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- EFFector Online Volume 08 No. 15 Sept. 9, 1995 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- IN THIS ISSUE:
-
- EFF Relocation Update
- Alert Update: Internet Censorship Legislation
- EFFector Changes
- Upcoming 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 Relocation Update
- ------------------------------
-
- EFF has relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area, in California.
-
- Contact information:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- PO Box 170190
- San Francisco CA 94117 USA
- [*Postal mail only* Contact us via phone for an address to use for
- FedEx and UPS shipping.]
-
- +1 415 668 7171 (voice, general office; Calif.)
- +1 415 668 7007 (fax, general office; Calif.)
- +1 510 548 3290 (voice, Mike Godwin, Staff Counsel; Calif.)
- +1 301 375 8856 (voice, Shari Steele, Staff Counsel; DC/VA/MD area.)
-
- We apologize for any downtime or net troubles users of our sites may have
- experienced, and for delays in turn-around time on information requests
- and membership applications. We're working on catching up with the
- several weeks worth of backlog incurred during our transition time.
-
- Though we are now back up and running full-time and full-on, we do not
- yet have permanent office space. When this last piece of the puzzle is
- resolved, we'll inform everyone of the change again.
-
- Nothing serious appears to have occurred during our downtime (Congress
- being in recess probably had a lot to do with that...)
-
- Thanks to our members and the online community for your continued support
- and action!
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Alert Update: Internet Censorship Legislation
- ------------------------------------------------------
-
- CAMPAIGN TO STOP THE EXON/COATS COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
- (SEE THE LIST OF CAMPAIGN COALITION MEMBERS AT THE END)
-
- Update: -Latest News:
- House/Senate Conference committee considering
- several pieces of legislation related to
- restricting the Internet
-
- -What You Can Do Now:
- Put your business or bulletin board on record
- as supporting free speech and opposing censorship
- for cyberspace!
-
- CAMPAIGN TO STOP THE UNCONSTITUTIONAL COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
- August 26, 1995
-
- PLEASE WIDELY REDISTRIBUTE THIS DOCUMENT WITH THIS BANNER INTACT
- REDISTRIBUTE ONLY UNTIL September 25, 1995
- REPRODUCE THIS ALERT ONLY IN RELEVANT FORUMS
-
- Distributed by the Voters Telecommunications Watch (vtw@vtw.org)
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- CONTENTS
- The Latest News
- What You Can Do Now
- Letter for electronic businesses and bulletin boards
- Letter for professional organizations and non-profits
- Chronology of the CDA
- For More Information
- List Of Participating Organizations
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- THE LATEST NEWS
-
- The House and Senate have passed a total of four different pieces of
- legislation aimed at dealing with children's access to information on
- the Internet.
-
- Each of the four was profiled in BillWatch #13 which you can retrieve
- from URL:http://www.vtw.org/billwatch/issue.13.html. Here are the four
- pieces of legislation and a short summary of each of them.
-
- HR1978: "Internet Freedom and Family Empowerment Act" (Cox/Wyden) This
- bill takes the approach of encouraging industry to provide parents with
- tools to restrict their childrens' access to the net. It contains no
- new criminal provisions. This approach was affirmed by the House
- 421-4 on August 4, 1995. (Yes, that's a landslide)
-
- S314: "The Communications Decency Act" (Exon/Coats) This bill makes
- many types of constitutionally-protected speech (including lewd,
- lascivious, and indecent speech) criminal when used through a
- telecommunications device. This provision was affirmed by the Senate
- 84-16 on June 14, 1995.
-
- House amendment to HR1555: "Child Protection, User Empowerment, and
- Free Expression in Interactive Media Study Act" (Klink/Leahy) This bill
- directs the Department of Justice to study and see if there are places
- in current law where existing obscenity laws are unenforcible on computer
- networks. This approach was affirmed by a committee voice vote.
-
- House amendment to HR1555: <unnamed> This amendment was submitted at
- the last minute through the Manager's Mark, a collection of several
- amendments to HR1555 that were voted on as a block. This amendment
- takes constitutionally-protected speech and criminalizes it when it is
- expressed online. Most legislators had no idea that they voted on this
- last amendment; the summary of the Manager's Mark did not mention
- these new criminal provisions. There was no applicable House vote on
- *just this* provision.
-
- The House-Senate conference committee now has the task of deciding
- which of these are allowed into the final Telecommunications Deregulation
- bill for the last floor vote.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW
-
- 1. It's crucial that we tell Congress how their decision in the conference
- committee will affect businesses and bulletin boards in cyberspace.
-
- Read the electronic business and bulletin board letter below. You
- can also find it at:
-
- Gopher: gopher -p1/vtw/exon gopher.panix.com
- WWW URL: http://www.vtw.org/cdaletter/
- Email : Send mail to files@vtw.org with "send cdaletter" in the
- subject line.
-
- 2. If you work for a business that uses bulletin boards or public networks,
- convince the owners to sign onto the letter. Companies that should sign
- this include Internet service providers, Web designers (big and small),
- Internet consultants and trainers, Internet restaurants and bars,
- software companies that develop Internet-related software, companies
- that advertise or publish through the Internet or bulletin boards, writers
- who publish through the Internet, and many others!
-
- If you belong to a bulletin board, ask the sysop if he or she will sign
- onto the letter.
-
- 3. Ask the BBS sysop or the business owner to mail in the following
- information to vtw@vtw.org:
-
- Business name
- Owner or officer name
- Address
- Email address
- Phone number
- Description of business and anything else relevant
-
- Here's an example:
-
- $ Mail vtw@vtw.org
-
- My business would like to signon to the business and bbs letter.
- We are:
-
- Ed's Xcellent Online Node (EXON)
- J.J. Exon, Owner
- 2323 Decency Road, Nebraska 10000-0000
- (402) 555-1212
- jj@exon.net
-
- Ed's Xcellent Online Node is based in Nebraska and provides Internet
- service to many thoughtful and free-speech loving Nebraskans.
- We provide Internet access to over 1,500 residents and 400
- businesses. We employ 35 full time employees.
-
- -James
- ^D
- Mail sent!
- $
-
- If you have questions about the BBS and business letter and are in the
- states of NY, OH, FL, TN, CA, NJ, OR, or NH, contact one of the people
- below. Each of them has volunteered to coordinate the letter for their
- state and they can answer your questions. You can also send your signon
- directly to them. (anything for their state sent to vtw@vtw.org will
- be forwarded to them directly)
-
- CA: jandrews@slip.net (John Andrews)
- FL: apresha@tds.org (Aubrey Presha)
- NH: dan@efnh.org (L. Daniel York)
- NJ: stc@vtw.org (Steven Cherry)
- NY: shabbir@vtw.org (Shabbir J. Safdar)
- OH: pstemari@erinet.com (Paul J. Ste. Marie)
- OR: mnasstro@ednet1.osl.or.gov (Mark C. Nasstrom)
- TN: mddallara@msuvx2.memphis.edu (Mark Dallara)
-
- 4. If you don't subscribe to a BBS or have an affiliation with a business
- that uses public networks, but belong to a professional organization
- or an advocacy group, consider sending Congress the ACLU letter included
- below with your local group's name on it. Simply replace the material
- in parentheses with your own information.
-
- 5. Relax! You can save the world only one step at a time.
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- LETTER FOR ELECTRONIC BUSINESSES AND BULLETIN BOARDS
-
- (Do not send this letter in. Simply follow the instructions at the top
- for signing your business or bulletin board onto it.)
-
- Dear member of Congress,
-
- Laws restricting Internet speech, such as S314, the Exon/Coats
- "Communications Decency Act" and the new Title 18 language in the
- Managers Amendment to HR1555, will not help parents control their
- children's access to objectionable material and will over-regulate
- electronic businesses out of this growing industry.
-
- These bills are currently in the Telecommunications Deregulation
- conference right now, and we urge you to provide your input to the
- conference committee to remove the criminal provisions mentioned
- above from the final bill.
-
- Recently the House addressed the issue of children accessing
- controversial material in cyberspace. By affirming HR 1978 (the
- Cox/Wyden Internet Freedom and Family Empowerment bill) they encouraged
- workable and successful solutions to helping parents control their
- children's access to the Internet while showing a concern for the First
- Amendment.
-
- Unfortunately Congress also passed two measures that do nothing to help
- parents control their childrens' access to controversial material on
- the Internet. S314, the Exon/Coats Communications Decency Act, and the
- new additions to Title 18 of the US Code were drafted without an
- understanding of the technology or the business that we engage in.
-
- This legislation imposes regulations on business so grave that many of
- us wonder if we will be able to stay in business.
-
- The great advantages of modern electronic communications--and the
- reason why we can stay in business delivering these communications--are
- speed and openness. In short, the new media allow millions of people
- to exchange information freely at speeds approaching that of light.
- The bills we object to will force many sites to screen every message
- that comes across, or to shut down access. We ourselves are at some
- risk of violating the law, simply because we cannot police every page
- that comes across our channels.
-
- Should the laws proposing new regulations pass, the National Information
- Infrastructure will be crippled, and many fewer organizations will be
- willing to purchase our services.
-
- Let it be understood that objectionable material is available to
- children right now on sites outside the United States and will continue
- to be available to children if these changes to the criminal code
- pass. Legislation that attempts to criminalize such information will
- do nothing to affect information that sits on foreign soil, far from
- the reach of US laws.
-
- What will help parents control their children's access to the Internet
- is "parental control" tools and features, such as those provided by
- several major online services and available as over-the-counter
- software. Unlike many other parental schemes, these solutions are here
- today. No one had to mandate them, they appeared because parent
- consumers asked for them. A list of them is attached for your
- information.
-
- Once again, we urge you to express your opinion to the conference
- committee. The Telecommunications Deregulation bill that comes back to
- the floor for a vote should contain HR1978 and exclude S314 and the new
- Title 18 language from the HR1555 Managers Amendment.
-
- Respectfully submitted,
-
- <your name and business>
-
- ______________________________________________________________________________
-
- LETTER FOR PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS AND NON-PROFITS
-
- (If you want your organization to signon to this letter below, simply print
- it out and sign it. This letter is not being centrally coordinated.)
-
- Dear Member of Congress,
-
- The undersigned represent a diverse coalition of [state] organizations and
- associations based in [state] that are dedicated to free speech and privacy
- values. We write today to express our strong opposition to online
- censorship legislation. In addition to being unconstitutional, online
- censorship legislation will unnecessarily stifle a promising new
- communications medium -- cyberspace. We urge you to oppose any effort to
- censor online communications in violation of the First Amendment or to
- impose a federal regulatory scheme on online content.
-
- As you know, the House and Senate have now passed two different
- telecommunications deregulation bills (S 652 and HR 1555) that contain two
- different versions of online speech crimes legislation. Both versions pose
- a severe threat to the First Amendment and to online services because they
- impose significant criminal penalties for the online transmission of
- "indecency." Indecent speech, unlike obscenity, is fully protected by the
- First Amendment.
-
- The Senate version (Senator Exon's "Communications Decency Act") inserts
- new speech crimes into the communications section of the federal code and
- puts the FCC in charge of online content. The House version (passed as
- part of the larger Managers Amendment to HR 1555) amends the obscenity
- provisions of the criminal code to outlaw indecent speech over online
- networks. This fall, a conference committee will consider the differences
- between the two telecommunications bills. We urge you to provide your
- input to the conference committee to remove these speech crimes provisions
- from the final version of the telecommunications bill.
-
- We believe it is important to emphasize -- and to promote -- the remarkable
- capabilities of interactive technologies. Cyberspace is probably the
- richest source of creative, diverse, empowering, and democratizing
- communication ever to connect people statewide, nationwide, and globally.
- It is perhaps the world's first true "mass media" because it allows anyone
- with a few simple tools to communicate their ideas to thousands of persons
- at once. It inspires tolerance and promotes mutual understanding by
- connecting people of all ilk around the world. Its vast databases, created
- by the nation's finest universities, libraries, civic organizations and
- industries, provide an invaluable educational resource. It is a tool for
- community organizing and citizen involvement.
-
- [People from state] -- like other citizens around the globe -- are going
- online in record numbers, both at home and at work. Interactive
- communications have created a wealth of [state] business opportunities, for
- established businesses and for entrepreneurs. [State] libraries and
- universities continue to contribute valuable databases to the Internet, and
- to serve as log-in stations for people who don't have computers at home.
- The world-renowned [state] arts community is using online networks as a
- powerful new creative tool and as a new way to reach audiences outside of
- [state].
-
- All the innovation and citizen empowerment inspired by online
- communications, in [state] and around the world, is threatened by online
- censorship legislation.
-
- To advance the truly amazing accomplishments of interactive technology, the
- undersigned organizations believe that any legislation that affects the
- emerging online environment must:
-
- EMPOWER USERS -- INCLUDING PARENTS -- TO MAKE PERSONAL DECISIONS ABOUT
- ONLINE CONTENT.
- The right to decide what children should see and hear is uniquely personal
- to the family -- government should have no role in dictating such personal
- and private matters. User-controlled screening programs provide
- alternative ways to protect access by children to certain material without
- infringing on the free speech rights of adults.
-
- PROTECT THE FIRST AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF ALL AMERICANS.
- Any effort to establish federal control over constitutionally protected
- speech must be opposed outright. It is especially inappropriate to
- restrict adult content in order to protect children when less restrictive
- methods are available.
-
- SAFEGUARD PRIVACY IN ONLINE COMMUNICATIONS.
- Neither private companies nor local law enforcement officials should be
- given carte blanche to read private e-mail or to create transactional
- records of the habits of online users.
-
- PRESERVE A DEMOCRATIC, DECENTRALIZED NET.
- The online industry has blossomed without government control over content.
- Allowing the FCC or any other government agency to determine appropriate
- content would stifle the diversity and flow of online speech and virtually
- destroy the promise of the Net.
-
- Conclusion
- We ask that you oppose any legislation that fails to adhere to the above
- principles. In the words of House Speaker Newt Gingrich who spoke out
- against the Communications Decency Act, "It is clearly a violation of free
- speech and it's a violation of the right of adults to communicate with each
- other." Online communications continue to empower [state] citizens and to
- stimulate [state] business. We hope you will support this progress by
- urging the conference committee to remove any online censorship provisions
- from the final version of the telecommunications bill.
-
- Sincerely,
-
- [list of organizations, with addresses]
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- CHRONOLOGY OF THE COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
-
- Aug 4, '95 House passes HR1555 which goes into conference with S652.
- Aug 4, '95 House votes to attach Managers Amendment (which contains
- new criminal penalties for speech online) to
- Telecommunications Reform bill (HR1555).
- Aug 4, '95 House votes 421-4 to attach HR1978 to Telecommunications
- Reform bill (HR1555).
- Jun 30, '95 Cox and Wyden introduce the "Internet Freedom and Family
- Empowerment Act" (HR 1978) as an alternative to the CDA.
- Jun 21, '95 Several prominent House members publicly announce their
- opposition to the CDA, including Rep. Newt Gingrich (R-GA),
- Rep. Chris Cox (R-CA), and Rep. Ron Wyden (D-OR).
- Jun 14, '95 The Senate passes the CDA as attached to the Telecomm
- reform bill (S 652) by a vote of 84-16. The Leahy bill
- (S 714) is not passed.
- May 24, '95 The House Telecomm Reform bill (HR 1555) leaves committee
- in the House with the Leahy alternative attached to it,
- thanks to Rep. Ron Klink of (D-PA). The Communications
- Decency Act is not attached to it.
- Apr 7, '95 Sen. Leahy (D-VT) introduces S.714, an alternative to
- the Exon/Gorton bill, which commissions the Dept. of
- Justice to study the problem to see if additional legislation
- (such as the CDA) is necessary.
- Mar 23, '95 S314 amended and attached to the telecommunications reform
- bill by Sen. Gorton (R-WA). Language provides some provider
- protection, but continues to infringe upon email privacy
- and free speech.
- Feb 21, '95 HR1004 referred to the House Commerce and Judiciary committees
- Feb 21, '95 HR1004 introduced by Rep. Johnson (D-SD)
- Feb 1, '95 S314 referred to the Senate Commerce committee
- Feb 1, '95 S314 introduced by Sen. Exon (D-NE) and Gorton (R-WA).
-
- ________________________________________________________________________
-
- FOR MORE INFORMATION
-
- Web Sites
- URL:http://www.vtw.org/exon/
- URL:http://epic.org/
- URL:http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/
- URL:http://www.cdt.org/cda.html
- URL:http://outpost.callnet.com/outpost.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 alert" in the subject line for the latest
- alert, or "send cdafaq" for the CDA FAQ)
- 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 Communication Association * American Council for the Arts *
- Arts & Technology Society * Association of Alternative Newsweeklies *
- biancaTroll productions * Boston Coalition for Freedom of Expression *
- Californians Against Censorship Together * Center For Democracy And
- Technology * Centre for Democratic Communications * Center for Public
- Representation * Citizen's Voice - New Zealand * Cloud 9 Internet
- *Computer Communicators Association * Computel Network Services *
- Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility * Cross Connection *
- Cyber-Rights Campaign * CyberQueer Lounge * Dutch Digital Citizens'
- Movement * ECHO Communications Group, Inc. * 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 * FranceCom, Inc. Web Advertising
- Services * 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. * Internet Users Consortium * Joint Artists' and Music
- Promotions Political Action Committee * The Libertarian Party *
- Marijuana Policy Project * Metropolitan Data Networks Ltd. * MindVox *
- MN Grassroots Party * National Bicycle Greenway * National Campaign for
- Freedom of Expression * National Coalition Against Censorship *
- National Gay and Lesbian Task Force * National Public Telecomputing
- Network * National Writers Union * Oregon Coast RISC * Panix Public
- Access Internet * People for the American Way * Republican Liberty
- Caucus * 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: EFFector Changes
- -------------------------
-
- Starting with this issue, the long calendar of events that might interest
- EFF members and EFFector readers is being replaced with a much shorter
- list of events more directly EFF-related. We hope this will help keep
- down the size of the newsletter.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Upcoming events
- ------------------------
-
- This schedule lists events that are directly EFF-related. A much more
- detailed calendar of events likely to be of interest to our members and
- supporters is maintained at:
-
- ftp: ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/calendar.eff
- gopher: gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF, calendar.eff
- http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/calendar.eff
-
-
- Sep. 14-
- 15 * 2nd Ann. Business & Legal Aspects of the Internet & Online Services
- Seminar; Park Central Hotel, New York City, NY. Speakers include:
- Mike Godwin (EFF), Anne Branscomb (Harvard U.), Dan L. Burk (Seton
- Hall U.), Steward Baker (Steptoe & Johnson, ex-NSA), Jan
- Constantine (Delphi), Andrea Ireland (MCI), Joseph Lamport (_Law_
- _Journal_EXTRA!_), Bennett Lincoff (ASCAP), Vance Opperman (West
- Pub.), David G. Post (Georgetown U., & EFF Policy Fellow), William
- Schneck (Prodigy), Margaret Seif (AT&T Interchange Network), Kent
- Stuckey (CompuServe), David Witus (Microsoft).
- Contact: 1 800 888 8300 ext. 611 (voice, US-only),
- +1 212 545 6111 (voice), +1 212 696 1517 (fax)
- Email: seminars@ljextra.com
-
-
- Sep. 19-
- 21 * Online Developers Conf. II: Blueprints for the Post-Web World;
- San Francisco, Calif. Speakers include: Robert Massey (CompuServe),
- Russell Siegelman (Microsoft Network), Ed Bennet (Prodigy),
- Ted Leonsis (AOL), Michael Kolowich (AT&T Interchange), Don
- Brazeal (_Digital_Ink_), Ellio Dahan (Compton's New Media),
- Richard Barth (Microsoft), James Gosling (Sun, chief architect of
- JAVA), Tim Gelinas (Spry/CIS-Seattle), E. David Ellington
- (NetNoir), Phil Monego (Yahoo), Charles Martin (_Interactive_Age_),
- Scott Kurnit (MCI), Andrew Anker (_Wired_, HotWired), Bruce Katz
- (the WELL), Tracy Erway (Intel), Patrick Ames (Adobe Pr.), Tony
- Christopher (Fujitsu), Dan Ambrosi (Silicon Graphics), Rob Glaser
- (EFF Board of Directors, Progressive Networks, RealAudio), Joe
- Dunn (Macromedia), Bruce Ravenel (TCI), and several others.
- Contact: 1 800 488 4345 (voice, US-only) or +1 212 780 6060 (voice)
- +1 212 780 6075 (fax)
- Email: jupiter@jup.com
-
- Sep. 20 * The Future of the Internet: Realizing Its Potential; Penn Club,
- New York City. Presentation by EFF Board Member David Farber.
- Admission free, reserve a spot via the phone number below.
- Contact: +1 212 403 6620 (voice)
-
- Sep. 21 * Pittsburgh Law School Second Century Conferenc; University of
- Pittsburgh. Speakers include EFF co-founder Mitch Kapor
- (presentation on "Regulation of Computing and Information
- Technology")
- Contact: Prof. Pamela Samuelson, +1 412 648 1389 (voice)
-
- Sep. 29 * Software Publishers Association 11th Annual Conference;
- Westin Hotel Copley Place, Boston, Mass. Speakers include
- EFF co-founder Mitch Kapor (presentation on "A Fresh Look at
- The Future of Intellectual Property in a Networked World")
- Contact: +1 202 452 1600 ext. 328 (voice)
-
- Oct. 10-
- 11 * US NII Advisory Council meeting; Pittsburgh, Penn. Open to the
- public; members of this civilian council include EFF board members
- Esther Dyson and David Johnson.
- Contact: +1 212 482 1835 (voice)
-
- Oct. 13 * Seminar on Forecasting the Technological Future in
- Information Systems; Annenberg School of Communication Public
- Policy Center, U. of Pennsylvania. Speakers include EFF
- co-founder Mitch Kapor.
- Contact: +1 215 898 7041 (voice; ask for Oscar Gandy)
-
- Oct. 19 * Library Fair 95: Information Access at the Smithsonian Institution
- Libraries; Smithsonian Ripley Center, Washington DC. Speakers
- include Shari Steele (EFF Staff Counsel)
- Email: libem011@sivm.si.edu
-
- Nov. 3-
- 4 * Innovation and the Information Environment Conf.; U. of Oregon
- School of Law, Eugene, Or. Speakers include Shari Steele (EFF
- Staff Counsel).
- Email: kaoki@law.uoregon.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Quote of the Day
- -------------------------
-
- "Our problems are not new. We must not sign away our freedom and our reason
- to make things even easier for the [politicians]. The only cure for bad
- information is better information. You are in charge now; use your power
- wisely."
- - Jon Carroll, "I Have Met the Enemy. I Have Bad News", _San_Francisco_
- _Chronicle_, June 29, 1995.
-
- 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?
- Concerned that legislative efforts nominally to "protect children" will
- actually censor all communications down to only content suitable for
- the playground?
-
- 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. If it hasn't already.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: What YOU Can Do
- ------------------------
-
- * The Communications Decency Act & Other Censorship Legislation
-
- The Communications Decency Act and similar legislation pose serious
- threats to freedom of expression online, and to the livelihoods of system
- operators. The legislation also undermines several crucial privacy
- protections.
-
- Business/industry persons concerned should alert their corporate govt.
- affairs office and/or legal counsel. Everyone should write to their own
- Representatives and Senators, asking them to oppose Internet censorship
- legislation, and (when the list is available) everyone should write to
- the conference committee members to support the reasonable approaches of
- Leahy, Klink, Cox and Wyden, and to oppose the unconstitutional proposals of
- Exon, Gorton and others.
-
- 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.
-
-
- * The Anti-Electronic Racketeering Act
-
- This bill is unlikely to pass in any form, being very poorly drafted, and
- without much support. However, the CDA is just as bad and passed with
- flying colors [the jolly roger?] in the Senate. It's better to be safe
- than sorry. If you have a few moments to spare, writing to, faxing, or
- calling your Congresspersons to urge opposition to this bill is a good
- idea. If you only have time to do limited activism, please concentrate
- on the CDA instead. That legislation is far more imminent that the AERA.
-
-
- * 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. (A House list is included in this
- issue of EFFector). 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 are having difficulty determining who your Representatives are,
- try contacting your local League of Women Voters, who maintain a great
- deal of legislative information.
-
-
- * 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
- P.O. Box 170190
- San Francisco CA 94117 USA
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- +1 415 668 7007 (fax)
- 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
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-
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- at EFFweb. HTML editions of the current issue sometimes take a day or
- longer to prepare.
-
- ------------------------------
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-
-
-
-
- End of EFFector Online v08 #15 Digest
- *************************************
-
- $$
-