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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun Sep 8, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 65
- 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, #8.65 (Sun, Sep 8, 1996)
- File 1--BOOK> GOVERNMENT ONLINE IN CANADA (fwd)
- File 2--China slices off access to web sites including CNN and WSJ
- File 3--US Army troubled by viruses, France with hackers...
- File 4--Germany censors dutch website www.xs4all.nl
- File 5--Indonesia detains democracy activist after post to mailing list
- File 6--Singapore
- File 7--Kuwait moves to censor "sin-inducing" Internet
- File 8--NSF yanks Iran's Internet connection, from HotWired
- File 9--CITA 'declares war' on SaskTel
- File 10--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: Mon, 19 Aug 1996 14:40:18 -0400 (EDT)
- From: Pierre Bourque <pierre@dragon.achilles.net>
- Subject: File 1--BOOK> GOVERNMENT ONLINE IN CANADA (fwd)
-
- Hi,
- would appreciate it if you could consider the following for an upcoming
- edition of CUD.
-
- Thanks in advance,
-
- Pierre Bourque
- Mercenary Scribbler
-
- --
-
- GOVERNMENT ONLINE CANADA: The Internet User's Comprehensive Directory !
- by Pierre Bourque (pierre@achilles.net) Foreword by Prime Minister Jean
- Chretien (pm@pm.gc.ca)
-
- This unique Internet Directory is the ultimate guide to the maze of
- government websites in Canada and perhaps the most important political
- book of the year. With thousands of relevant web and
- email addresses, Pierre Bourque's book is the only reference you need.
- The book also holds important appendices filled with key links to online
- educational, business, and journalistic resources, online research tools,
- domestic and international media, search engines, and glossaries of terms.
-
- GOVERNMENT ONLINE IN CANADA (www.achilles.net/~pierre/GOC.html)
- Published by Stoddart Publishing Co. Limited.
- Media Contact: Patti McCabe (Patti.Mccabe@ccmailgw.genpub.com)
- Distributed in Canada and the USA by General Distribution Services Inc.
- (Customer.Service@ccmailgw.genpub.com)
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Sep 1996 23:09:52 -0500
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
- Subject: File 2--China slices off access to web sites including CNN and WSJ
-
- [One aspect to stress here is understanding what technical means the
- Chinese government is using, so net-activists can subvert it better. Anyone
- want to give me an account on a machine in China so I can experiment?
- --Declan]
-
- September 5, 1996
-
- China Bans Internet Access To as Many as 100 Web Sites
-
- By KATHY CHEN
-
- Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
-
- BEIJING -- Acting on its threat to control Internet use, China blocked
- access to as many as 100 sites on the World Wide Web, according to
- Chinese and Westerners who monitor the industry.
-
- [...]
-
- The ban on select Web sites comes amid a broad tightening of control
- over the rising flood of information into China. In January, Beijing
- announced that economic news services sold by foreign companies --
- including Dow Jones & Co., publisher of this newspaper -- must be
- distributed by the official Xinhua news agency.
-
- ...a Chinese official who works in the information industry confirmed
- that the State Council Information Leading Group last week ordered the
- ministry to block access to one batch of sites "suspected of carrying
- spiritual pollution," with a second group likely to follow soon.
-
- Western industry sources estimated that China has banned access on as
- many as 100 Web sites by using a filtering system to prevent delivery
- of offending information. Checks by the sources over the past few days
- showed that China has shut access to sites in the following five
- categories for subscribers of China's commercial network:
-
- English-language sites sponsored by U.S. news media such as The Wall
- Street Journal, the Washington Post and CNN.
-
- Chinese-language sites featuring news and commentaries from Taiwan,
- which Beijing considers a renegade province of China.
-
- Sites sponsored by Hong Kong newspapers and anti-Beijing China-watching
- publications.
-
- Overseas dissident sites, including those providing data on the restive
- Himalayan region of Tibet and Xinjiang's independence movement.
-
- Sexually explicit sites, such as those sponsored by Playboy and
- Penthouse. Some such sites remain unblocked.
-
- [...]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 30 Aug 1996 15:07:23 +0100
- From: Jean-Bernard Condat <jeanbc@INFORMIX.COM>
- Subject: File 3--US Army troubled by viruses, France with hackers...
-
- Despite the hype, there are important historical trends behind the
- interest in information warfare. French military authorities, for
- example, suspect that unidentified hackers broke into their navy
- system in July and, according to Reuters on September 20, "tapped
- into the data on the acoustic signatures of hundreds of French and
- allied ships." President Jacques Chirac ordered a major
- investigation. While American and British liaison officers, who
- provided information on their own vessels, were furious at the
- French and suspected the Russians, some French officers suspect that
- the Americans were testing French security.
-
- Writing in an article entitled "US Army Seeks Computer Antivirus
- Plan" in the August 26 issue of "Defense News" magazine, reporter
- Pat Cooper reveals the US Army suffered from serious computer virus
- infections while deployed in Bosnia.
-
- Infections by Monkey, AntiEXE and Prank Macro caused computer
- software malfunctions and related problems which "forced Army
- personnel to waste hundreds of hours finding the viruses and
- cleaning them from the systems (...)" Apparently, imperfect Monkey
- virus removals also resulted in non-critical data being lost from
- infected hard disks. The widespread dispersal of the viruses on Army
- computers in Bosnia have catalyzed a review of informations systems
- procedures and could have implications for all future force
- deployments, servicewide, according to Cooper and Defense News.
-
- Army Captain Steve Warnock told Cooper that while virus computer
- trouble was widespread, it affected only "nonsensitive data and did
- not adversely affect the Bosnian mission."
-
- Army officials pressed for solid recommendations that all computers
- be checked for computer viruses prior to future deployments. One
- suggestion aired involved the maintenance of an on-line site from
- which Army personnel could download current anti-virus software
- while in the field. Pat Cooper commented to "Crypt Newsletter" that
- the US Army had used IBM Anti-virus and McAfee Associates software
- while in Bosnia.
-
- -- Jean-bernard Condat, Senior Consultant, Smart Card Business Unit
- | Informix, La Grande Arche, 92044 La Defense Cedex, France
- | Phone: +33 1 46963769, fax: +33 1 46963765, portable: +33 07238628
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 5 Sep 1996 21:16:33 +0200 (MET DST)
- From: Felipe Rodriquez <felipe@xs4all.nl>
- Subject: File 4--Germany censors dutch website www.xs4all.nl
-
- Please forward:
-
-
- Contact: XS4ALL Internet BV (http://www.xs4all.nl)
- Postbus 1848
- 1000BV Amsterdam
- Fax: +31-20-6274498
- Email: felipe@xs4all.nl
-
-
- * * * P R E S S R E L E A S E * * *
-
-
- GERMANY CENSORS DUTCH WEBSITE WWW.XS4ALL.NL, WITH 3100 WEBPAGES
-
-
- German internetproviders, joined in the Internet Content Taskforce
- (ICTF), started censoring the Dutch website www.xs4all.nl, containing
- 3100 personal and commercial homepages. This act of censorship is
- caused by the webpage of a magazine that is banned in Germany, Radikal
- (http://www.xs4all.nl/ ~tank/radikal/).
-
- A German prosecutor sent the following message to the ICTF
- (http://www.anwalt.de/ictf/p960901e.htm):
-
- "Under the following addresses in Internet:
-
- http://www.serve.com/spg/154/
- http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/radikal//154/
-
- and using the link on page
-
- http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/angela1/radilink.htm
-
- one can call up the entire edition of the pamphlet entitled radikal Nr.
- 154". Parts of this pamphlet justify preliminary suspicion of promoting
- a terrorist organization under ' 129a, Par.3 of the German Criminal
- Code, public condoning of criminal activities penalizable under ' 140
- no.2 of the German Criminal Code and preliminary suspicion of inciting
- to criminal activity under ' 130a Par.1 of the German Criminal Code.
- The Public Prosecutor General at the Federal Court of Justice has
- therefore initiated a criminal investigatory procedure against the
- parties disseminating this pamphlet.
-
- You are herewith informed that you may possibly make yourself subject
- to criminal prosecution for aiding and abetting criminal activities if
- you continue to allow these pages to be called up via your access
- points and network crosspoints"
-
-
- Providers in Germany are already blocking packets to and from the
- host www.xs4all.nl. The 3100 websites on this server include the
- Kurdistan Information Network (http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/kurdish/htdocs/),
- the very popular Internet Charts (http://www.xs4all.nl/~jojo/) and
- the world famous Chip Directory (http://www.xs4all.nl/~ganswijk/chipdir/).
-
- XS4ALL has not received any request from the German Government regarding
- the homepage of Radikal. Without any prior contact the German prosecutor
- decided that the XS4ALL website needs to be blocked for German
- Internet Users. XS4ALL is awaiting legal advice, and will investigate
- if legal procedures against the German government are possible.
-
- Censorship on Internet usually has the opposite effect. Internetusers
- consider it a sport to publish censored materials. Many users have already
- published the Radikal website on other Internet hosts. Here are some of
- the URL's:
-
- http://burn.ucsd.edu/%7Eats/RADIKAL/
- http://www.jca.or.jp/~taratta/mirror/radikal/
- http://www.serve.com/~spg/
- http://huizen.dds.nl/~radikal
- http://www.canucksoup.net/radikal/index.html
- http://www.ecn.org/radikal
- http://www.well.com/~declan/mirrors/
- http://www.connix.com/~harry/radikal/index.htm
- http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/radikal/index.htm
-
- Xs4all Internet will rotate the IP-numbering of the website www.xs4all.nl
- to ensure that it's 3100 userpages will all remain available for any
- internet-user.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 18 Aug 1996 21:23:29 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
- Subject: File 5--Indonesia detains democracy activist after post to mailing list
-
- Indonesia is joining the rest of the world in cracking down on online
- speech. Perhaps the lesson here is that no matter how much the Internet
- supposedly "routes around censorship," the most vulnerable points are the
- humans on both ends. More info on the global net-crackdown is at:
- http://www.eff.org/~declan/global/
-
- -Declan
-
- ---
-
- http://www.hotwired.com/netizen/96/34/special0a.html
-
- HotWired, The Netizen
- 19 August 1996
-
- Trouble in Paradise
- by Declan McCullagh (declan@well.com)
- Washington, DC, 18 August
-
- Indonesian democracy activists have taken their fight for freedom
- to the Net, and the government doesn't approve.
-
- After distributing email messages about riots in Jakarta last month to
- an international Indonesian-politics mailing list, Prihadi Beny
- Waluyo, a lecturer at Duta Wacana Christian University, was arrested
- and interrogated by the military. Since then, the mailing list has
- been banned from the country and Waluyo has returned to his house,
- where he remains under surveillance.
-
- Until now, Indonesian cyberspace has been relatively free, with no
- regulations or laws explicitly restricting online discussions. By
- contrast, newspapers and magazines are subject to strict censorship,
- following a 1984 ministerial decree requiring the press to obtain
- licenses from the government.
-
- [...]
-
- "He [Waluyo] was arrested and accused of sending messages to Holland
- and printing out photocopies," said Sidney Jones, executive director
- of Human Rights Watch/Asia. "The army is out to stop any kind of
- discussion of the riots."
-
- The censor-happy regime of President Suharto tried to stop journalists
- from reporting on the outbreaks of violence - which shattered his
- carefully cultivated image of a stable Indonesia. The worst domestic
- disturbance in a decade, the uprising started after police stormed the
- headquarters of an opposition party and ejected anti-government
- activists from the building...
-
- [...]
-
- ---
-
- August 14, 1996
-
- His Excellency M. Arifin Siregar
- Ambassador to the United States
- Embassy of Indonesia
- 2020 Mass. Avenue, NW
- Washington, DC 20036
-
- Your Excellency:
-
- I am writing on behalf of Human Rights Watch/Asia to protest the
- arrest of Drs. Prihadi Beny Waluyo, a lecturer at Duta Wacana Christian
- University. Drs. Waluyo was arrested at his home by soldiers of the
- district military command. He was reportedly accused of distributing
- e-mail messages and also of sending messages relating to the July 27 riots
- to a destination in Holland. His arrest came after an unidentified person
- gave an officer photocopies of e-mail messages that were traced to Drs.
- Waluyo. The person claimed the printouts came from a store in Kebumen, a
- district of Yogyakarta.
-
- Following his arrest, Drs. Waluyo was interrogated by the military
- about his connections with the Peoples Democratic Party (PRD), which the
- government has accused of masterminding the riots, but he denied any
- involvement with the PRD. He acknowledged that he had sent messages over
- the Internet. Following his questioning, he was reportedly ordered to go
- to his home and was told to report to the district military command on a
- regular basis. He is said to be under strict surveillance.
-
- Human Rights Watch opposes actions by the Indonesian government to
- restrict electronic communication. As stated in Article 19 of the
- Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
-
- Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression: this
- right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to
- seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and
- regardless of frontiers.
-
- We believe that such forums provide a truly unique opportunity for people
- from around the globe to share their views with an international audience.
- By allowing unrestricted communication, important issues can receive the
- benefit of serious discussion by the broadest cross-section of society. If
- the Internet is to achieve its potential to become a global information
- infrastructure, it is important, at the present moment, to agree to allow
- its unrestricted development.
-
- We urge that Drs. Waluyi and every other citizen be allowed to
- receive and transmit electronic mail without fear of harassment,
- intimidation, or arrest.
-
- Sincerely,
- Sidney Jones
- Executive Director
- Human Rights Watch/Asia
-
- cc: His Excellency Nugroho Wisnumurti, Ambassador to the United Nations
-
- ---
-
- [Thanks to Bruce Sterling for this excerpt. --Declan]
-
- >From the INDEX ON CENSORSHIP web site:
-
- http://www.oneworld.org/index_oc/
-
- INDONESIA
-
- It was reported in May that the government has banned the book Bayang Bayang
- PKI (In the Shadows of the PKI). Published by the Institute for Studies on
- the Free Flow of Information (ISAI), it focuses on the 1965-1966 events
- leading to the assumption of power by President Soeharto. It is now a
- criminal offence for any person to process, publish, distribute, trade or
- reprint the book. (A19)
-
- The government has put pressure on the media to report positively on
- government-backed efforts to oust the leader of the opposition Indonesian
- Democratic Party (PDI), Megawati Sukarno-putri. On 2 June army officers
- invited most of Indonesia's chief editors to attend media briefings where,
- among other things, they were told not to use the words 'unseat' or 'topple'
- in their reporting.
-
- A rally in Jakarta organised by members loyal to Megawati on 20 June was
- broken up by troops, who killed at least one of the protesters, and arrested
- hundreds. Erwin Hadi, photographer with the weekly Sinar, Iqbal Wahyudin of
- CNN, Tomohiko Ohtsuka of Mainichi Shimbun and Reuters photographer Enny
- Nuraheini were among the journalists injured by soldiers during the rally.
-
- Local stations were also banned by the government from broadcasting images
- of the protest or from helping foreign news agencies feed their pictures of
- the rally abroad. Megawati was finally ousted as PDI leader on 22 June.
- (Institute for Studies on the Free Flow of Information)
-
- The Supreme Court voted on 13 June to uphold the government's ban on the
- independent newsweekly Tempo (Index 4&5/1994, 3/1995, 1/1996). The Court
- ruled that the information minister has the right to revoke publishing
- licences since he also has the right to issue them. (Institute for Studies
- on the Free Flow of Information)
-
- Index Index incorporates information from the American Association for the
- Advancement of
- Science Human Rights Action Network (AAASHRAN), Amnesty International (AI),
- Article 19
- (A19), the BBC Monitoring Service Summary of World Broadcasts (SWB), the
- Committee to
- Protect Journalists (CPJ), the Canadian Committee to Protect Journalists
- (CCPJ), the
- Inter-American Press Association (IAPA), the International Federation of
- Journalists (IFJ/FIP), the
- International Federation of Newspaper Publishers (FIEJ), Human Rights Watch
- (HRW), the Media
- Institute of Southern Africa (MISA), International PEN (PEN), Open Media
- Research Institute
- (OMRI), Reporters Sans Frontires (RSF), the World Association of Community
- Broadcasters
- (AMARC) and other sources
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 2 Sep 1996 21:57:06 +0200 (MET DST)
- From: Felipe Rodriquez <felipe@XS4ALL.NL>
- Subject: File 6--Singapore
-
- Hi,
-
- The Singaporean system will be followed up by other countries. I expect
- this to happen almost immediately. Other countries have been looking at
- similar systems, and will try to perfect the licensing system Singapore
- created. Just wait to see China, Taiwan, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia to
- impose similar legislation. Even Europe may have a brainwave leading
- us all into a system of licensing the Internet.
-
- In every country there is discussions about legislation on Internet. Every
- country will feel a need to uphold the national moral standards. It
- will cause people to migrate their information to other, more tolerant, parts
- of the world. People from singapore may have websites in Holland or
- the US. (some sex-companies from singapore already operate digitally from
- Holland). Singapore can block those pages off, but would have an
- increasingly burdensome task to track down all 'hostile' and 'dangerous'
- information. I doubt if they will succeed, as the Net grows larger. Three
- years ago the worldwide usenet-flow was 100mb/day. Today it's about
- two gigabytes. In two years this will have quadrupled. No organisation
- can control such enormous flows of information. I don't want to even
- start thinking about tracking and censoring webpages, because
- they will just be put on a new URL every day.
-
- Any country trying to impose national or regional legislation on
- the Net will have a hard time. A global consensus is needed for
- the Internet, a consensus of tolerance. We need to let go of regional
- issues, and try to define global issues.
- A global system would need an enourmous amount of tolerance. There is
- no other choice than accepting total tolerance, because there is no way
- to shut your opponents up. The replication of censored information seems
- to be a favourite sport of internet users around the world. Most censored
- documents on Internet had many more readers _after_ the attempts
- to censor them. If you would ever want to write a bestseller on the Net,
- be sure to have the governments and coorporations censor it. It'll
- ensure thousands of readers.
-
- Child-pornography and copyrights may very well be the only two issues
- where global consensus is possible. Other issues like racism and
- pornography would be very difficult to deal with. Some countries on the
- Net will tolerate it, under their local freedom of speech legislation.
- Realize that because of this the information will be available on the
- entire Net. It becomes clear that on a global scale pornography and
- racism are hard, even impossible, to censor from the Net. As are other
- documents that may offend someone, somewhere in the world. Expect all
- the human expressions to be reproduced on the Net, its poetry but also
- its excrements. Accept it, or disconnect.
-
- I don't know if we should all be happy or unhappy about all these
- things on the Net. It's not very positive to see racist propaganda
- spread over the world, it does not make me very happy. A lot of Americans
- will not be happy about the fact that there's loads of pornography on
- the Net, coming from Europe. But agression about these publications
- will not solve your or my own problems. The Internet is not there to make
- us happy, it is not there to irritate us either. The Internet is there
- to use, to communicate. The Net is part of our universal right to express
- ourselves and communicate with eachother.
-
- Communication on such a vast scale is only possible through tolerance,
- by accepting things on a global scale. Accept that there're other
- cultures, with other beliefs and moral codes. To accept and be tolerant
- to the other gives you the right to demand a tolerant approach
- by others. There're some things we may agree on together, like
- persecution of child pornography. But there's a lot of other things
- that we will have to accept on the Net. We are forced into tolerance,
- because there's no other option.
-
- Imagine living in a country with 5 different races, and 100 different
- religions. A country where people speak many dialects and where
- every village has their own legal system. This is basically what
- the Net is. So how can you remain order and harmony in such a country ?
- By killing off all your opponents, because they think differently ? By
- persecuting them because they believe in a different god ? By exploiting
- the others for your own sake ? By shutting people up, to find out that
- you will be shut up yourselve some day ?
- In my opinion tolerance would be key, because otherwise the
- villages would all slaughter each other with their intolerant
- agression. Out of tolerance and mutual respect comes order and
- harmony.
-
- Don't forget ! We are all clueless and lost on the Net. We can only
- speculate where this thing is going. But it's going somewhere :-)
-
-
-
- Kind regards,
-
-
- Felipe Rodriquez
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 30 Aug 1996 13:15:58 -0500
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
- Subject: File 7--Kuwait moves to censor "sin-inducing" Internet
-
- August 28, 1996
-
- KUWAIT (Reuter) - An Islamist Kuwaiti deputy, citing
- concern over "sin-inducing" material on the worldwide computer
- network Internet, Wednesday called for government curbs on
- access to some Internet sites by users in Kuwait.
- "It (Internet) carries material...inducing sin. This is a
- matter that should not be met with silence," a proposal
- submitted to parliament by Abdulla al-Hajri said. "This is most
- dangerous."
- "Concerned government bodies should take the measures they
- envisage to prevent viewing all (material) breaching our belief
- and values on the information network, the Internet," it said.
- Hajri told Reuters by telephone: "There have been some
- images that breach decency and do not suit our social values on
- the Internet."
- He said his proposal did not call for any restrictions that
- would harm the freedom of expression. "I believe the government
- would respond to this proposal," he said.
- The government in the conservative Gulf Arab state imposes
- strict censorship on nudity and revealing photographs in
- magazines.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Wed, 28 Aug 1996 20:08:06 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Declan McCullagh <declan@eff.org>
- Subject: File 8--NSF yanks Iran's Internet connection, from HotWired
-
- Attached is my column on the NSF and Iran. After I filed it, I received an
- unconfirmed note from the NSF saying that they removed the restriction in
- response to my calls earlier today. I'll verify tomorrow.
-
- I have some original documents on the Iran sanctions law and executive
- order at:
- http://www.eff.org/~declan/global/
-
- -Declan
-
-
- // declan@eff.org // I do not represent the EFF // declan@well.com //
-
-
-
- http://www.netizen.com/netizen/96/35/special3a.html
-
- HotWired
- The Netizen
-
- Banning Iran
- by Declan McCullagh (declan@well.com)
- Washington, DC, 28 August
-
-
- The US government has quietly pulled the plug on Iran's Internet
- connection. The catch? No one gave it permission.
-
- Earlier this month, a National Science Foundation official blocked
- crucial international links to Iran, apparently in response to an Iran
- and Libya Sanctions Act that became law on 5 August. The move prevents
- people in the United States from connecting to Iranian computers by
- cutting off access to the country's only permanent Net connection - a
- single, achingly slow 9600 bps modem.
-
- The link joins the Internet at Austria's Vienna University, which
- received a letter from an NSF employee - who the foundation claims
- acted without authority - asking their network gurus to cease
- forwarding Iranian data to American networks. The NSF employee, Steve
- Goldstein, told the university that the United States embargoed such
- exchanges with Iran.
-
- From Austria, packets travel across the Atlantic through links funded
- in part by US taxpayers, which Goldstein claims gives the NSF control
- over them. Goldstein works in the agency's Networking and
- Communications Research and Infrastructure division.
-
- The NSF's action, however, tramples on the First Amendment. The
- Supreme Court has upheld the right of Americans to receive a wide
- range of information from abroad. An existing executive order
- explicitly allows the import and export of Iranian informational
- materials regardless of medium of transmission, according to Solveig
- Bernstein, a lawyer with the Cato Institute. "Congress intended any
- sanctions the president took to be directed at money and weapons
- production, not communications," she said.
-
- The NSF isn't accepting responsibility. The agency claims Goldstein
- acted on his own volition. Although Goldstein declined comment, the
- agency's lawyers say he was not authorized to block the line. "We were
- not asked by Dr. Goldstein for any opinions, so I'm not sure on what
- basis we're doing it," said John Chester, NSF legal counsel. Other NSF
- officials did not return repeated phone calls.
-
- Many Iranians in the United States are outraged at losing access to
- friends, family, and educational links in Iran. Farhad Shakeri, a
- software engineer at Stanford University who operates the Iranian
- Cultural and Information Center, says: "Lots of people in Iran are
- confused. They can't talk to any university in the world.... We just
- want the problem fixed." Anoosh Hosseini, a webmaster at the Global
- Publishing Group, says: "It affects me as a person. I want to visit my
- cousin's homepage, and my brother's homepage. The University of Texas
- has a Middle Eastern research center, but now they can't research Iran
- [on the Net]."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 30 Aug 1996 15:11:25 -0700 (PDT)
- From: Tim Harris <maxexpo@SASKMAPLE.NET>
- Subject: File 9--CITA 'declares war' on SaskTel
-
- For Immediate Release
- C.I.T.A. -- Canadian Information Technology Association Declares War on
- SaskTel
-
- SASKATOON, August 30, 1996 -- The C.I.T.A. -- Canadian Information
- Technology Association has officially declared war on SaskTel. An
- official investigative report released by the provincial government
- August 27, 1996 indisputably shows that SaskTel is deliberately pushing
- private sector Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and federal government
- subsidized Community Access Program communities out of business.
-
- According to the report, 100 Internet users, each operating a 28.8 k/sec
- modem would be able to concurrently use a single 56 k/sec line. "You do
- not have to know anything about computers to do the math." says Lyndon
- Holm Vice Chairman of the C.I.T.A. "This is technically impossible."
-
- The C.I.T.A. confronted Robert Hersche, Senior Advisor on
- Telecommunications for Saskatchewan Intergovernmental Affairs, about
- some of the comments made in his report. Mr. Hersche acknowledged that
- he is not familiar with Internet technology and that the report was
- constructed from the statements made from the SaskTel Engineering
- Department. Mr. Hersche indicated that he "took their word for it." When
- asked if any independent consultants were used for the investigation he
- replied that they did not have the budget for that.
-
- "This assault on private business by this crown corporation grossly
- violates the Competition Act." says Tim Harris, Chairman of the C.I.T.A.
- "Unfortunately, as we can see with this provincial government report,
- the private business owners can not even get a fair investigation to
- determine wrong doing. SaskTel is judge and jury on every issue."
-
- Since the private sector has been challenging SaskTel on these issues of
- unfair competition, SaskTel insists they are bound by tariffs. These
- tariffs are not federal but from the Provincial Cabinet. The role of
- Saskatchewan Intergovernmental Affairs is to advise the Minister about
- policy issues concerning SaskTel. It is the position of the C.I.T.A.
- that the Provincial Cabinet is just as ignorant as their advisors and
- are passing tariffs "taking SaskTel's word for."
-
- The C.I.T.A. will be releasing an official challenge to SaskTel and
- provincial government representatives to have an on-camera debate later
- next week. "We don't expect them to show up." says Harris "To this point
- they have backed out of every request to meet this organization."
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 10--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996)
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- ------------------------------
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- End of Computer Underground Digest #8.65
- ************************************
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