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- EFFector Online Volume 08 No. 10 June 16, 1995 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- IN THIS ISSUE:
-
- EFF Analysis of Communications Decency Act as Passed by Senate
- Next Steps in Opposing the Communications Decency Act
- Background
- The Latest News
- What You Can Do Now
- For More Information
- List Of Participating Organizations
- Calendar of Events
- Quote of the Day
- What YOU Can Do
- Administrivia
-
- * See http://www.eff.org/Alerts/ or ftp.eff.org, /pub/Alerts/ for more
- information on current EFF activities and online activism alerts! *
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: EFF Analysis of Communications Decency Act as Passed by Senate
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CONSTITUTIONAL PROBLEMS WITH THE COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY AMENDMENT:
- A LEGISLATIVE ANALYSIS BY THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- On June 14, 1995, the United States Senate approved by a vote of 84-16 an
- amendment to the Senate's omnibus telecommunications-deregulation bill
- that raises grave Constitutional questions and poses great risks for the
- future of freedom of speech on the nation's computer-communications
- forums.
-
- Sponsored by Sen. Jim Exon (D-Nebraska), the amendment originated as an
- independent bill titled Communications Decency Act of 1995 (CDA), and is
- intended, according to its sponsor, both to prohibit "the [computer]
- equivalent of obscene telephone calls" and to prohibit the distribution to
- children of materials with sexual content.
-
- As drafted, however, the legislation not only fails to solve the problems
- it is intended to address, but it also imposes content restrictions on
- computer communications that would chill First-Amendment-protected speech
- and, in effect, restrict adults in the public forums of computer networks
- to writing and reading only such content as is suitable for children.
-
-
- SPECIFIC PROVISIONS OF THE CDA
-
- The Communications Decency Act would change the language of Title 47,
- United States Code, Section 223, a section that primarily does two things:
-
- 1) it prohibits "obscene or harassing" phone calls and other, similar,
- abusive uses of the telephone, and
-
- 2) it imposes regulation (promulgated and administered by the Federal
- Communications Commission) on telephone services that provide so-called
- "indecent" content and prohibits those services from providing legally
- obscene content.
-
- The amending language drafted by Sen. Exon and passed by the Senate
- substantially restructures and alters the provisions of this section in an
- effort to bring computer communications under the statute. If the
- Senate-approved language becomes law, provisions in the amended statute
- will:
-
- (a) Expand the scope of the statute from telephones to "telecommunications
- devices" (such as computers, modems, and the data servers and conferencing
- systems used by Internet sites and by commercial providers like America
- Online and CompuServe);
-
- (b) Define as a criminal offense any communication that is legally obscene
- or indecent if that communication is sent over a telecommunications device
- "with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, or harass another person";
-
- (c) Penalize any person or entity who, by use of a telecommunication
- device, "knowingly ... makes or makes available" any content or material
- that is legally obscene; and
-
- (d) Penalize any person or entity who "knowingly ... makes or makes
- available" to a person under the age of 18 any content or material that is
- "indecent."
-
- The CDA outlines affirmative defenses for persons or entities who might
- otherwise be liable under the statute's criminal provisions.
-
- In spite of the efforts of Sen. Exon to address in this revision of his
- legislation those criticisms and constitutional issues raised by earlier
- drafts of it, the language of the CDA as passed by the Senate is riddled
- with flaws that threaten the First Amendment rights both of online service
- providers and of individual citizens.
-
- THE CDA WOULD CRIMINALIZE CONSTITUTIONALLY PROTECTED SPEECH.
-
- None of the CDA's prohibitions of "obscene" communications raise any
- constitutional issues; it is well-settled law that obscene content is not
- protected under the Constitution. In contrast, CDA's restrictions on
- "indecent" speech are deeply problematic.
-
- What is "indecent" speech and what is its significance? In general,
- "indecent" speech includes nonobscene material that deals explicitly with
- sex or that uses profane language. The Supreme Court has repeatedly
- stated that such "indecency", since it is not obscene, is Constitutionally
- protected. Further, the Court has stated that indecent communications
- cannot be banned altogether from the view of the general public -- not
- even in broadcasting, the single communications medium in which the federal
- government Constitutionally holds broad powers of content control.
-
- The section of the CDA dealing with "obscene or harassing" communications
- penalizes not only the sending of "obscene" communications, but also those
- that are "indecent." This prohibition of indecent content, even though
- limited somewhat in application by the section's intent requirement, is
- unconstitutional on its face.
-
- In _Sable_Communications_v._FCC_ (1989), a case involving dial-in phone-sex
- services, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, even though a ban on *obscenity* in
- "dial-a-porn" services is constitutional, a ban on *indecency* is not.
- Citing earlier holdings, the Court said that "[t]he government may not
- reduce the adult population to only what is fit for children."
-
- What are some examples of "indecent" content? The most famous example
- probably is the George Carlin comedy monologue that was the basis of the
- Supreme Court case _FCC_v._Pacifica_Foundation_ (1978). In that
- monologue, Carlin discusses the "Seven Dirty Words" (i.e., certain profane
- language) that cannot be uttered in broadcast media. Other examples of
- "indecency" could include passages from John Updike or Erica Jong novels,
- certain rock lyrics, and Dr. Ruth Westheimer's sexual-advice column.
- Under the CDA, it would be criminal to "knowingly" publish such material
- on the Internet unless children were affirmatively denied access to it.
- It's as if the manager of a Barnes & Noble bookstore could be sent to
- jail simply because children were able to wander the store's aisles and
- search for the racy passages in a Judith Krantz or Harold Robbins novel.
-
- The Supreme Court has consistently held, both before and after its
- landmark obscenity decision in _Miller_v._California_ (1973), that while
- sexual material and profane language can be regulated in some specifically
- defined contexts (e.g., the FCC can require that "indecent" content in
- broadcasting be limited to certain hours of the broadcasting schedule when
- children are somewhat less likely to be exposed), in general indecency is
- fully protected by the First Amendment. The Court has even recognized
- that profane language may be essential to political speech, since the
- emotional power of particular words may be as important as their
- intellectual content. As Justice Harlan commented in _Cohen_v._California_
- (1971), a case in which a young man was prosecuted for wearing a profane
- anti-draft slogan on his jacket, "One man's vulgarity is another's lyric."
-
- It's important to note that not every application of this part of the CDA
- would be unconstitutional. If the "obscene or harassing" offense language
- had been limited to instances in which the speaker intends to "threaten,"
- for example, it
- would have raised no constitutional problems. (A threat of blackmail or
- physical violence, is not protected speech.) But the CDA goes
- beyond threats or harassment -- it criminalizes the use of "indecent"
- language even when the
- speaker merely intends for his content to be "annoying," and this
- prohibition treads squarely on speakers' First Amendment rights. After
- all, the First Amendment was drafted to protect offensive, annoying, and
- disturbing speech -- there is little need for protection of pleasant and
- uncontroversial speech, since few people feel impelled to ban it. As
- Justice Douglas observed in _Terminiello_v._Chicago_ (1949), free speech
- "may best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest,
- creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people
- to anger." For example, a citizen offended by the passage of the CDA who
- shouts an indecent comment at his U.S. Senator may very well intend to
- annoy the Senator -- nevertheless, such expression is protected under
- the First Amendment. It is constitutionally absurd that speech that would
- be protected if shouted on the street would turn the speaker into a felon
- if sent by e-mail.
-
-
- BY GRANTING THE FCC REGULATORY CONTROL OVER THE CONTENT AND AVAILABILITY
- OF COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS, THE CDA VIOLATES THE FIRST AMENDMENT.
-
- Is it constitutional for Congress to declare that computer communications
- are a medium like broadcasting, where it is allowable for the FCC to
- impose content-related regulations? Clearly not. Prior to Sen. Exon's
- proposed changes to Section 223, the FCC has had content control over only
- two specific types of communications media:
-
- (1) broadcasting media like TV and radio (and broadcasting-related
- technologies, such as cable TV), and
-
- (2) the narrow class of telephone-based commercial services that requires
- the assistance and support of government-regulated common carriers.
-
- In all other communications media, the government has no constitutional
- authority to impose broad regulation of indecent content.
-
- The justification for the federal government's special role in regulation
- of broadcasting is twofold. The first rationale for such a broad
- regulatory role was the "scarcity of frequencies" argument, which appears
- in the Supreme Court's decision in _Red_Lion_Broadcasting_Co._v._FCC_
- (1969). In that case, the Court held that there is a finite number of
- useful broadcasting frequencies, and that the scarcity of this important
- public resource entails that the airwaves be allocated and supervised by
- the federal government in ways that best serve the public interest. The
- second rationale for a special government role in broadcasting appears in
- _FCC_v._Pacifica_Foundation_ (the "Seven Dirty Words" case discussed
- above). In this case the Court argued that broadcasting is an especially
- "pervasive" medium that intrudes into the privacy of the home, creating a
- constant risk that adults will be exposed to offensive material, and
- children to indecent material, without warning.
-
- The justification for regulation of the telephone-based services is
- grounded in the government's special role in supervising common carriers.
- Since the telephone systems of this country, many of which amount to
- monopolies, are common carriers, they are appropriately under the
- jurisdiction of the FCC. It arguably makes sense for phone-sex services,
- which rely on the cooperation of common carriers, to fall under FCC
- jurisdiction as well.
-
- *Neither the broadcasting rationales nor the common-carrier rationale
- support government content control over computer communications.*
-
- First, the new medium of computer-based communications -- which may
- take place over everything from large-scale Internet access providers and
- commercial conferencing systems to the PC-based bulletin-board system
- running in a hobbyist's basement -- isn't afflicted with "scarcity."
- Computing hardware itself is increasingly inexpensive, for example, and
- one of the basic facts of modern computer communication is that whenever
- you add a computer to the Internet, you *increase* the Internet's size and
- capabilities.
-
- Secondly, computer-based communications aren't "pervasive" as that term is
- used in the Pacifica case. In the world of broadcasting, content is
- "pushed" at audiences by TV and radio stations and broadcasting networks
- -- audiences are primarily passive recipients of programming. In computer
- communications, in contrast, content is *pulled* by users from various
- locations and resources around the globe through the Internet or from the
- huge data servers maintained by services like Prodigy and American Online.
- Exposure to content is primarily *driven by user choice*. For users with
- even minimal experience, there is little risk of unwitting exposure to
- offensive or indecent material.
-
- Finally, online service providers aren't common carriers and don't want to
- be -- it is the nature of this kind of service that providers must reserve
- the right to make certain basic choices about content. In contrast, a
- common carrier like AT&T or BellSouth has to "take all comers." (If online
- service providers were treated as common carriers, we might imagine a day
- when the FCC requires that an NAACP-sponsored BBS carry racist messages
- from members of the Ku Klux Klan.)
-
- It is indisputable that the narrow constitutional justifications for
- content regulation of two specific types of media do not extend to the
- all media generally, even though all communications media -- including
- newspapers, magazines, books, films, and oral conversations -- create
- some risk that children will be exposed to indecent content. That general
- principle applies here as well: There is no Constitutional rationale for
- extending intrusive content-regulatory control to online communications.
- This means that the CDA's "shoehorning" of online communications into the
- jurisdiction of the FCC is itself unconstitutional.
-
- It is clear that Congress could not constitutionally grant the FCC the
- power to tell The _New_Yorker_ not to print profane language -- even though
- *children* might come across a copy of The _New_Yorker_. Surely it is
- equally clear that Congress cannot grant the FCC the authority to dictate
- how providers like Netcom and CompuServe handle content that contains such
- language.
-
-
- COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS POSE DIFFERENT PROBLEMS, AND REQUIRE DIFFERENT
- SOLUTIONS, FROM THOSE OF OTHER MEDIA.
-
- Even if the federal government did have the constitutional authority to
- regulate indecency in computer communications, it would be required by the
- First Amendment to employ only the "least restrictive means" in doing so.
- In the Sable case, the Court noted that there are less restrictive means than
- a total ban for protecting children from indecent content on phone-sex
- services. These include such measures as requiring various procedures to
- verify customers' ages and to deny services to minors.
-
- The Exon language creates an affirmative defense for online service
- providers who implement the same types of procedures that the FCC now
- requires of phone-sex services. But what works for phone-sex services
- clearly would not work for computer-communications services. In this
- fundamentally different medium, those FCC-enforced procedures are not a
- "least restrictive means" -- in fact, they are potentially among the most
- restrictive.
-
- To take only one example: The language that penalizes anyone who "makes
- or makes available" indecent content to a minor would require an Internet
- access provider like Netcom to cease carrying the virtually all of the
- "alt.sex.*" discussions forums of the distributed global conferencing system
- known as Usenet. This would be true even though the great majority
- of the content in those forums is First-Amendment-protected speech.
-
- Netcom would be compelled to take such action because the affirmative
- defenses proposed by the CDA would in practice function as little or no
- defense at all. Suppose for example that Netcom tried to avail itself of
- legal immunity for transmitting indecency by, say, limiting subscriber
- access to the "indecent" Usenet newsgroups to Netcom subscribers age 18 or
- over. Since Netcom, as a typical Internet access provider, is also a
- Usenet distribution node, *the company would still face criminal
- liability.* You see, Usenet nodes like Netcom don't just provide Usenet
- content to subscribers; they also forward that content to other parts of
- the Internet, and their doing so is necessary for Usenet to function. Even
- if Netcom had minor-screening procedures in place for its own
- subscribers, if it continued to operate as a typical Usenet distribution
- node by passing "indecent" Usenet traffic through to the rest of the Net,
- it would "knowingly ... make available" that indecent content to minors
- elsewhere on the Net who aren't Netcom customers.
-
- Note: this analysis is not meant to imply that *no* government
- regulation of computer communications would meet the "least restrictive
- means" requirement. As a practical matter, this medium is *uniquely suited*
- to measures that simultaneously protect sensitive users and children from
- offensive content and allow the full range of constitutionally protected
- speech on the Net. Since both the computers that users employ to read the
- Net and those that providers use to administer the Net are highly
- intelligent and programmable devices, it is relatively easy to design
- tools that individuals can use to filter offensive content and that
- parents can use to screen content for their children. The government's
- promotion of the development and implementation of such tools, if done in
- a way consistent with First Amendment guarantees, would likely qualify as
- a "least restrictive means."
-
- Furthermore, there are constitutional reasons for favoring policies that
- empower individuals and families to make their own content choices. In
- _Wisconsin_v._Yoder_ (1972), the Supreme Court acknowledged that the
- right of parents to determine what is appropriate for their children is
- constitutionally protected. "Filtering" software tools could be the
- fundamental means for parents to preserve family values while allowing
- their children exploring global computer networks.
-
-
- ADULTS CANNOT CONSTITUTIONALLY BE LIMITED IN PUBLIC FORUMS TO READING AND
- WRITING ONLY SUCH CONTENT AS IS "SAFE" FOR CHILDREN.
-
- The effect of the CDA's provisions regarding indecent content and minors
- would be both dramatic and disastrous. If enacted, the CDA would
- effectively turn all the public areas of the Net -- and all of the distributed
- global conferencing system known as Usenet -- into the equivalent of the
- Children's Room at the public library. Traditionally, every large public
- library has a Children's Room -- a confined area of the library with
- content deemed safe for children. Outside of the Children's Room, the rest
- of the library is geared toward, and available to, adults.
-
- The Exon language would turn the Net as a whole into the *inverse* of the
- public library -- the Global public spaces, including Usenet, would be
- limited to Children's-Room-standard content in order to be safe for
- children. Adult users would have limit their talk about adult subjects
- (detailed discussions of sexual content in the work of James Joyce,
- explanations of Shakespeare's bawdy puns, or descriptions of proper
- techniques for safe sex, to name some examples) in confined, nonpublic
- (and probably non-global) subforums or "rooms." There would be no more
- wide-ranging debates with the full set of potential international
- participants about the significance of _The_Satanic_Verses_ -- after all,
- that book has indecent content. We'd have to be satisfied with the narrower
- range of participants we could lure to an "adult" room on CompuServe or
- AOL -- a small group of paying subscribers rather than a large population of
- discussants from commercial and noncommercial systems alike. The CDA would
- diminish and perhaps destroy the intellectual diversity and vibrancy of
- the Net.
-
-
- CONCLUSION
-
- The CDA represents the kind of "top-down," government-centered attempt to
- regulate online content that demonstrates a lack of understanding of the
- nature of this new medium. Legislative efforts like the CDA --
- particularly when based on regulatory approaches designed for wholly
- different media -- are certain to create more practical and constitutional
- problems than they solve. It is especially ironic that the Exon amendment,
- which would chill the development of online services and communities and
- "dumb down" the content of the Net's public spaces to a grade-school
- level, has been attached to a bill deregulating our communications
- industry and infrastructure. This deregulation has been presented as a
- boost to the pace of development of the very technology that supports the
- current broad range of content, services, and and communities that
- populate the Net -- the CDA's practical effect would be to greatly
- diminish that diversity of resources that is supposed to be the principal
- benefit of deregulation.
-
- EFF believes that parents, not Congress or the FCC, have the primary
- responsibility and constitutionally protected prerogative to determine
- what is appropriate for their children to see. Furthermore, it has long been
- understood that government has no general authority to make outlaws out of
- adults for engaging in constitutionally protected public speech merely
- because minors in public spaces might be exposed to inappropriate content.
- As Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter ruled in _Butler_v._Michigan_
- (1957): "The State insists that, by thus quarantining the general reading
- public against books not too rugged for grown men and women in order to
- shield juvenile innocence, it is exercising its power to promote the general
- welfare. Surely this is to burn the house to roast the pig. The incidence
- of this enactment is to reduce the adult population of Michigan to
- reading only what is fit for children."
-
- And a legislative approach that was bad for the adult population of
- Michigan nearly 40 years ago is surely just as bad for the adult
- population of the Net today.
-
-
-
- For More Information Contact:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
- Mike Godwin
- Shari Steele
- +1.202.861.7700 (voice)
-
-
- ******************************************************************
-
- COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY AMENDMENT -- FULL TEXT OF FINAL LANGUAGE PASSED BY
- THE U.S. SENATE ON JUNE 14, 1995
-
- The text of the Communications Decency Amendment, sponsored by Sen. Jim
- Exon (D-Nebraska).
-
- This language was passed by the US Senate on June 14th.
-
- -------------------------------------------------------
-
- This strikes all of Title IV of S. 652 and replaces it with the following:
-
- Sec.___ OBSCENE OR HARASSING USE OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITIES UNDER
- THE COMMUNICATIONS ACT OF 1934
-
- Section 223 (47 U.S.C. 223) is amended --
-
- (1) by striking subsection (a) and inserting in lieu thereof:
-
- ``(a) Whoever--
- ``(1) in the District of Columbia or in interstate or foreign
- communications
-
- ``(A) by means of telecommunications device knowingly--
-
- ``(i) makes, creates, or solicits, and
- ``(ii) initiates the transmission of,
-
- any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image, or other
- communication which is obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, or indecent,
- with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, or harass another person;
-
- ``(B) makes a telephone call or utilizes a telecommunications
- device, whether or not conversation or communication ensues, without
- disclosing his identity and with intent to annoy, abuse, threaten, or
- harass any person at the called number or who receives the
- communication;
-
- ``(C) makes or causes the telephone of another repeatedly or
- continuously to ring, with intent to harass any person at the called
- number; or
-
- ``(D) makes repeated telephone calls or repeatedly initiates
- communication with a telecommunications device, during which conversation
- or communication ensues, solely to harass any person at the called number
- or who receives the communication; or
-
- ``(2) knowingly permits any telecommunications facility under his
- control to be used for any activity prohibited by paragraph (1) with the
- intent that it be used for such activity,
-
- shall be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned not more than two
- years, or both.''; and
-
- (2) by adding at the end the following new subsections:
-
- ``(d) Whoever--
-
- ``(1) knowingly within the United States or in foreign
- communications with the United States by means of telecommunications
- device makes or makes available any obscene communication in any form
- including any comment, request, suggestion, proposal, image,
- regardless of whether the maker of such communication placed the call
- or initiated the communications; or
-
- ``(2) knowingly permits any telecommunications facility under such
- person's control to be used for an activity prohibited by subsection
- (d)(1) with the intent that it be used for such activity;
-
- shall be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned not more than two
- years or both.
-
- ``(e) Whoever--
-
- ``(1) knowingly within the United States or in foreign
- communications with the United States by means of telecommunications
- device makes or makes available any indecent comment, request,
- suggestion, proposal, image to any person under 18 years of age
- regardless of whether the maker of such communication placed the call
- or initiated the communication; or
-
- ``(2) knowingly permits any telecommunications facility under such
- person's control to be used for an activity prohibited by paragraph (1)
- with the intent that it be used for such activity,
-
- shall be fined not more than $100,000 or imprisoned not more than two
- years or both.
-
- ``(f) Defenses to the subsections (a), (d), and (e),
- restrictions on access, judicial remedies respecting restrictions for
- persons providing information services and access to information
- services--
-
- (1) No person shall be held to have violated subsections (a), (d),
- or (e) solely for providing access or connection to or from a facility,
- system, or network over which that person has no control, including
- related capabilities which are incidental to providing access or
- connection. This subsection shall not be applicatable to an individual
- controlled by, or a conspirator with, an entity actively involved in the
- creation, editing or knowing distribution of communications which violate
- this section.
-
- (2) No employer shall be held liable under this section for the
- actions of an employee or agent unless the employee's or agent's conduct
- is within the scope of his employment or agency and the employer has
- knowledge of, authorizes, or ratifies the employee's or agent's conduct.
-
- (3) It is a defense to prosecution under subsection (a), (d)(2),
- or (e) that a person has taken reasonable, effective and appropriate
- actions in good faith to restrict or prevent the transmission of or access
- to a communication specified in such subsections, or complied with
- procedures as the Commission may prescribe in furtherance of this section.
- Until such regulations become effective, it is a defense to prosecution
- that the person has complied with the procedures prescribed by regulation
- pursuant to subsection (b)(3). Nothing in this subsection shall be
- construed to treat enhanced information services as common carriage.
-
- (4) No cause of action may be brought in any court or any
- administrative agency against any person on account of any action which in
- not in violation of any law punishable by criminal penalty, which activity
- the person has taken in good faith to implement a defense authorized under
- this section or otherwise to restrict or prevent the transmission of, or
- access to, a communication specified in this section.
-
- (g) no state or local government may impose any liability for
- commercial activities or actions by commercial entities in connection with
- an activity or action which constitutes a violation described in
- subsection (a)(2), (d)(2), or (e)(2) that is inconsistent with the
- treatment of those activities or actions under this section provided,
- however, that nothin herein shall preclude any State or local government
- from enacting and enforcing complementary oversight, liability, and
- regulatory systems, procedures, and requirements so long as such
- systems, procedures, and requirements govern only intrastate services and
- do not result in the imposition of inconsistent rights, duties or
- obligations on the provision of interstate services. Nothing in this
- subsection shall preclude any State or local government from governing
- conduct not covered by this section.
-
- (h) Nothing in subsection (a), (d), (e), or (f) or in the
- defenses to prosecution under (a), (d), or (e) shall be construed to
- affect or limit the application or enforcement of any other Federal law.
-
- (i) The use of the term 'telecommunications device' in this
- section shall not impose new obligations on (one-way) broadcast radio or
- (one-way) broadcast television operators licensed by the Commission or
- (one-way) cable services registered with the Federal Communications
- Commission and covered by obscenity and indecency provisions elsewhere in
- this Act.
-
- (j) Within two years from the date of enactment and every two
- years thereafter, the Commission shall report on the effectiveness of this
- section.
-
- Sec. ____ OBSCENE PROGRAMMING ON CABLE TELEVISION.
-
- Section 639 (47 U.S.C> 559) is amended by striking "10,000" and
- inserting "$100,000"
-
- Sec. ___ BROADCASTING OBSCENE LANGUAGE ON THE RADIO.
-
- Section 1466 of Title 18, United States Code, is amended by
- striking out "$10,00" and inserting "$100,000".
-
- Sec. ___ SEPARABILITY
-
- "(a) If any provision of this Title, including amendments to this
- Title or the application thereof to any person or circumstance is held
- invalid, the remainder of this Title and the application of such provision
- to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby."
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Next Steps in Opposing the Communications Decency Act
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- CAMPAIGN TO STOP THE EXON/GORTON COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
- (SEE THE LIST OF CAMPAIGN COALITION MEMBERS AT THE END)
-
- Update: -The Latest News: The Senate voted to attach the
- Communications Decency Act to the Telecom Reform bill.
- Leahy's alternative was not attached to the Telecom
- Reform bill.
- -What You Can Do Now
-
-
- CAMPAIGN TO STOP THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
- June 14, 1995
-
- PLEASE WIDELY REDISTRIBUTE THIS DOCUMENT WITH THIS BANNER INTACT
- REDISTRIBUTE ONLY UNTIL June 25, 1995
- REPRODUCE THIS ALERT ONLY IN RELEVANT FORUMS
-
- Distributed by the Voters Telecommunications Watch (vtw@vtw.org)
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- CONTENTS
- Background
- The Latest News
- What You Can Do Now
- For More Information
- List Of Participating Organizations
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- BACKGROUND
-
- The Communications Decency Act (sponsored by Sen. Exon and Gorton) would
- criminalize many forms of expression on online systems. Many believe
- it to be unconstitutional, and a fight to oppose it has been waged
- since its introduction. It was recently attached to the fast-tracked
- Telecommunications Deregulation bill, which is moving quickly through
- Congress.
-
- [EFF Note: The telecom "deregulation" bill passed the Senate on the 15th.]
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- THE LATEST NEWS
-
- Right up until the last minute, callers reported weary Senatorial
- staffers continued to report a deluge of incoming calls, almost all
- against the Exon/Coats bill and supporting the Leahy alternative. The
- Senate debated the Exon/Coats/Gorton Communications Decency Act and the
- Leahy alternative today (June 14, 1995) starting at about 3:30pm EST
- for 90 minutes.
-
- The debate was opened by Senator Exon who read a prayer to protect
- against computer pornography. Senators Exon (D-NE) and Coats (R-IN)
- spoke in favor of their position. Senator Gorton (R-WA) was
- mysteriously absent from the debate.
-
- Exon referred those that signed the petition to prevent his censorship
- bill as "selfish". Exon presented letters from many groups in support
- of his bill, including the Christian Coalition, the Family Research
- Council, the National Law Center for Families. He also stated that
- 75% of computer owners have refused the join the Internet because the
- obscene material they feared on the Internet.
-
- Senators Byrd (D-WV) and Heflin (D-AL) cosponsored the Exon bill at
- the last minute.
-
- Senators Leahy (D-VT) and Feingold (D-WI) spoke passionately about the
- First Amendment and the Internet. Feingold warned against the dangers
- of chilling free speech. Leahy brought out the monster petition in
- support of his alternative (it looks pretty impressive on television)
- and proceeded to try to debunk the myths Exon promulgated about the
- Internet. He also trumpeted the success of the Internet, and pointed
- out it wouldn't have been nearly as successful if the US government had
- tried to micro-manage it.
-
- Both Exon and Leahy then gave back extra debating time and went to a vote
- on the bill. The Exon bill was successfully attached to the Telecomm
- Reform bill (84-16). The Leahy alternative was not attached to the
- Telecom Reform bill.
-
- Questions and answers:
-
- Q: What does this mean?
- A: It means we lost this round. The unconstitutional Exon Communications
- Decency Act was attached to the Telecomm Reform bill.
-
- Q: What's the next step?
- A: Next, we need to ensure that a House equivalent to the Exon
- Communications Decency Act is not attached to the House Telecomm Reform
- bill.
-
- Q: Where can I find more information about the bill?
- A: Check below.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW -- U.S. and non-U.S. citizens
-
- 1. Familiarize yourself with the version of the bill that passed,
- and the transcript of the Senate debate. (directions to obtain
- these are below)
-
- 2. Check the voting list below. It wouldn't hurt to send a nice
- letter, email, or fax to the Senators that voted to defeat the
- Communications Decency Act. Hateful mail to Senators who did
- not vote your way is not only *bad form*, but likely to become illegal
- soon anyway, under the Communications Decency Act.
-
- In other words, take some time to cool off.
-
- 3. If you don't receive Coalition alerts reliably through mail or news,
- join the mailing list by sending mail to listproc@vtw.org with
- "subscribe vtw-announce Firstname Lastname". We'll have to fight
- this battle in the House soon and you should be informed.
-
- 4. Relax, it's not the end of the world. We still have this battle to
- fight in the House of Representatives and then in the conference
- committee. This is a setback, but we haven't lost yet.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- RESULTS OF THE SENATE VOTE
-
- Senators who voted to defeat the Communications Decency Act
- (A polite letter to congratulate them for defending your free speech
- rights would be appropriate.)
-
- D ST Name (Party) Phone Fax
- = == ================== ============== ==============
- D CT Lieberman, Joseph I. 1-202-224-4041 1-202-224-9750
- D DE Biden Jr., Joseph R. 1-202-224-5042 1-202-224-0139
- D IL Simon, Paul 1-202-224-2152 1-202-224-0868
- senator@simon.senate.gov
- D IL Moseley-Braun, Carol 1-202-224-2854 1-202-224-2626
- D MA Kennedy, Edward M. 1-202-224-4543 1-202-224-2417
- senator@kennedy.senate.gov
- D MI Levin, Carl 1-202-224-6221 na
- D MN Wellstone, Paul 1-202-224-5641 1-202-224-8438
- D NM Bingaman, Jeff 1-202-224-5521 na
- Senator_Bingaman@bingaman.senate.gov
- D NY Moynihan, Daniel P. 1-202-224-4451 na
- D OH Glenn, John 1-202-224-3353 1-202-224-7983
- R RI Chafee, John H. 1-202-224-2921 na
- D VA Robb, Charles S. 1-202-224-4024 1-202-224-8689
- Senator_Robb@robb.senate.gov
- vascr@CapAccess.org
- D VT Leahy, Patrick J. 1-202-224-4242 1-202-224-3595
- senator_leahy@leahy.senate.gov
- R VT Jeffords, James M. 1-202-224-5141 na
- D WA Murray, Patty 1-202-224-2621 1-202-224-0238
- D WI Feingold, Russell 1-202-224-5323 na
- russell_feingold@feingold.senate.gov
-
-
- Senators who voted to support the (CDA) Communications Decency Act
- (They voted for the CDA and to curtail your free speech rights.
- Writing them an impolite and nasty letter would be a bad idea, and
- may soon be illegal under the CDA anyway. Take some time to cool down.)
-
- D ST Name (Party) Phone Fax
- = == ================== ============== ==============
- R AK Murkowski, Frank H. 1-202-224-6665 1-202-224-5301
- R AK Stevens, Ted 1-202-224-3004 1-202-224-1044
- D AL Heflin, Howell T. 1-202-224-4124 1-202-224-3149
- R AL Shelby, Richard C. 1-202-224-5744 1-202-224-3416
- D AR Bumpers, Dale 1-202-224-4843 1-202-224-6435
- D AR Pryor, David 1-202-224-2353 1-202-224-8261
- R AZ Kyl, Jon 1-202-224-4521 1-202-228-1239
- R AZ McCain, John 1-202-224-2235 1-602-952-8702
- D CA Boxer, Barbara 1-202-224-3553 na
- D CA Feinstein, Dianne 1-202-224-3841 1-202-228-3954
- R CO Campbell, Ben N. 1-202-224-5852 1-202-225-0228
- R CO Brown, Henry 1-202-224-5941 1-202-224-6471
- D CT Dodd, Christopher J. 1-202-224-2823 na
- R DE Roth Jr. William V. 1-202-224-2441 1-202-224-2805
- D FL Graham, Robert 1-202-224-3041 1-202-224-2237
- R FL Mack, Connie 1-202-224-5274 1-202-224-8022
- D GA Nunn, Samuel 1-202-224-3521 1-202-224-0072
- R GA Coverdell, Paul 1-202-224-3643 1-202-228-3783
- D HI Akaka, Daniel K. 1-202-224-6361 1-202-224-2126
- D HI Inouye, Daniel K. 1-202-224-3934 1-202-224-6747
- D IA Harkin, Thomas 1-202-224-3254 1-202-224-7431
- R IA Grassley, Charles E. 1-202-224-3744 1-202-224-6020
- R ID Craig, Larry E. 1-202-224-2752 1-202-224-2573
- R ID Kempthorne, Dirk 1-202-224-6142 1-202-224-5893
- R IN Coats, Daniel R. 1-202-224-5623 1-202-224-8964
- R IN Lugar, Richard G. 1-202-224-4814 1-202-224-7877
- R KS Dole, Robert 1-202-224-6521 1-202-224-8952
- R KS Kassebaum, Nancy L. 1-202-224-4774 1-202-224-3514
- D KY Ford, Wendell H. 1-202-224-4343 1-202-224-0046
- R KY McConnell, Mitch 1-202-224-2541 1-202-224-2499
- D LA Breaux, John B. 1-202-224-4623 na
- D LA Johnston, J. Bennett 1-202-224-5824 1-202-224-2952
- D MA Kerry, John F. 1-202-224-2742 1-202-224-8525
- D MD Mikulski, Barbara A. 1-202-224-4654 1-202-224-8858
- D MD Sarbanes, Paul S. 1-202-224-4524 1-202-224-1651
- R ME Snowe, Olympia 1-202-224-5344 1-202-224-6853
- R ME Cohen, William S. 1-202-224-2523 1-202-224-2693
- R MI Abraham, Spencer 1-202-224-4822 1-202-224-8834
- R MN Grams, Rod 1-202-224-3244 na
- R MO Bond, Christopher S. 1-202-224-5721 1-202-224-8149
- R MO Ashcroft, John 1-202-224-6154 na
- R MS Cochran, Thad 1-202-224-5054 1-202-224-3576
- R MS Lott, Trent 1-202-224-6253 1-202-224-2262
- D MT Baucus, Max 1-202-224-2651 na
- R MT Burns, Conrad R. 1-202-224-2644 1-202-224-8594
- R NC Faircloth, D. M. 1-202-224-3154 1-202-224-7406
- R NC Helms, Jesse 1-202-224-6342 1-202-224-7588
- D ND Conrad, Kent 1-202-224-2043 1-202-224-7776
- D ND Dorgan, Byron L. 1-202-224-2551 1-202-224-1193
- D NE Kerrey, Bob 1-202-224-6551 1-202-224-7645
- D NE Exon, J. J. 1-202-224-4224 1-202-224-5213
- R NH Gregg, Judd 1-202-224-3324 1-202-224-4952
- R NH Smith, Robert 1-202-224-2841 1-202-224-1353
- D NJ Bradley, William 1-202-224-3224 1-202-224-8567
- D NJ Lautenberg, Frank R. 1-202-224-4744 1-202-224-9707
- R NM Domenici, Pete V. 1-202-224-6621 1-202-224-7371
- D NV Bryan, Richard H. 1-202-224-6244 1-202-224-1867
- D NV Reid, Harry 1-202-224-3542 1-202-224-7327
- R NY D'Amato, Alfonse M. 1-202-224-6542 1-202-224-5871
- R OH Dewine, Michael 1-202-224-2315 1-202-224-6519
- R OK Inhofe, James 1-202-224-4721
- R OK Nickles, Donald 1-202-224-5754 1-202-224-6008
- R OR Hatfield, Mark O. 1-202-224-3753 1-202-224-0276
- R OR Packwood, Robert 1-202-224-5244 1-202-228-3576
- R PA Santorum, Rick 1-202-224-6324 na
- R PA Specter, Arlen 1-202-224-4254 1-717-782-4920
- D RI Pell, Claiborne 1-202-224-4642 1-202-224-4680
- D SC Hollings, Ernest F. 1-202-224-6121 1-202-224-4293
- R SC Thurmond, Strom 1-202-224-5972 1-202-224-1300
- D SD Daschle, Thomas A. 1-202-224-2321 1-202-224-2047
- R SD Pressler, Larry 1-202-224-5842 1-202-224-1259*
- R TN Thompson, Fred 1-202-224-4944 1-202-228-3679
- R TN Frist, Bill 1-202-224-3344 1-202-224-8062
- R TX Hutchison, Kay Bailey 1-202-224-5922 1-202-224-0776
- R TX Gramm, Phil 1-202-224-2934 1-202-228-2856
- R UT Bennett, Robert 1-202-224-5444 1-202-224-6717
- R UT Hatch, Orrin G. 1-202-224-5251 1-202-224-6331
- R VA Warner, John W. 1-202-224-2023 1-202-224-6295
- R WA Gorton, Slade 1-202-224-3441 1-202-224-9393
- D WI Kohl, Herbert H. 1-202-224-5653 1-202-224-9787
- D WV Byrd, Robert C. 1-202-224-3954 1-202-224-4025
- D WV Rockefeller, John D. 1-202-224-6472 na
- R WY Simpson, Alan K. 1-202-224-3424 1-202-224-1315
- R WY Thomas, Craig 1-202-224-6441 1-202-224-3230
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION
-
- We will be archiving the version of the Communications Decency Act
- that passed, the roll call vote that went with it, and the transcript
- of the Senate debate.
-
- We will make these available through the methods below as soon as
- they are available through the Government Printing Office (this usually
- takes about 24 hours). Please try to use the Web or Gopher sites first
- before using our email server.
-
- Web Sites
- URL:http://www.panix.com/vtw/exon/
- URL:http://epic.org/
- URL:http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/
- URL:http://www.cdt.org/cda.html
-
- FTP Archives
- URL:ftp://ftp.cdt.org/pub/cdt/policy/freespeech/00-INDEX.FREESPEECH
- URL:ftp://ftp.eff.org/pub/Alerts/
-
- Gopher Archives:
- URL:gopher://gopher.panix.com/11/vtw/exon
- URL:gopher://gopher.eff.org/11/Alerts
-
- Email:
- vtw@vtw.org (put "send help" in the subject line)
- cda-info@cdt.org (General CDA information)
- cda-stat@cdt.org (Current status of the CDA)
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- LIST OF PARTICIPATING ORGANIZATIONS
-
- In order to use the net more effectively, several organizations have
- joined forces on a single Congressional net campaign to stop the
- Communications Decency Act.
-
-
- American Civil Liberties Union * American Communication Association *
- American Council for the Arts * Arts & Technology Society * Association
- of Alternative Newsweeklies * biancaTroll productions * Californians
- Against Censorship Together * Center For Democracy And Technology *
- Centre for Democratic Communications * Center for Public Representation
- * Citizen's Voice - New Zealand * Computer Communicators Association *
- Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility * Cross Connection *
- Cyber-Rights Campaign * CyberQueer Lounge * Dutch Digital Citizens'
- Movement * Electronic Frontier Canada * Electronic Frontier Foundation
- * Electronic Frontier Foundation - Austin * Electronic Frontiers
- Australia * Electronic Frontiers Houston * Electronic Frontiers New
- Hampshire * Electronic Privacy Information Center * Feminists For Free
- Expression * First Amendment Teach-In * Florida Coalition Against
- Censorship * Friendly Anti-Censorship Taskforce for Students * Hands
- Off! The Net * Human Rights Watch * Inland Book Company * Inner Circle
- Technologies, Inc. * Inst. for Global Communications * Internet
- On-Ramp, Inc. * The Libertarian Party * Marijuana Policy Project *
- Metropolitan Data Networks Ltd. * MindVox * National Bicycle Greenway *
- National Coalition Against Censorship * National Public Telecomputing
- Network * National Writers Union * Oregon Coast RISC * Panix Public
- Access Internet * People for the American Way * Rock Out Censorship *
- Society for Electronic Access * The Thing International BBS Network *
- The WELL * Voters Telecommunications Watch
-
- (Note: All 'Electronic Frontier' organizations are independent entities,
- not EFF chapters or divisions.)
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- End Alert
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Calendar of Events
- ---------------------------
-
- This schedule lists EFF events, and those we feel might be of interest to
- our members. EFF events (those sponsored by us or featuring an EFF speaker)
- are marked with a "*" instead of a "-" after the date. Simlarly, government
- events, such as deadlines for comments on reports or testimony submission, are
- marked with "!" in place of the "-" after the date.
-
- If you know of an event of some sort that should be listed here, please
- send info about it to Stanton McCandlish (mech@eff.org)
-
- The latest full version of this calendar, which includes material for
- later in the year as well as the next couple of months, is available from:
-
- ftp: ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/calendar.eff
- gopher: gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF, calendar.eff
- http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/calendar.eff
-
-
- Updated: Jun. 13, 1995
-
-
- 1995
- ----
-
-
- June 17-
- 19 - NECC'95: Emerging Technologies and Lifelong Learning: 16th Annual
- National Educational Computing Conf., sponsored by International
- Society for Technology in Education; Baltimore, Maryland.
- VP Gore and Sec'y. of Labor Robert Reich invited as keynote
- speakers. Other speakers include: John Phillipo (CELT), Frank
- Knott (MGITB)
- Contact: +1 503 346 2834 (voice), +1 503 346 5890 (fax)
- Email: necc95@ccmail.uoregon.edu
-
- June 18-
- 21 - ED-MEDIA'95; Graz, Austria. A world conference on educational
- multimedia and hypermedia. Sponsor: The Association for the
- Advancement of Computing.
- Contact: +1 804 973 3987 (voice)
- Email: aace@virginia.edu.
-
- June 24-
- 28 - Workshop on Ethical & Professional Issues in Computing;
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., Troy, NY. Deadline for submissions:
- Apr. 15.
- Contact: +1 518 276 8503 (voice), +1 518 276 2659 (fax)
- Email: cherkt@rpi.edu
-
- June 27-
- 29 - Women in Technology Conference: Channels for Change; Santa Clara
- Conv. Ctr., Santa Clara, Calif. Speakers include: Gloria Steinem.
- Sponsored by Int'l. Network of Women in Technology (WITI).
- Contact: +1 818 990 1987 (voice), +1 818 906 3299 (fax)
- Email: witi@crl.com
-
- June 28-
- 30 - INET '95 Internet Society 5th Ann. International Networking
- Conf.; Honolulu, Hawaii. Sponsored by Internet Society (ISoc).
- See Jan. 13 for proposal deadline
- Contact: +1 703 648 9888 (voice)
- FTP: ftp.isoc.org, /isoc/inet95/
- Gopher: gopher.isoc.org, 1/isoc/inet95
- WWW: http://www.isoc.org/inet95.html
- Email: inet95@isoc.org
-
- July 5-
- 7 - Key Players in the Introduction of Information Technology: Their
- Social Responsibility & Professional Training; Namur, Belgium.
- Sponsored by CREIS.
- Email: nolod@ccr.jussieu.fr, clobet@info.fundp.ac.be
-
- July 5-
- 8 - Alliance for Community Media International Conference and Trade
- Show. [See Jan. 31 for proposal submission deadline info].
- Contact: Alliance c/o MATV, 145 Pleasant St., Malden, MA 02148
- Fax: (617) 321-7121; Voice: Rika Welsh (617) 321-6400
- Email: matv@world.std.com
-
- July 5-
- 8 - 18th International Conf. on Research & Development in Information
- Retrieval; Sheraton Hotel, Seattle, Wash.
- Email: sigir95@u.washington.edu
-
- July 6-
- 7 ! Interoperability & the Economics of Information Infrastructure;
- Freedom Forum, Rosslyn, Virginia. IITF/NSF/Harvard/FFMSC joint
- workshop to "analyze and evaluate economic incentives and
- impediments to achieving interoperability in the National
- Information Infrastructure. The goal is to help agencies,
- associations, the Administration, and the Congress to develop
- sound policies for realizing the vision of a seamless,
- interoperating NII. Deadline for proposals: Mar. 17. Deadline
- for submissions: June 15.
- Contact: +1 617 495 8903 (voice), +1 617 495 5776 (fax)
- Email: kahin@harvard.edu
-
- July 11-
- 15 - '95 Joint International Conference: Association for Computers and
- the Humanties, and Association for Literacy and Linguistic
- Computing; UCSB, Santa Barbara, Calif. Will highlight the
- development of new computing methodologies for research and
- teaching in the humanities
- Contact: Eric Dahlin, +1 805 687 5003 (voice)
- Email: hcf1dahl@ucsbuxa.ucsb.edu
-
- July 22-
- 26 - Syllabus'95; Sonoma State U., Rohnert Park, Calif.
- "The premier conference covering the use of technology in the
- curriculum"
- Contact: 1-800-773-0670 (voice, US-only), +1 408 746 200 (voice,
- elsewhere)
- Email: syllabus@netcom.com
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Quote of the Day
- -------------------------
-
- "This is nothing less than thought control."
- - Constitutional law scholar Lawrence Tribe, on the U.S. government's
- crusade against "indecency".
-
- Find yourself wondering if your privacy and freedom of speech are safe
- when bills to censor the Internet are swimming about in a sea of of
- surveillance legislation and anti-terrorism hysteria? Worried that in
- the rush to make us secure from ourselves that our government
- representatives may deprive us of our essential civil liberties?
-
- Join EFF!
-
- Even if you don't live in the U.S., the anti-Internet hysteria will soon
- be visiting a legislative body near you.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: What YOU Can Do
- ------------------------
-
- * The Exon Bill (Communications Decency Act)
-
- The Communications Decency Act poses serious threats to freedom of
- expression online, and to the livelihoods of system operators.
-
- Business/industry persons concerned should alert their corporate govt.
- affairs office and/or legal counsel. Everyone should write to their own
- Representatives and ask them to support the "Child Protection, User
- Empowerment, and Free Expression in Interactive Media Study Act, sponsored
- by Rep. Ron Klink (D-PA), currently attached to the House telecom reform
- bill, and to oppose any Internet censorship legislation, such as
- the Communications Decency Act (HR1004). Explain, quickly, clearly and
- politely, why you feel the Klink/Leahy language is a good alternative to
- censorship measure which threatend First Amendment rights.
-
- S.652, the Senate telecom deregulation bill, now contains Sen. Exon's
- "Communications Decency Act" (formerly S.314.), and was passed a few days
- ago in a landslide vote.
-
- For more information on what you can do to help stop this and other
- dangerous legislation, see:
-
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Alerts/
- gopher.eff.org, 1/Alerts
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/
-
- If you do not have full internet access, send your request
- for information to ask@eff.org.
-
-
- * Find Out Who Your Congresspersons Are
-
- Writing letters to, faxing, and phoning your representatives in Congress
- is one very important strategy of activism, and an essential way of
- making sure YOUR voice is heard on vital issues.
-
- EFF has lists of the Senate and House with contact information, as well
- as lists of Congressional committees. These lists are available at:
- ftp.eff.org, /pub/Activism/Congress_cmtes/
- gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF/Issues/Activism/Congress_cmtes
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Activism/Congress_cmtes/
-
- The full Senate and House lists are senate.list and hr.list, respectively.
- Those not in the U.S. should seek out similar information about their
- own legislative bodies. EFF will be happy to archive any such
- information provided. If you do not know who your Representatives are,
- you should contact you local League of Women Voters, who typically maintain
- databases that can help you find out.
-
-
- * Join EFF!
-
- You *know* privacy, freedom of speech and ability to make your voice heard
- in government are important. You have probably participated in our online
- campaigns and forums. Have you become a member of EFF yet? The best way to
- protect your online rights is to be fully informed and to make your
- opinions heard. EFF members are informed and are making a difference. Join
- EFF today!
-
- For EFF membership info, send queries to membership@eff.org, or send any
- message to info@eff.org for basic EFF info, and a membership form.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Administrivia
- =============
-
- EFFector Online is published by:
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1667 K St. NW, Suite 801
- Washington DC 20006-1605 USA
- +1 202 861 7700 (voice)
- +1 202 861 1258 (fax)
- +1 202 861 1223 (BBS - 16.8k ZyXEL)
- +1 202 861 1224 (BBS - 14.4k V.32bis)
- Membership & donations: membership@eff.org
- Legal services: ssteele@eff.org
- Hardcopy publications: pubs@eff.org
- General EFF, legal, policy or online resources queries: ask@eff.org
-
- Editor:
- Stanton McCandlish, Online Services Mgr./Activist/Archivist (mech@eff.org)
-
- This newsletter printed on 100% recycled electrons.
-
- Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. Signed
- articles do not necessarily represent the views of EFF. To reproduce
- signed articles individually, please contact the authors for their express
- permission. Press releases and EFF announcements may be reproduced individ-
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-
- To subscribe to EFFector via email, send message body of "subscribe
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-
- Back issues are available at:
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-
- To get the latest issue, send any message to effector-reflector@eff.org (or
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- http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Newsletters/EFFector/HTML/
- at EFFweb.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-
- End of EFFector Online v08 #10 Digest
- *************************************
-
- $$
-