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-
- Computer underground Digest Sun July 6, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 53
- 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
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Ian Dickinson
- Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
- Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
-
- CONTENTS, #9.53 (Sun, July 6, 1997)
-
- File 1--Cap'n Crunch Site Now Moved
- File 2--Mitnick's computer/wireless ban
- File 3--DARK SIDE OF FORCE HITS USENET AS STARWARS DISCUSSION BANNED
- File 4--Common Sense and Cyberspace
- File 5--If Klingons Developed Software
- File 6--Re: Purpose of CuD - #9.44,
- File 7--Creative Writing, Brock Meeks-style
- File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
- CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
- THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 29 Jun 97 14:50 CDT
- From: Cu Digest <TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU>
- Subject: File 1--Cap'n Crunch Site Now Moved
-
- Source - TELECOM Digest Thu, 26 Jun 97 Volume 17 :(#164)
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: For those not familiar with Pat Townson's
- TELECOM DIGEST, it's a an exceptional resource. From the header
- of TcD:
- "TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but
- not exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is
- circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to various
- telecom forums on a variety of public service systems and
- networks including Compuserve and America On Line. It is also
- gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
- newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. Subscriptions are available to
- qualified organizations and individual readers. Write and tell
- us how you qualify:
- * ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu * ======" ))
-
-
- From--John Draper <crunch@host.net>
- Date--Tue, 24 Jun 1997 20:12:41 -0700
-
- The Cap'n Crunch home page URL has been changed. The new URL is now
- http://crunch.woz.org/crunch
-
- I've made significant changes to the site, added a FAQ based on a lot
- of people asking me many questions about blue boxing, legal stuff, and
- hacking in general. The FAQ will be growing all the time, as I go
- through all the requests for information that many people have sent.
- "Email me" if you want to add more questions.
-
- Our new server is now available to host web sites for anyone who wants
- to use it for interesting projects. This is for Elite people only,
- and you have to send me a proposal on what you plan to use it for.
-
- I'm open for suggestions, and when you go up to the WebCrunchers web
- site: http://crunch.woz.org
-
- You'll get more details on that. Our server is a Mac Power PC,
- running WebStar web server, connected through a T-1 link to the
- backbone. I know that the Mac Webserver might be slower, but I had
- security in mind when I picked it. Besides, I didn't pick it, Steve
- Wozniak did... :-) So please don't flame me for using a Mac.
-
- I know that Mac's are hated by hackers, but what the heck ... at least
- we got our OWN server now.
-
- I also removed all the blatant commercial hipe from the home page and
- put it elsewhere. But what the heck ... I should disserve to make
- SOME amount of money selling things like T-shirts and mix tapes.
-
- We plan to use it for interesting projects, and I want to put up some
- Audio files of Phone tones. For instance, the sound of a blue box
- call going through, or some old sounds of tandom stacking. If there
- are any of you old-timers out there that might have some interesting
- audio clips of these sounds, please get in touch with me.
-
- Our new Domain name registration will soon be activated, and at that
- time our URL will be:
-
- http://www.webcrunchers.com - Our Web hosting server
- http://www.webcrunchers.com/crunch - Official Cap'n Crunch home page
-
-
- Regards,
-
- Cap'n Crunch
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sat, 28 Jun 1997 00:55:01 -0400
- From: Evian S Sim <evian@escape.com>
- Subject: File 2--Mitnick's computer/wireless ban
-
- Calif. hacker ordered to stay away from computers
-
- Copyright 1997 Reuter Information Service
-
- LOS ANGELES (June 27, 1997 8:20 p.m. EDT) - A federal judge
- Friday ordered convicted computer hacker Kevin Mitnick to stay
- away from all computers, cell phones or software when he is
- released from prison.
-
- U.S. District Court Judge Mariana Pfaelzer said Mitnick is also
- prohibited from being employed in any job that would allow him to
- have access to computers without approval from a probation
- department officer.
-
- Mitnick, 33, held in custody since 1995, was sentenced last week
- to 22 months in federal prison for possessing illegal cellular
- phone codes and for violating his parole.
-
- Mitnick pleaded guilty last year to one count of possession of
- fraudulent cellular codes that he used to illegally access
- cellular phone networks. The crime occured while Mitnick was on
- supervised release for an earlier "hacker" offense.
-
- He faces an additional 25-count indictment for alleged computer
- intrusions and theft of millions of dollars of software during
- the 2 1/2 year period he was a fugitive.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Sun, 22 Jun 1997 18:41:35 -0400
- From: Paul Kneisel <tallpaul@nyct.net>
- Subject: File 3--DARK SIDE OF FORCE HITS USENET AS STARWARS DISCUSSION BANNED
-
- DARK SIDE OF THE FORCE HITS USENET AS STAR WARS DISCUSSION IS BANNED
-
- by tallpaul@nyct.net (Paul Kneisel)
-
-
- Does the right of free speech include the right to cry "Yoda!" in
- a crowded theater? Does it include the right to publish an risque
- love story between Princess Leila and a wookie on a crowded
- Internet?
-
- "No," say the UseNet old boys in "group-advice" whose position on
- UseNet provides them with the de-facto power to block the creation
- of new news groups by denying those groups the right to formally
- publish their Request For Discussion document normally needed to
- create the groups.
-
- The pre-publication censorship dispute developed out of an attempt
- by people around the UseNet "Star Wars" group to reorganize. The
- group, called <rec.arts.sf.starwars.*> or RASS is located in the
- "Big 8" hierarchy of UseNet and has a proposed subsidiary group
- called "fanfic" attached. (see Appendix A below)
-
- Fanfic is the name given to literature created by fans and modeled
- on characters, events, and locations mentioned in movies, TV, and
- the like. It has been especially popular among science fiction
- affectionadoes.
-
- But the forces around UseNet "group-advice" on the global
- information superhighway have decided that neither you nor anyone
- else in the world will be able to read any, at least in that part
- of the Big 8 hierarchy they dominate.
-
- David C Lawrence, also known as "Tale," wrote Russ Allbery,
- Lawrence's associate on "group-advice" "is the moderator of
- news.announce.newgroups; if you want to create a new newsgroup in
- the Big Eight, you have to go through him."[1]
-
- Lawrence will not officially approve the RASS draft proposal for
- publication, a process normally required to create the group.
-
- "The reason why RFDs for those groups aren't posted is because
- Tale feels it's in his purview to reject RFDs for groups where the
- traffic itself would be illegal," Allbery explained. "...
- Discussion of sex, guns, or illegal drugs is not illegal. Posting
- fanfiction is."[2]
-
- Illegal? Allbery is not a judge or even an attorney. Nor does he
- appear to be someone who has devoted much time to studying the
- complex series of legal issues that he and his co-thinkers are
- using to block the creation of new news groups.
-
- We're not talking here about *criminal* behavior like bombing
- federal buildings, making "kiddie porn," pumping fascist
- propaganda into Germany, or burning black churches in the U.S.
- south.
-
- Rather, the issue concerns the violation of *civil* law in that
- class of non-criminal action called "torts."
-
- People who violate criminal law go to prison to pay their
- proverbial "debt to society;" people who commit torts go to their
- bank to pay monetary damages to the individuals whose civil rights
- they violated.
-
- Allbery argues that fanfic in RASS would violate the property
- rights of U.S. corporations since Yoda is a trademark of
- Lucasfilms Inc. The argument follows those previously presented by
- groups like the Church of Scientology against publication of their
- trade secrets and copyrighted material on the net.
-
- One central difference is that Yoda is well known while the
- contents of CoS documents are not.
-
- Another is that CofS leaders play no major role on the Internet;
- Allbery and Lawrence do.
-
- The Allbery/Lawrence ban of fanfic has an especially broad and
- chilling character since it also limits publication of purely
- literary criticism of other fanfic that might have been published
- off the net in some private hard-copy fanzine. RASS, as the
- charter indicates, would be open to such literary criticism. But
- Allbery and Lawrence say "no."
-
- It also bans -- before publication -- fanfic on the grounds that
- it is (or rather would be) illegal. This is an action that even
- the U.S. Supreme Court has deemed improper when performed by the
- U.S. government.
-
- The Allbery/Lawrence ban thus has a character unsupported -- and
- indeed condemned -- by the highest court in the United States.
-
- In other words, if Lucasfilms themselves went into court to get a
- pre-publication injunction against RASS they would fail.
-
- It doesn't matter.
-
- Allbery and Lawrence say fanfic is illegal and they say it's
- banned.
-
- Torts, especially, vary as legal jurisdiction changes.
-
- One example is the tort of libel and how different courts define
- and enforce it. Many countries accept the doctrine of "group
- libel" where charges that "Jews are dirty" or that "black people
- smell" are libelous, therefore torts, and therefore the exact
- category of civilly-"illegal" behavior that Allbery seeks to ban
- (if only it concerns the alleged property rights of large
- corporations instead of the breathing-rights of people previously
- targeted for mass murder.)
-
- The notion of group libel has been central to governments seeking
- to ban certain material from the Internet, as when E. Zundel's
- "Holocaust Revisionist" web site was shut down or when some German
- state governments have sought to eliminate fascist material from
- the net as a whole.
-
- And let us not even think of writing about libel laws in Singapore
- for reasons that we will not even think of writing about.
-
- Libel can also occur when unconvicted citizens are accused of
- criminal behavior like "theft," "hijacking," and "fraud" as
- Allbery's other political supporters have written about critics
- elsewhere in <news.group>-based discussions.
-
- Another tort, similar to trademark violation so upsetting to
- Allbery, is copyright violation. This may occur when copyrighted
- material in some post to news groups is quoted in a response
- without the permission of the copyright owner, as occurred when
- Allbery quoted the copyrighted material by RASS-supporters.
-
- UseNet readers also see hate-based material routinely published on
- the net despite its illegal criminal nature in many parts of the
- world.[3]
-
- Cyherpunks believe that "National boundaries are just speedbumps
- on the information superhighway."
-
- That may be true for Holocaust Revisionism, calls to lynch blacks,
- publish Church of Scientology documents, or "kiddie porn" from
- Denmark. It might be true when the speedbumps are created by laws
- in Germany, Finland, Singapore, China, Iran, or international
- conventions like those that created the international war crimes
- tribunals held at Nuremberg 50 years ago.
-
- It may be true when people call for the thermonuclear destruction
- of the Moon of Endor because they don't like teddy bears. It might
- cover publishing articles that wookies smell bad, that you don't
- want one of them to move into your virtual.neighborhood, or that
- they bring down property values of adjacent ISPs.
-
- But the opinions of two non-lawyers in <news.groups> have a
- different view when the dispute is about allegedly violating
- property rights with a limerick about Jedhi Knights.
-
- Damn! And just when I was going to send off a RASS fanfic story
- about how the Emperor wears no clothes!
-
- May the Farce Be With You!
-
- APPENDIX A:
-
- CHARTER: rec.arts.sf.starwars.fanfic
-
- The posting of works of fanfic and discussion of ideas,
- characterisation, and works in progress. Posts indicating the
- location of websites archiving fanfic would also be welcome.
-
- Constructive criticism of the Fan-fiction posted to the group is
- welcome, however personal attacks or flames of an author, for
- whatever reason, will not be tolerated.
-
- All fanfiction stories should be tagged with one or more of the
- following:
-
- [EMPIRE] Stories dealing with officers or government officials
- (namely the Emperor and Darth Vader) of the Galactic Empire, or
- other stories closely related to the Empire.
-
- [NEWREP] Stories that take place after the Battle of Endor that
- are not primarily about the Empire.
-
- [OLDREP] Stories that take place before the rise of the Emperor.
-
- [REBEL] Stories based on the officers or leaders of the Rebel
- Alliance.
-
- [ADULT] Stories that include primarily adult situations and might
- be considered offensive to some people.
-
- [author -- JamesG <jag7@ukc.ac.uk>, "PRE-RFD: RASS groups reorg,"
- 11 Jun 1997 18:46, post to <rec.arts.sf.starwars.misc> et al.]
-
- END CHARTER.
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
- [a] Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>, "Re: PRE-RFD: RASS groups
- reorg," 13 Jun 1997 17:48, post to <news.groups>.
-
- [b] Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>, "Re: PRE-RFD: RASS groups
- reorg," 12 Jun 1997 11:16, post to <news.groups>.
-
- [3] see Associated Press, "German High Court Rules Against Jailed
- American Neo-Nazi," 13 June 1997.
-
- "KARLSRUHE, Germany (AP) - Germany's highest court ruled today
- that a lower court did not violate the rights of an American
- neo-Nazi by convicting him of disseminating hate propaganda and
- sending him to prison for four years.
-
- "Gary Lauck, once German neo-Nazis' main source of anti-Semitic
- and xenophobic literature, was convicted by a Hamburg court last
- August of inciting racial hatred and other counts.
-
- "Lauck filed an appeal, arguing his right to free speech had been
- violated.
-
- "But the Federal Constitutional Court, Germany's equivalent of the
- U.S. Supreme Court, said without comment today it has rejected the
- appeal."
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 17 Jun 1997 11:59:51 +0100
- From: "Richard K. Moore" <rkmoore@iol.ie>
- Subject: File 4--Common Sense and Cyberspace
-
- This was written more than a year ago, but seem even more timely today, as
- the consequences of the Telecom Bill have become more widely apparent.
-
- Perhaps it would be of interest to CuDigest readers.
-
- -rkm
- ________________________________________________________________
-
- Common Sense and Cyberspace
-
- Richard K. Moore
- 20 March 1996
-
- NOTE: This piece was submitted to a U.S. Senator, at the request of a
- staff member.
-
- -rkm
-
- Telecom backgrounder -- what preceded the "Reform" bill
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- What we had under the old Ma Bell monopoly was a vertically-
- integrated marketplace, where phone-sets, local calls, long distance, and
- other services, were all obtained from a single vendor. This was not an
- altogether bad arrangement: under this regime the U.S. telephone system was
- the envy of the world, and offered top quality product for bottom dollar,
- by global standards.
-
- But there was a problem -- advancing technology had the potential
- to support new kinds of services, but the business structure of Ma Bell was
- not appropriate to exploit those opportunities effectively or aggressively.
- What was needed was _competition_ to stimulate new-market development. But
- in order to enable competition, there needed to be an appropriate
- restructuring of the communications industry -- the creation of one or more
- "playing fields" in which market economics could be allowed to operate --
- even while many phone services (eg. local loop) continued to be provided by
- natural monopolies.
-
- The result of this transformation was a brilliant new regime, even
- though it seemed to dribble out as a series of distinct anti-trust actions.
- The communications market was divided into a number of layers, with each
- layer operating as a marketplace in its own right. AT&T kept the long-line
- layer and the long-distance business (later shared with MCI et al), while
- the Baby Bells got the regional networks and the local-call business (later
- to be diluted by cellular).
-
- But this was only the beginning. On top of these "commodity
- backbone network layers" other products and services could be devised and
- markets developed. Entrepreneurs could develop gadgets to add-on to the
- network (eg. modems, multiplexers, and in-house switching systems), while
- other entrepreneurs could resell communications bundled with "value-added"
- services such as database access, timesharing services, wirephoto
- distribution, or whatever. The telcos got no "cut" of these value-added
- businesses, they just got their leased-line rentals: this is what's meant
- by "layered markets".
-
- Out of this entrepreneurial activity evolved the technologies which
- enabled the Internet, and many other more special-purpose networks, both
- public and private. Just as the Ma-Bell regime served well to build up
- America's basic telephone network, so the "layered marketplace" regime has
- served well to pioneer and develop digital networking.
-
-
- The post-Reform-bill regime - a playground for robber barons
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- But that's all history now -- the new Reform bill has essentially
- scrapped the whole layering paradigm, and thrown us back into the kind of
- laissez-faire regime that spawned the Ma Bell monopoly in the first place.
- Once again, we will see monopoly domination of communications, only now
- there will be several Majors (as in Oil or Television), rather than one
- single dominant vendor. And "communications" now includes so much more
- than phone service -- it subsumes cable and satellite and will serve as the
- primary distribution channel for films, live entertainment, news, and
- whatever cyber-experiences Hollywood is able to fabricate.
-
- As the Telecom bill wended its way toward enactment, merger-mania
- swept the media industry as players positioned themselves to participate in
- the anticipated feeding frenzy. Examples:
- Westinghouse / CBS
- Disney / ABC
- GE / NBC
- Gulf+Western / Paramount
- Time-Warner / Turner
-
- Now that the bill has passed, we're beginning to see RBOC mergers
- (eg. SBC and Pacific Telesis), and we'll see many satellite, cellular, and
- cable operators gobbled up by deeper pockets.
-
- Given the Spectrum Auction, we now have a regime where monopolistic
- control is possible over:
- - ownership of content
- (films, live sports, syndicated productions)
- - access to the home
- (wires, broadcast, cellular, and satellite)
- - distribution facilities
- (wire & satellite backbones)
-
- The communications Majors will be integrated conglomerates, with
- assets distributed between content and infrastructure, and they will fight
- for market share a bit like airlines or television networks do today. This
- is indeed "competition", but sterile and unproductive compared to what we
- had under the layered regime.
-
- The Cyber-Baron club -- the masters of our information future --
- will be the telecom companies, the cable operators, and news &
- entertainment conglomerates -- together with the more general corporate
- community which will be involved through cross-ownership, interlocking
- directorates, advertising, and underwriting. In other words, cyberspace
- will be run by more or less the same Corporate Establishment that runs
- today's news & entertainment industries, which is why I refer to that
- future environment as Cyberspace Inc.
-
- It is abundantly clear from today's television programming what the
- political landscape of Cyberspace Inc will be: corporate-slanted propaganda
- in place of news, skillful promotion of laissez-faire globalist agendas,
- careful management of voter perceptions re/ politicians and elections, and
- the use of propagandistic entertainment to instill consumerist, pro-
- corporate values. In other words, Cyberspace Inc, besides delivering
- monopolist profits to its operators, will accomplish the corporate elite's
- goal of controlling the public mind and preventing the possibility of
- genuine democracy.
-
-
- The lost opportunity for democracy - the demise of Internet
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The fact is that digital networking has the potential to connect
- people in new and exciting ways, and at very low cost. That's what the
- lesson of Internet is all about. An underlying broadband network is
- relatively cheap to provide -- modern technology makes it cheaper to
- provide than was standard phone service only a couple decades ago. The
- natural course of events would have been for bandwidth to become ever
- cheaper, and the Internet ever more responsive. The "digital revolution"
- would have blossomed forth as a flowering of independent media productions
- (community theater available state-wide?), political organizations, "town-
- hall" meetings, cross-national hobby groups, etc. ad infinitum.
-
- This "people's infrastructure" -- which is what Internet has been
- rapidly becoming -- will be "cleared from the land" as the cyber developers
- come to town. The current Internet culture has as much relevance to the
- media conglomerates as the Red Indians did to the U.S. Calvary and the
- westward-moving real-estate interests. This whole public-participation
- phenomenon will be bundled under the heading "public access" and will be
- relegated to some peripheral, politically impotent corner, like late-night
- public television is currently.
-
- Economically, Internet culture is merely irrelevant to the soon-to-
- be corporate owners of cyberspace -- they don't need it, but they could
- permit it and continue to support it if they wanted to. But politically,
- Internet represents a credible threat to elite corporate hegemony over the
- American political process. Internet's phenomenal recent growth was
- threatening to connect _most_ U.S. households and businesses to a free-for-
- all communications network which could be used for who-knows-what political
- organizing, mobilizing of boycotts, and for spreading who-knows-where-
- obtained information about government activities, covert operations, on-
- site documentary evidence of news-event cover-ups, etc.
-
- The threat of net-enabled, PGP-endowed, militia terrorists is a
- real one, although tracking such operations is not a difficult problem for
- the likes of the NSA and FBI. But the threat of millions of citizens
- communicating openly, sharing information, and creating new kinds of
- political organizations and parties -- this is not a political landscape
- that the corporate elite desires to tolerate, especially as public
- dissatisfaction with the political status quo continues to grow apace.
-
- Thus we can expect the screws to be tightened on Internet as the
- commercial "alternative" is geared up to replace it. Seemingly disparate
- forces are converging on the Internet from all sides. The Christian
- Coalition provides the public cover for CDA censorship, while the corporate
- media demonizes the net (eg. Time's Cyberporn article), the Church of
- Scientology pushes the envelope of over-restrictive copyright, ACTA strikes
- against the media-enhancement of Internet discourse, the FBI raids various
- BBS operators, and Newt himself leads the troops for the structural Reform-
- bill coup that underlies the whole nip-Internet-in-the-bud campaign.
-
-
- Strategy options for politicians
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The safest course for any politician is to simply go along with the
- corporate steamroller, echo the lies about the Reform bill bringing
- "increased competition", and queue up to receive a share of the campaign
- funds available from the industry.
-
- Only if a politician REALLY cares about the future of democracy --
- and is willing to risk ridicule by colleagues and the media -- would it
- make sense for him or her to take a responsible position on the nation's
- communications infrastructure.
-
- For such a rare quixotic politician, willing to do battle for
- democracy, here are my thoughts regarding a regulatory/legislative agenda:
-
- I see the central cyber issues as:
- (1) Beyond CDA: the Bill of Rights (as a whole) and
- Cyberspace
-
- (2) Cyber economics: the monopolist pirate raid on the wired
- future.
-
- re/ (1)
- ^^^^^^^
- I believe that cyber "rights" are a consequence of how cyberspace
- is "modelled". The corporatist position, which is all but a fait accompli,
- is that cyberspace is an info-distribution channel like television, and
- hence has no inherent rights of access, privacy, free speech, etc. --
- concerns of children etc. are supposedly central (although we all know
- that's BS -- what could be more harmful to children than the television
- trash they're subjected to?).
-
- I see the "battle" as making a case that we should look at First
- Class Mail as the proper precedent for private email, and Public Gatherings
- as the precedent for email lists & conferences, etc. In other words, we
- should demand that our standard civil liberties be mapped onto cyberspace
- appropriately. We're not asking for new rights, simply the proper legal
- interpretation of existing rights (such as they are).
-
-
- re/ (2)
- ^^^^^^^
- I believe the so-called Reform bill is a modern Enclosures Act --
- the theft of the Public Commons by greedy promoters. And this public
- commons is a grand one indeed, being essentially the central nervous system
- and perceptual organs of our future society.
-
- The law doth punish man or woman
- That steals the goose from off the common,
- But lets the greater felon loose,
- That steals the common from the goose.
-
- Anon, 18th cent., on the enclosures.
- (courtesy of John Whiting)
-
-
- The main problem here is that the public at large understands
- neither the wonderful potential of cyberspace for "people's networking" (to
- give it an inadequate moniker), nor the true consequences of the new
- telecom regime.
-
- The public is saturated with a porn-terrorist-hacker image of
- Internet -- when possibly a majority of messages sent are day-to-day
- corporate and governmental inter-department mail. And the public is told
- the Reform act is only to their benefit, with promises of cyber gadgets and
- virtual entertainment -- with no discussion of what a digital
- infrastructure _could_ make available to them if it were open and cheap
- (which the technology should, by rights, provide).
-
- It seems to me the first step here is purely educational -- until
- there's more general understanding of the real issues, it would be
- pointless to attempt to rouse any sizable constituency around any actions
- or agenda.
-
- We have some natural allies in this field of battle, and ones with
- significant economic self-interest involved. These include all the small
- independent operators in the communications, media, and publication
- industries, together with everyone in public-sector-related businesses
- (education, municipal governments, etc.). There are also probably some
- professional associations who would have an identifiable commonality of
- interests, plus consumer groups and the like.
-
-
- Specific legislative agenda
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- 1) Amend the Reform bill to re-instate layered markets,
- most particularly isolation of the transport layer
- (wires and spectrum) as a commodity infrastructure.
-
- 2) Seek constituency-support among independent operators
- in the communications and media industries, public-
- interest groups, and the existing online community.
-
- 3) Insure that public-interest groups, government, and
- independent operators have full and equal access
- to communications facilities, including the local
- loop and backbone infrastructure.
-
- 4) Keep price-controls in place until and if effective,
- diverse competition actually occurs in a given market layer.
-
- 5) Prohibit cross-subsidies of any kind between the transport
- and value-added businesses of operators.
-
- 6) Apply the precedents of private-communications and public-
- gatherings to digital communications, and insure that
- the Bill of Rights is applied to cyberspace as regards
- privacy, freedom of expression and assembly, and protection
- against unreasonable search and seizure.
-
-
- ~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~--~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=~
- Posted by Richard K. Moore - rkmoore@iol.ie - PO Box 26 Wexford, Ireland
- Cyberlib: ftp://ftp.iol.ie/users/rkmoore/cyberlib | (USA Citizen)
- * Non-commercial republication encouraged - Please include this sig *
- * Please Cc: rkmoore@iol.ie directly on forwards & replies *
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 24 Jun 1997 12:06:50 -0700
- From: Jonathan Hirshon <jh@horizonpr.com>
- Subject: File 5--If Klingons Developed Software
-
- I thought you all might appreciate this -- enjoy :)
-
- cheers, JH
-
- _____________
-
- Top 10 things likely to be overheard if you
- had a Klingon on your software development team:
-
- 10) "This code is a piece of crap! You
- have no honor!"
-
- 9) "A TRUE Klingon warrior does not comment
- his code!"
-
- 8) "By filing this bug you have questioned
- my family honor. Prepare to die!"
-
- 7) "You question the worthiness of my Code?!
- I should kill you where you stand!"
-
- 6) "Our competitors are without honor!"
-
- 5) "Specs are for the weak and timid!"
-
- 4) "This machine is a piece of GAGH! I need dual
- Pentium processors if I am to do battle with
- this code!"
-
- 3) "Perhaps it IS a good day to Die! I say
- we ship it!"
-
- 2) "My program has just dumped Stova Core!"
-
- 1) "Behold, the keyboard of Kalis! The greatest
- Klingon code warrior that ever lived!"
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Fri, 20 Jun 1997 12:05:50 +0600
- From: RHS Linux User <gander@VOYAGER.NETCOMI.COM>
- Subject: File 6--Re: Purpose of CuD - #9.44,
-
- In response to Mike Oar's recent submission as File 5 in #9.44
- I'd like to respond.
-
- Mike,
-
- I have been reading CuD for, I don't know, at least 3 years, and
- I find many of the articles I read to not be in sync with my
- personal feelings or beliefs. Some of the people I don't
- particularily care for and content as well. However, forgive me
- for being ignorant, but in a way isn't that the point??
-
- The Net is filled with tens of millions [think about that a
- minute] of people from nearly every country and culture in the
- world [this too]. I suppose from our protected and (perhaps
- justifiably in rare situations) self rightious American point of
- view this is both its curse, and its beauty. To believe even for
- a moment that as a moderate to heavy Net users that one's fragile
- sensibilities will not be offended on a regular basis in this
- environment is naive.
-
- To make my point. CuD is a E-Rag that is designed, implemented
- and effected to present to an interested audience a wide range of
- views on commonly contraversial issues, it can be used as a way to
- gain a certian literacy about viewpoints that perhaps you don't
- share, perhaps after reading some you find you should, or do, but
- in a different way. To me, this entails the very essence of being
- a good American, indeed, a good human. To be able to learn and
- understand other viewpoints so that when we speak, or otherwise
- offer our own opinions we don't regurgitate what some high school
- teacher or parent, etc. taught us to say, but speak our own mind
- based on our own experiences and interactions. Basically, I
- guess, your note could be considered, in and of itself, to be an
- affront to free speech. Not because you didn't like Meeks
- statements, but because you have, in public, berated CuD for
- carrying articles that you don't personally care for. Much the
- same that Sen. Exon and friends don't like information being
- distributed that they do not agree with, or even the US Criminal
- and Spy orginizations don't like information being distributed in
- an encrypted format.
-
- In the end, nobody really feels hurt that you left the list (nor
- elated for the most part). It is just another activity that took
- place, but please try and consider opinions that differ from your
- own, I'm not telling you to agree with them, or like them, I
- don't. But as one of my music professors in university said, "I
- don't care if you like a composer, performer, etc., but it is
- important to APPRECIATE and KNOW each for what they are." A
- statement that I try to measure my own literacy against. Thinking
- about it, wasn't there a statement in the Art of War or somewhere
- that made a similar remark about knowing your enemies?
-
-
- Thanks,
-
- Gerald D. Anderson
-
- P.S. Stuff: Please don't respond to the list, as I will most likely not
- respond again. Also, these of course, represent my personal opinions,
- nothing else should be interpreted.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 30 Jun 97 01:29:18 -0400
- From: Rogier van Bakel <rogier@reporters.net>
- Subject: File 7--Creative Writing, Brock Meeks-style
-
- Brock Meeks -- that take-no-prisoners cybermuckraker, that
- gallbladder eruption waiting to happen -- turns out to have a
- soft spot after all. The object of his affection: a censorious
- intellectual dwarf from Nebraska called Jim Exon. Without
- apparent irony, Meeks tells us:
-
- > Second, love him or hate him, former Sen. Jim Exon, the father of
- >the CDA, deserves to be recognized for bringing a legitimate issue to the
- >national stage. He energized a host of forces, from advocates to industry,
- >and in the wake of turmoil he left behind, many good things have happened
-
- Ah! Talk about Creative Writing! Anyone else care to give Meeks'
- reasoning a try? How about:
-
- "Love 'em or hate 'em, the Ku Klux Klan deserve hugs for
- bringing to the table the issue of racism and lynchings. (Not
- to mention the great contribution the group made to the
- South's economy by purchasing more than its reasonable share
- of rope and white cotton sheets.)"
-
- Hey, this isn't hard at all! Let's see:
-
- "Love him or hate him, Jesse Timmendequas, Megan Kanka's
- killer, made an entire nation face the threat that repeat sex
- offenders pose
- to our kids.
- (Besides, how bad can a guy be who gave tough-on-crime
- lawmakers the best approval ratings ever?) Three cheers for
- Jesse!"
-
- Perhaps Meeks would like to finish this exercise with Pol Pot and
- the wonderful boost the Khmer Rouge provided to arms salesmen in
- South-East Asia; or the once-in-a-lifetime job opportunities
- senator Joe McCarthy created for non-blacklisted actors and
- writers. The possibilities are endless.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
- From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 8--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
-
- 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 (815-753-6436), 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);
- CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
- 1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.
-
- In ITALY: ZERO! BBS: +39-11-6507540
-
- UNITED STATES: ftp.etext.org (206.252.8.100) in /pub/CuD/CuD
- Web-accessible from: http://www.etext.org/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 #9.53
- ************************************
-
-
-