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- EFFector Online Volume 09 No. 04 Apr. 17, 1996 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- IN THIS ISSUE:
-
- Privacy & Free Speech Victory in Early Phase of Bernstein Case
- EFF Opposes Ridiculous and Anti-Net Trademark Bill in Georgia
- CDA Case Updates: Net 1, Government 0
- 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: Privacy & Free Speech Victory in Early Phase of Bernstein Case
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FEDERAL COURT DENIES GOVERNMENT'S MOTION TO DISMISS BERNSTEIN CASE,
- ACKNOWLEDGES SOURCE CODE AS SPEECH
-
- PRESS RELEASE Electronic Frontier Foundation Contacts:
- April 17, 1996 Shari Steele, Staff Counsel
- 301/375-8856, ssteele@eff.org
- Lori Fena, Executive Director
- 415/436-9333, lori@eff.org
-
- Denying the government's motion for dismissal in mathematician Daniel
- Bernstein's suit against the State Department, Judge Marilyn Hall Patel
- in the Northern District of California ruled Monday that source code in
- Bernstein's cryptographic algorithm, "Snuffle," is speech that is
- protected from prior restraint by the First Amendment.
-
- * LANDMARK RULING
-
- This is the first time a U.S. court has ruled that source code is speech
- under First Amendment analysis. Previously, courts have held that
- software is speech for copyright law only.
-
- The decision states in part:
-
- "This court can find no meaningful difference between computer language,
- particularly high-level languages as defined above, and German or
- French....Like music and mathematical equations, computer language is
- just that, language, and it communicates information either to a computer
- or to those who can read it....Thus, even if Snuffle source code, which
- is easily compiled into object code for the computer to read and easily
- used for encryption, is essentially functional, that does not remove it
- from the realm of speech....For the purposes of First Amendment analysis,
- this court finds that source code is speech."
-
- The full text of the decision can be found at
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/Bernstein_v_DoS/Legal/Decision_041596/
- in GIF image format (ASCII text will be made available as soon as possible,
- at http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/Bernstein_v_DOS/Legal/041596.decision
-
- Judge Patel's acknowledgment that source code enjoys Constitutional
- protection has implications that reach far beyond cases involving the
- export of cryptography. The decision holds importance to the future of
- secure electronic commerce and lays the groundwork needed to expand First
- Amendment protection to electronic communication.
-
- Because of its far-reaching implications, the Bernstein case is being
- watched closely not only by privacy advocates, but by the entire computer
- industry, the export and cryptography communities and First Amendment
- advocates.
-
- * CASE WILL PROCEED
-
- The decision allows Bernstein to continue with his lawsuit that the
- International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR) acts as a prior restraint
- on speech and that the ITAR is overbroad and vague.
-
- EFF is very pleased with Judge Patel's ruling and believes that it bodes
- well for Bernstein's ultimate success in trial, which is now scheduled to
- proceed with the normal pre-trial and trial sequence of events.
-
- The court drew an important distinction between the Bernstein case and
- other cases involving export controls on cryptography. The government has
- cited several cases involving the Export Administration Act as reasons
- why the Bernstein case should be dismissed. Judge Patel recognized that
- the Constitutional questions being raised by Bernstein differ
- significantly from the policy questions raised in the cases introduced by
- the government.
-
- Judge Patel also ruled that Bernstein could bring his case even though
- the Arms Export Control Act specifically precludes judicial review,
- because what Bernstein is asking the court to review (i.e., the
- constitutionality of the statute and its regulations) was not what had
- been precluded (i.e., the government's determination in a particular
- instance whether or not something was exportable). "With respect to
- constitutional questions, the judicial branch not only possesses the
- requisite expertise to adjudicate these issues, it is also the best and
- final interpreter of them."
-
- * CASE BACKGROUND
-
- As part of her decision, Judge Patel determined that only the source code
- was at issue in the case, not Bernstein's academic paper describing the
- source code. Bernstein tried to get the government to rule separately on
- the paper and the code back in 1993 by filing separate commodity
- jurisdiction requests. The State Department merged the requests and
- rejected them all. On June 29, 1995, after Bernstein and EFF filed suit,
- the government sent Bernstein a letter saying that the paper could be
- published and never had been forbidden. While Judge Patel claimed that
- the issue of the paper now appeared to be moot, she commented, "It is
- disquieting than an item defendants now contend could not be subject to
- regulation was apparently categorized as a defense article and subject to
- licensing for nearly two years, and was only reclassified after plaintiff
- initiated this action."
-
- * THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- EFF, a non-profit civil liberties organization working in the public
- interest to protect privacy, free expression, and access to online
- resources and information, is a primary sponsor of the Bernstein case.
- EFF helped to find Bernstein pro bono legal counsel, is a member of the
- Bernstein legal team, and organized amicus briefs from members of the
- academic community and computer industry to support this case.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: EFF Opposes Ridiculous and Anti-Net Trademark Bill in Georgia
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- [Note: That's the US state of Georgia, not the Republic of Georgia.]
-
- Many state and local governments have passed legislation that appears to be
- unconstitutional restraints on speech sent over the Internet. One state
- that recently passed a Bad Law is Georgia. Georgia House Bill 1620
- currently sits on the governor's desk awaiting his signature. EFF weighed
- in and voiced our concerns about this legislation, asking the governor to
- veto the bill.
-
- Among the problems with this legislation is that it would make
- it a crime to use someone else's trademark in user IDs, domain names, and
- other online contexts - regardless of the fact that in most cases the
- trademarks in question would not even apply. It would also
- criminalize the use of pseudonyms, and furthermore make it illegal to
- link from your homepage to another site without permission under many
- circumstances.
-
- The constitutionality of the law, as well as its wisdom, is highly
- questionable, as is the compatibility of it with existing intellectual
- property law (for example it could essentially grant the first to
- trademark a term or name in a particular field a monopoly on online use
- of that term or name, in *all* fields, despite that fact that any number
- of non-competing companies can have nearly identical trademarks in
- completely different areas of commerce.)
-
- Incidentally, the BellSouth telephone utility appears to be a major
- mover-'n'-shaker behind this issue - the bill (HB1630) was authored by Rep.
- Don Parsons, who happens to be a BellSouth employee. BellSouth has filed
- suit (two days before announcing plans to enter into the Internet
- service market, no less) against an online service, realpages.com, for
- alleged trademark violation (BellSouth's tradmark is "The Real Yellow
- Pages". Confusingly similar? Applicable at all? Not likely.)
-
- Very similar legislation has existed in draft form in California for
- some time, and may hit other states and countries soon. Keep an eye out!
-
- EFF Staff Counsel Shari Steele sent the following letter to Georgia Governor
- Zell Miller, explaining the problems with the new act and encouraging a veto.
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundaton
- 1550 Bryant Street, Suite 725
- San Francisco, CA 94103
- (415) 668-7171; (415) 668-7007 (fax)
- Internet e-mail: eff@eff.org
-
-
- Governor Zell Miller
- State Capitol
- Atlanta, GA 30334
-
- April 16, 1996
-
-
- Via Facsimile: (404)656-5948
-
-
- Dear Governor Miller,
-
- I am writing to you in my capacity as Staff Counsel for the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation (EFF) to ask that you veto Georgia House Bill 1630,
- Computer or telephone network; transmitting misleading data. EFF was
- founded in July of 1990 to work on protecting the free speech and privacy
- rights of users of new technology. Since that time, EFF has been
- involved in numerous battles against laws and actions that restrict the
- free speech rights of users of electronic bulletin board systems (BBSs)
- and the Internet. I fear that the Georgia legislature has just passed a
- bill which, if signed into law, will significantly hamper the
- development of the Global Information Infrastructure (GII, frequently
- referred to the Information Superhighway) and will result in an
- unconstitutional restraint on the free speech rights of the citizens of
- Georgia, the United States, and the global Internet.
-
- To help you understand the ramifications of this legislation, I'd like to
- take a minute to explain some basic things about electronic communications.
- First, individuals are not identified online by their "real world"
- names. Instead, they are identified by electronic mail addresses, which are
- composed of a "user ID" and the "location" of the individual's network
- access provider. Sometimes an individual gets to choose his or her own
- e-mail user-ID. But sometimes a random user ID is assigned to the
- individual by the service provider. For example, the online service
- provider CompuServe assigns user IDs like 102527.2327 and 75223.2153, which
- do not clearly identify the sender of the electronic message.
-
- Even where an individual gets to select his or her own user ID, it is rare
- that a person identifies him or herself by full name. In fact, many
- people identify themselves instead by words or heroes in which they have
- a personal interest. For example, I know a person whose user ID is
- calliope. I know another whose user ID is mnemonic, named for the
- character "Johnny Mnemonic" in the science fiction novel of the same
- name by William Gibson. I know yet another whose user ID is elvis.
- Even my user ID, which is ssteele, does not clearly distinguish me
- from others with the last name of Steele and the first initial "S."
-
- This brings us to the first problem with the current bill. The language of
- the bill makes it illegal for a sender of a message to "falsely
- identify" him or herself. All of the user IDs I've mentioned
- are false identifications, similar to the "handles" people use on citizen's
- band radios. It is and has always been legal for people to use any name
- they choose as long as it isn't for a fraudulent purpose. I can be
- Samuel Clemens to one set of people and Mark Twain to another set and
- nobody is harmed. Or Andrew Hamilton and Publius. Or ssteele@eff.org and
- Shari Steele. While it is true that some people may be harmed when
- others intentionally create confusion, by sending a message designed to
- look like it came from an identifiable other person, the bill
- criminalizes a vast array of everyday conduct in its attempt to reach this
- harm. Besides, there are already laws on the books that make it illegal
- to commit fraud or to fraudulently use the likeness of another that can
- be enforced where harm has occurred. Georgia House Bill 1630 makes
- criminals of the vast majority of us who communicate online.
-
- Next, the Internet is comprised of thousands of computers connected to one
- another. The World Wide Web is a graphical area of the Internet that
- allows users to move seamlessly from site to site by simply clicking on
- a mouse button. This is often referred to as "surfing the net" and is a
- basic quality to the World Wide Web. For example, I could get to Wired
- magazine's web site by clicking on a button at the Electronic Frontier
- Foundation's web site. I then would be seamlessly transported to
- Wired's site. Wired magazine loves this arrangement, because
- the more people they get visiting their web site, the more successful
- the site is.
-
- Which brings us to the second problem with the current bill. The language
- of the bill would make it illegal to create a button on our web site
- with Wired's "trade name" or "logo" without first obtaining "permission
- or authorization" from Wired magazine. Of course Wired magazine would
- give us permission -- they do not want to have a web site that no one
- visits. In fact, the more sites that "link" to Wired's site, the better
- it is for Wired. It's like making it illegal to take a copy of a
- newspaper that is labeled "free" on the top without first obtaining
- permission from the publisher. Or like making it illegal to look up a
- friend's phone number in the phone book and put it into a neighborhood
- directory or a bridge club newsletter. The problem is that H.B. 1630
- would make criminals out of virtually everyone with a web site (for all web
- sites link to others) when the sites being linked to would always give
- permission for the link.
-
- Furthermore, because of its vague language, it appears that the bill would
- make it a crime even to mention Wired magazine in writing an electronic
- review of their magazine or their articles without first obtaining their
- permission. The right to criticize other peoples' work is basic to our open
- society; it is how errors are corrected and differences of opinion are
- aired. It would be senseless to have the right to criticize a story
- from the New York Times without being able to mention that the story was
- printed in the New York Times! Even if reviewers went to the
- effort contemplated in the bill of contacting the company and asking its
- permission, many companies would refuse permission to use their names in
- reviews that disagreed with the companies. This sabotages the
- whole process of critical review that keeps our society tending toward truth.
-
- Finally, the entire purpose of the bill seems to be to protect intellectual
- property, such as trademarks and logos. But there are already laws in
- place on both federal and state levels that protect these things. The
- legislature has created a poorly crafted, unconstitutional law to protect
- something that is already protected. There is no rational reason to make
- criminals out of all users of the Internet.
-
- I hope that I have helped shed some light on the dangers of this
- legislation. The Electronic Frontier Foundation urges you to veto H.B.
- 1630 as an unnecessary and unconstitutional restriction on the free
- speech right of Internet users. I invite you to contact me if you have any
- questions or concerns about the legalities surrounding electronic
- communications as you consider your actions regarding this bill. My
- telephone number is (301)375-8856. And you can reach me via Internet
- e-mail at ssteele@eff.org.
-
- Thank you for your consideration.
-
- Sincerely,
-
-
- Shari Steele
- Staff Counsel
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
-
-
- cc: Ms. Mary Beth Westmoreland, Georgia Department of Law,
- fax: (404) 651-6459
- Mr. Michael Bowers, Attorney General, fax: (404) 657-8733
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: CDA Case Updates: Net 1, Government 0
- ----------------------------------------------
-
- The first stage of the CDA trial in Philadelphia is over, with the
- government and pro-censorship forces clearly on the defensive. "Expert"
- witnesses for the govenment have practically discredited themselves
- without the plaintiffs even having to cross examine them. The
- Justice Department's demonstration of how and where to find "cyberporn"
- was a cheat, and the judges caught it. The government foolishly even tried
- early on to rely on the Rimm/CMU "study" of online pornography. The
- court has showed quite a bit of skepticism regarding the government's
- claims, and a lot of interest in the First Amendment issues at stake.
-
- Many participants in the trial have issued updates on the blow-by-blow
- court action, and we have been collecting it at
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Legal/Cases/EFF_ACLU_v_DoJ/ so we'll refrain from
- reprinting it here.
-
- Closing arguments in the case are set for May 10.
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Upcoming Events
- ------------------------
-
- This schedule lists events that are directly EFF-related, or sure to be
- of interest to our members. A much more detailed calendar of events
- likely to be of interest to all netizens 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
-
-
- Apr. 18 - HotWired Electronic Frontiers Forum; online event, 7pm PST
- "speak"ers will include Ed Cavazos on the topic of Cyberlaw
- Users can participate via either WWW or telnet.
- URL: http://www.hotwired.com/club/
- Telnet: chat.wired.com 2428.
-
- Apr. 18-
- 19 - Conference on Technological Assaults on Privacy; Rochester
- Institute of Technology, Rochester, New York.
- Deadline for submitting papers: Feb. 1
- Contact: +1 716 475 6643 (voice), +! 716 375 7120 (fax)
- Email: privacy@rit.edu
-
- Apr. 21 - ACLU forum on "Cyber Liberties," Phoenix, AZ
- Contact: Bob Hirschfeld
- Voice: +1 602 265 4692
- Fax: +1 602 0259
- Email: nolawyer@primenet.com
-
- Apr. 24-
- 25 + Electronic Democracy, sponsored by Riley Information Services;
- Ottawa, Canada
- Email: 76470.336@compuser.com
- URL: http://www.rileyis.com
-
- Apr. 25 - HotWired Electronic Frontiers Forum; online event, 7pm PST
- "speak"ers will include Ann Beeson of the ACLU. Users can
- participate via either WWW (http://www.hotwired.com/club/) or
- telnet (chat.wired.com2428).
- URL: http://www.hotwired.com/club/
-
- Apr. 29 ! Net-savvy U.S. Rep. Robert Goodlatte, and Sens. Conrad Burns
- and Larry Pressler will speak at "Information Security and the 20th
- Anniversary of Public Key Cryptography," sponsored by the
- Churchill Club; Marriott Hotel, Burlingame, CA.
- Contact: +1 408 371 4460
- Fax: +1 408 371 4180
- Email: chrchllclb@aol.com
-
- May 4 - ACLU forum on Censorship and the Internet User; Souls Unitarian
- Church, 4500 Warwick, Kansas City, MO; featuring Laura Murphy,
- Executive Director of ACLU's national office in Washington, D.C.
- Contact: +1 816 756 3113
- Email: bbarrish@falcon.cc.ukans.edu
-
- May 3 + Symposium: "The Law of Information Superhighways and
- Multimedia," sponsored by the Eurpoean Lawyers Union, Monaco.
- URL: http://www.iway.mc/groupecx/uae
-
- May 6-
- 8 - IEEE/IACR Security & Privacy Symposium; Oakland, Calif.
- Deadline for submissions: Nov. 6, 1995.
- Contact: +1 503 725 5842 (voice), +1 503 725 3211 (fax)
- Email: sp96@cs.pdx.edu
- URL: http://www.cs.pdx.edu/SP96/
- FTP: ftp.cs.pdx.edu, /pub/SP96/
-
- May 9 - HotWired Electronic Frontiers Forum; online event, 7pm PST
- "speak"ers will include Jerod Pore of Scamizdat. Users can
- participate via either WWW (http://www.hotwired.com/club/) or
- telnet (chat.wired.com2428).
- URL: http://www.hotwired.com/club/
-
- May 9-
- 11 + Visions of Privacy for the 21st Century: A Search for Solutions;
- Victoria, BC, Canada.
- Contact: http://www.cafe.net./gvc.foi
-
- May 10 - Workshop on Medical Records Privacy, sponsored by the Consumer
- Project on Technology, Washington, D.C.
- Contact: Manon Ress, +1 202 387 8030
- Email mress@essential.org
- URL: http://www.essential.org/cpt
-
- May 16 - HotWired Electronic Frontiers Forum; online event, 7pm PST
- "speak"ers will include Sameer Parekh of Community Connection.
- Users can participate via either WWW (http://www.hotwired.com/club/)
- or telnet (chat.wired.com2428).
- URL: http://www.hotwired.com/club/
-
- May 20-
- 21 ! Internet Privacy and Security Workshop, sponsored by the
- Privacy and Security Working Group of he Federal Networking Council
- and the Research Program on Communications Policy Center for
- Technology, Policy, and Industrial Development at Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology; Haystack Observatory, Boston, MA.
- Deadline for abstracts: April 14.
- Contact: Internet Security and Privacy Workshop c/o Joseph
- Reagle, Research Program on Communications Policy, MIT, One
- Amherst St. (E40-218), Cambridge, MA 02139
- Voice: +1 617 253 4138
- Fax: +1 617 253 7326
- Email: papers@rpcp.mit.edu
-
- May 23 - HotWired Electronic Frontiers Forum; online event, 7pm PST
- "speak"ers will include Gary Chapman.
- Users can participate via either WWW (http://www.hotwired.com/club/)
- or telnet (chat.wired.com2428).
- URL: http://www.hotwired.com/club/
-
- May 28-
- 31 - Harvard Conference on the Internet and Society, Harvard
- University, Cambridge, MA.
- Contact: +1 617 432 1NET
- Email: harvnet@harvard.edu
- URL: http://www.harvnet.harvard.edu
-
- ------------------------------
-
-
- Subject: Quote of the Day
- -------------------------
-
- "It shouldn't be too much of a surprise that the Internet has evolved
- into a force strong enough to reflect the greatest hopes and fears of
- those who use it. After all, it was designed to withstand nuclear war,
- not just the puny huffs and puffs of politicians and religious fanatics."
- - Denise Caruso (digital commerce columnist, _New_York_Times_, EFF
- boardmember emeritus)
-
- 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? Alarmed by commercial and religious organizations abusing
- the judicial and legislative processes to stifle satire, dissent and
- criticism?
-
- 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, letting them know that such abuses of
- public trust will not be tolerated, that legislators who vote against
- your free speech rights will be voted against by you in the next elections.
-
- Join in the Blue Ribbon Campaign - see http://www.eff.org/blueribbon.html
-
- PARTICIPATE IN BLUE RIBBON ACTIVISM EFFORTS:
- http://www.eff.org/blueribbon/activism.html
-
- Support the EFF Cyberspace Legal Defense Fund:
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Alerts/cyberlegal_fund_eff.announce
-
- 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 (e.g. WWW), send your request
- for information to ask@eff.org.
-
-
- * New Crypto-Privacy Legislation
-
- Urge your Senators and Representatives to call for hearings! Not much
- else needs to be done on this right this moment, but expect this issue to
- heat up rapidly. Pointers to Congress contact info are below. Action is
- expected NEXT WEEK.
-
- Keep an eye on http://www.eff.org/pub/Activism/index.html#crypto
-
-
- * Digital Telephony/Comms. Assistance to Law Enforcement Act
-
- The FBI is now seeking both funding for the DT/CALEA wiretapping provisions,
- and preparing to require that staggering numbers of citizens be
- simultaneously wiretappable.
-
- To oppose the funding, write to your own Senators and Representatives
- urging them to vote against any appropriations for wiretapping.
-
- We are aware of no major action on this threat at present, but keep your
- eyes peeled. It will be back.
-
-
- * Anti-Terrorism Bills
-
- Several bills threatening your privacy and free speech have been introduced
- recently. None of them are close to passage at this very moment, but
- this status may change. Urge your Congresspersons to oppose these
- unconstitutional and Big-Brotherish bills, which threaten freedom of
- association, free press, free speech, and privacy. One such bill passed
- last week, stripped of most of the more onerous provisions. Keep it up.
- Write to your legislators: No secret trials and deportations, no
- expansion of wiretapping scope or authority, no national or "smart-card"
- ID systems!
-
- For more information on some of this legislation, see
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/Terrorism_militias/
-
-
- * 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 Congress. 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.
-
-
- * Medical Privacy Legislation
-
- Several bills relating to medical privacy issues are floating in Congress
- right now. Urge your legislators to support only proposals that *truly*
- enhance the medical privacy of citizens.
-
- More information on this legislation will be available at
- http://www.eff.org/pub/Privacy/Medical/ soon. Bug mech@eff.org to make
- it appear there faster. :)
-
-
- * 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, or consult the free ZIPPER service
- that matches Zip Codes to Congressional districts with about 85%
- accuracy at:
- http://www.stardot.com/~lukeseem/zip.html
-
- Computer Currents Interactive has provided Congress contact info, sorted
- by who voted for and against the Communcations Decency Act:
- http://www.currents.net/congress.html
-
-
- * 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
- 1550 Bryant St., Suite 725
- San Francisco CA 94103 USA
- +1 415 436 9333 (voice)
- +1 415 436 9993 (fax)
- Membership & donations: membership@eff.org
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- End of EFFector Online v09 #04 Digest
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