a citizen-activist beyond the Beltway
-
- Dear Rules Committee members --
-
- I will forego the flowerly language and risk candid brevity:
-
- Those of us who have no hired lobbyists in Washington can *effectively*
- participate in the process of our own governance *only* to the extent that
- (1) we have TIMELY access to ADEQUATE information about issues BEFORE they
- are functionally decided by the committees of our elected representatives,
- and
- (2) those who vote on decisions that impact us all give balanced
- consideration to the comments and pleas from all of those who will be
- impacted, who wish to be heard.
-
- The global Internet can greatly facilitate such access.
-
-
- Here are some suggested groundrules:
-
- 1. To allow an *informed* electorate: Any documents prepared by
- congressional staff or Members using a word-processor should be placed on
- "free" [tax-supported] public-access congressional Internet file-servers AT
- THE SAME TIME that paper or faxed copies are made available to lobbyists
- and special interest representatives inside the Beltway or in donors'
- offices.
- To do anything less, *unnecessarily* continues to benefit and
- empower the few at the expense of the many -- notably including most of the
- Members' constituents.
- The California legislature has been doing much of this since 1994;
- other state legislatures are also beginning to do so. For Members of
- Congress to say that they can't do it is simply unbelievable.
- We all understand that, "knowledge is power," and that senior
- Members and committee Chairs use selective disclosure to empower themselves
- and those whom they favor, and use delayed disclosure to emasculate their
- opponents.
- But we citizens *should* be treated as those whom Members favor.
- Members should *not* CONTINUE to treat citizens, in this way, as opponents.
- Empower the electorate beyond the Beltway to participate in their [our!]
- own governance -- even when it means sharing the power held by senior
- Members. If legislation is laudible, it -- and its mark-up and analyses
- and reports and drafts -- can withstand the bright light of *timely*,
- nationwide public access and scrutiny.
- Technology now makes it possible to empower representative
- democracy by allowing citizens the *option* of being fully and timely
- informed. Please -- do so!
-
-
- 2. Regarding the handling of electronic mail sent to elected
- representatives -- who vote on decisions that effect *everyone* (*not*
- merely those constituents or party members who can re-elect them):
- Elected representatives who accept campaign contributions from
- sources other than constituents in their districts, should also accept
- email from senders other than constituents in their districts, and should
- be comparably responsive.
- Anything less simply provides concrete, measurable *evidence* that
- government belongs only to those who can buy it, and further *valdates*
- citizen cynicism about Congress, Washington and their [our!] powerlessness
- against the big-bucks "Beltway bandits."
-
-
- These are merely two worthy starting points. There is much more that can
- be done to facilitate and enhance representative democracy via
- well-established, well-understood information technology and public
- networking.
- Please, honor your Office by allowing all of us to have effective
- access. Please -- delay no longer!
-
- I remain, Sincerely,
-
- /s/ Jim Warren
-
- GovAccess list-owner/editor, advocate & columnist (jwarren@well.com)
- 345 Swett Rd., Woodside CA 94062; voice/415-851-7075; fax/<# upon request>
-
- [1994 James Madison Freedom-of-Information Award,
- Society of Professional Journalists - Nor.Cal.;
- 1994 Hugh M. Hefner First-Amendment Award, Playboy Foundation;
- 1992 Pioneer Award, Electronic Frontier Foundation (its first year);
- founded the Computers, Freedom & Privacy Conferences, InfoWorld magazine, etc.]
-
- === EXPLANATION OF WHAT GOVACCESS IS & WHERE TO FIND ITS ARCHIVES ===
-
- GovAccess is a list distributing irregular info & advocacy regarding
- technology and civil liberties, citizen access to government - and
- government access to citizens, covert and overt.
-
- To add or drop GovAccess, email to Majordomo@well.com ('Subject' ignored)
- with message: [un]subscribe GovAccess YourEmailAddress (insert your eaddr)
- For brief description of GovAccess, send the message: info GovAccess
-
- Past postings are at ftp.cpsr.org: /cpsr/states/california/govaccess
- and by WWW at http://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/states/california/govaccess .
- Also forwarded to USENET's comp.org.cpsr.talk by CPSR's Al Whaley.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 28 May 1996 10:17:35 -0400
- From: Wes Morgan <morgan@ENGR.UKY.EDU>
- Subject: File 5--Re: Civil Liberties and Encryption
-
- >Date--23 May 96 04:00:19 EDT
- >From--Lance Rose <72230.2044@CompuServe.COM>
- >Subject--File 1--The Civil Liberies On-line Circus
- >
- >Whoa -- let's circle back to the top now. Isn't an indecency standard
- >of some sort very much in place for television today? And isn't
- >television a hugely popular mass medium, at the very center of U.S.
- >and other societies?
-
- It's inarguably clear that television is popular, but that is not
- the question at hand. We must consider the participation of the
- "average Joe" (or, to borrow a legal phrase, a "reasonable person")
- in the medium. Television *is* popular, but it is hardly open to
- the average Joe; when was the last time your neighbor broadcast a
- television program? The production facilities required, even for
- the most rudimentary public-access-channel documentary, create an
- effective barrier to mass participation. Television is a one-way
- street; its 'heavy hitters' can easily afford the control structure
- (and legal/regulatory bureaucracy) necessary to follow the indecency
- standards. This bureaucracy trickles down to the level of the indi-
- vidual network affiliate...
-
- The Net, on the other hand, actively encourages participation; indeed,
- it makes such participation almost trivially simple. Your neighbor
- *can* reach millions via the Internet; Web pages are cross-linked
- around the world, Usenet postings reach into the cracks and crevices
- of the online world (until very recently, a large mainframe site re-
- portedly receives Usenet news on a weekly *magtape*!), and email
- flits among the nest of systems called the Internet. The problem,
- however, lies in the fact that the typical Joe can't afford a flock
- of legal eagles to appease the regulators; Bill's BBS isn't going to
- keep an attorney on retainer to handle complaints of this sort. Is
- it reasonable to expect such a compliance mechanism from _ad hoc_
- publishers like Net contributors?
-
- >But what is crypto, really, but just an awkward way of hiding
- >things? We're not talking about the underlying math, of course,
- >designed by guys next to whose intellects most of us are just chimps
- >in lab cages. Rather, what is crypto used for? It is used to hide
- >a message right in someone else's face. It is like sticking a
- >self-incriminating note in a physical capsule that is uncrackably
- >hard and strong, then lobbing the capsule through the window of a
- >police station to sit in the middle of the floor among a bunch of
- >cops, powerless to open it up and figure out how to get the perp.
-
- Actually, it's more like placing a postal message in an envelope,
- instead of using a postcard. Would you like to receive your monthly
- banking statement on a postcard, open to anyone who handles it? How
- about the results of those medical tests you took last week?
-
- >Gee, is that really the best way to hide a message (given that the
- >cops" first move will be to look outside for those responsible)? Or
- >is it better to leave the cops blissfully unaware of the message's
- >existence, or its true nature, so they never even get close to the
- >point of having an encrypted message they're trying to crack?
-
- Given the ease with which Internet traffic can be monitored and/or
- logged, encryption provides the same level of privacy (*not* neces-
- sarily security) as do envelopes in the postal medium. What's
- wrong with that?
-
- >Far more elegant and effective means of attaining secrecy exist today,
- >and will be devised in the future. That's where the action will be
- >after the dust has cleared on today's crypto rights battles, no
- >matter who "wins" them.
-
- What might some of those "elegant and effective means" be? Remember,
- we have to limit ourselves to those tools available to Joe AOLer,
- Bill BBS-in-my-basement and Jane College-Student.
-
- >3. The proposed "National Information Infrastructure" copyright
- >legislation. There's a lot of fire and brimstone being spewed over
- >this one, but who has really looked at the proposed law? There
- >ain't much there.
- >
- >One part of the proposed law gives a copyright owner control over
- >"transmissions" of works online. The opposing civil liberties
- >people say this will make browsing on the Net illegal. What?
-
- If memory serves, _Basic Four v. MAI_ held that maintaining a copy
- in RAM can violate copyright, even if that copy is a transitory
- one-shot. Since browsing the Web is just that - loading a copy
- of a document into RAM - one could make the argument (as you do,
- later in your message) that such browsing is already illegal.
-
- >If the new proposal turns the current "copying" right into a
- >so-called "transmission" right when it happens across a network,
- >this is no more than a change in terminology. The same factors
- >described above apply as much to "transmissions" involving browsing
- >users as to "copying" involving browsing users.
-
- Changes in terminology can have substantial ramifications - just
- ask the European folks about the new Web policies, in which Web
- transmissions are now termed "broadcasts" and treated in the same
- vein as television and radio broadcasts.
-
- >Here comes the part that you may find hard to believe: in all the
- >battles mentioned above, I personally side with the civil liberties
- >groups every single time. Then why the criticisms? It looks like
- >these groups, with their admirable principles and agendas, are
- >increasingly getting lost in hyperbole and losing important
- >perspective. Frankly, the shrillness is beginning to hurt my ears.
-
- You're on the mark with this comment. It's very important that the
- Net public present a calm, factual case in each of these matters; too
- many are resorting to histrionics and hyperbole.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 3 May 1996 16:24:44 -0300 (ADT)
- From: InfoLink <infolink@fox.nstn.ca>
- Subject: File 6--More Information about Getting Online (Conference)
-
- The following is a draft of the agenda of Getting Online: Communities on the
- Internet, a conference to be held in Ottawa 20-23 June, 1996. We look
- forward to the interest and response of the community sector and the 'Net
- community in general.
-
- Please forward as appropriate.
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- GETTING ONLINE:
- COMMUNITIES ON THE INTERNET
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Draft Agenda
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Thursday, June 20
-
- 0830-0900 Registration for Pre-Conference Workshops
-
- 0900-1230 Pre-Conference Workshops: Session A (choose 1 stream)
-
- A1. The Internet, communications and research
-
- A2. Uploading and downloading common file types
-
- A3. Basics of HTML and home page construction
-
- 1230-1330 Lunch
-
- 1330-1700 Pre-Conference Workshops: Session B
-
- B1. Efficiently finding the information you need
-
- B2. Introduction to creating Gopher & FTP sites
-
- B3. Introduction to forms and CGI scripts
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Friday, June 21
-
- 0830-0900 Registration for conference
-
- 0900-0930 Welcome, purpose of event, review of agenda
-
- 0930-0945 Video from Africa - Don Richardson, UN FAO
-
- 0945-1045 ABCs of Access
- Michael Richardson, Community Consultant
- Greg Searle, IDRC
- Leslie Shade, Community Consultant
- Terry Lewycky, BlueSky FreeNet (invited)
-
- 1045-1115 Break
-
- 1115-1230 Concurrent Community Session: Session A
-
- A1. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * Rural Nets
-
- John Stevenson, CSpace (invited)
-
- * Environmental/Sustainable Development Sites
-
- Justine Ackman, Environmental Inter Network, Web (?)
-
- A2. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * Youth Networks
-
- Mark Surman, Kids from Kanata, Web
- Janet Longmore, Community in Schools (invited)
-
- * Education Networks
-
- Dalia Naujokaites, St Elizabeth School, Ottawa
- Dick Holland, Ursula Franklin Academy, Toronto
-
- 1230-1400 Lunch with Keynote Speaker:
-
- John Ralston Saul, author of _Voltaire's Bastards_ and
- _The Unconscious Civilization_
-
- 1400-1515 Concurrent Community Sessions: Session B
-
- B1. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * Aboriginal Networks
-
- Melanie Goodchild, Raindancer Interactive
-
- * Union Resources
-
- Kerry Pither, CUPW
-
- B2. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * International/Peace Networks
-
- Bellanet (?)
- Helene Mousseau, CARE
-
- * Ethnocultural Networks
-
- 1515-1545 Concurrent Community Sessions: Session C
-
- C1. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * Seniors' Networks
-
- Seniors' Computer Information Project (?)
- One Voice, Seniors' Network (?)
-
- * Health/Disabilities Networks
-
- Chuck Letourneau, Adaptive Computer Technology Centre
-
- C2. Success Stories from Cyberspace
-
- * Women's Networks
-
- * Social Service Resources
-
- Lyz Rykert, Family Service Association, Metro Toronto
- Simon Mielniczuk, Ont. Prevention Clearinghouse (invtd)
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Saturday, June 22
-
- 0830-1015 Impact on Work and Community
-
- Theresa Johnson, PSAC
- Kerry Pither, CUPW
- Sid Schniad, Telecommunications Workers Union (invited)
- Moderator: Garth Graham, Telecommunities Canada
-
- 1015-1045 Break
-
- 1045-1215 Networking by Community of Interest I:
- Concurrent Discussion Groups
-
- What resources do we have? What can community groups
- do to acquire the resources necessary to establish an online
- presence? What can social sector groups offer Internet service
- providers in exchange for service? What internal resources do
- groups have to generate content?
-
- 1215-1330 Lunch with Keynote Speaker:
-
- Heather Menzies, author of _Fastforward and Out of Control_
- and _Whose Brave New World?_
-
- 1330-1430 Internet Service Providers Panel
-
- Jesse Hirsch, LocalGlobal Access
- Moderator: Mark Bell, Monitor Magazine
-
- 1430-1500 Moderated Discussion: Participants and Panel
-
- 1500-1530 Break
-
- 1530-1700 Networking by Community of Interest II:
- Concurrent Discussion Groups
-
- Where are we going? What do we need? How can social
- sector groups coordinate their interests, concerns and
- needs to gain the consideration of Internet businesses and
- government policy makers?
-
- ____________________________________________________________
-
- Sunday, June 23
-
- 0830-1030 Reports back from discussion groups. Summaries of
- previous day's discussions with action points highlighted. How
- can an overview of promises, potentials and pitfalls be achieved?
- What points should it take into account?
-
- 1030-1100 Break
-
- 1100-1230 Networking Fair (topics, sessions to be set and
- arranged by participants - suggestions follow)
-
- * Fundraising for a Network
- * Women in Cyberspace
- * How to Organize a Community Online
- * Technical Resources
- * Sustainability, Environment and Economy
- * Development, Local and International
- * Caucuses at will
-
- 1230-1400 Lunch
-
- 1400-1530 Goals for the Year
-
- Coalition for Public Information (?)
- Public Interest Advocacy Centre (?)
- Alliance for a Connected Canada (?)
-
- * Audience feedback
- John Thurston, PhD jthursto@fox.nstn.ca
- Manager of Emerging Technologies ag264@freenet.carleton.ca
- InfoLink Consultants 613 594-5960 (work)
- Ottawa, Ontario 613 737-9648 (home)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 7--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.
-
- To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
- Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
- (NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
-
- Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
- news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
- LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
- libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
- the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
- On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
- on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on internet);
- and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (860)-585-9638.
- CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
- 1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
-
- EUROPE: In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS: +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
- Brussels: STRATOMIC BBS +32-2-5383119 2:291/759@fidonet.org
- In ITALY: ZERO! BBS: +39-11-6507540
- In LUXEMBOURG: ComNet BBS: +352-466893
-
- UNITED STATES: etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8) in /pub/CuD/CuD
- ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
- aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
- world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
- wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
- EUROPE: nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/CuD/CuD/ (Finland)
- ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)
-
-
- The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
- Cu Digest WWW site at:
- 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
- as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
- they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
- non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
- specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
- relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
- preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
- unless absolutely necessary.
-
- DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
- the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
- responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
- violate copyright protections.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.40
- ************************************
-
-
-