Computer underground Digest Wed May 29, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 40 ISSN 1004-042X Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu) News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu) Archivist: Brendan Kehoe Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala Ian Dickinson Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest CONTENTS, #8.40 (Wed, May 29, 1996) File 1--PERSPECTIVE: "Act Locally!" File 2--bonfire: organizing online File 3--cDc has a plan for your life!-5/27 File 4--about Friday's "Congress and the Internet" Beltway hearing File 5--Re: Civil Liberties and Encryption File 6--More Information about Getting Online (Conference) File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996) CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION ApPEARS IN THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Fri, 24 May 1996 02:14:04 -0500 (CDT) From: telstar@wired.com Subject: File 1--PERSPECTIVE: "Act Locally!" Yesterday I conducted an interview with U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont). The interview was done in audio format as one of HotWired's "Wiredside Chats," and all in all, I thought it went pretty well. I mean, I'm no Larry King, but it's great to explore the frontiers of the Internet as a true mass communications medium. At one point in the interview, I asked Senator Leahy if the Internet community should be doing more to promote our interests within Congress. The Senator responded as follows: "Well, you've got to put faces on the Internet community," Leahy said. "One important thing is to try and get a dozen or so people together, then make an appointment to go visit the home office of your legislators. Meet them for a cup of coffee to demonstrate what people are really doing with the Internet." Sagely advice. I'm of the opinion that the Net community has been largely invisible as a political force. As a result, Congress has found it easy to pass shit-stupid Internet legislation, because they don't feel that they'll be held accountable to a constituency of Internet voters. In such an environment, it should come as little surprise that we had the Communications Decency Act rammed down our throats earlier this year. And if we don't get our act together soon, there's plenty more nasty legislation that'll we'll have to grapple with. Encryption restrictions. Copyright proposals. FCC regulation. You name it. They'll all be coming down the pipes in the months and years ahead. One solution to this problem, of course, is local political action. Simple things - like writing letters or meeting with your legislators - can make a BIG difference. The following article by Rich Burroughs puts all these issues in useful perspective. In addition, Rich's article also comes with a handy-dandy "clip n' save" guide to getting organized locally. Read on... think about it... and of course.... Work the network! --Todd Lappin--> Section Editor WIRED Magazine (P.S. You can tune in to a RealAudio recording of my interview with Senator Leahy by stopping by at: http://www.hotwired.com/netizenaudio/96/21/index3a.html) =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D= =3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D "ACT LOCALLY" By: Rich Burroughs <richieb@teleport.com> From=20"Cause for Alarm," May, 1996 http://www.teleport.com/~richieb/cause/may96.shtml If "act locally" becomes the net.activist's meme of choice in late 1996, it will be largely due to the efforts of Jon Lebkowsky, among others. Lebkowsky, a former co-founder and CEO of Fringe Ware, now hosts HotWired's Electronic Frontiers Forum Thursdays at 7 PM Pacific time at Club Wired. He's also a founding member of EFF-Austin and is currently vice-president of that organization, in addition to writing his zine, Cyberdawg Barking. Why is Lebkowsky all riled up? "The Exon bill, from which the CDA evolved, hit me pretty hard," he said. "I realized that=8Arepressive political group= s were organizing effectively while progressives and civil libertarians were in disarray. I had been throwing all my time into a commercial effort, but I was finished with that project, ready to shift gears=8A. Then HotWired offered me the Electronic Frontiers Forum, and I found myself totally immersed again in cyberactivism." Anyone who's attended Lebkowsky's Thursday night jams (which have featured such activist luminaries as Mike Godwin, Ann Beeson, and Steve Jackson) has probably heard him grumble about the need for more grass roots action. He urges people to start their own local organizations because, "Only local groups can monitor local politics=8A. Freedom can be threatened as readily = on a municipal as a state or national level, so it's as important to have a network of empowered activists organizing cities as it is to have activists working 'inside the Beltway'." In fact, at least 16 states have proposed some sort of Net censorship legislation, including California, Washington, New York, Connecticut, and Georgia. National organizations are lucky to have the resources to even track all of the state bills that are being proposed, let alone to combat that legislation on a case-by-case basis. A local group can try to head these threats off at the pass by mobilizing local support and mounting a grass roots opposition. Stanton McCandlish, an Online Activist for EFF and another proponent of local groups, observed that "It matters more to a typical Bostonian that a (hypothetical) EF-Massachusetts is acting on behalf of the [Massachusetts] public on a state or even local issue, than it does that some organization in DC is doing something similar on the national level. It's closer to home." Local groups can influence national politics, as well, by contacting their Congressional representatives on their home turf. Jonah Seiger, a Policy Analyst for CDT, feels that one of the biggest challenges facing online activists is putting a human face on the Net user. "It's amazing when you think about it that 115,000 people signed the petition for Leahy, [and] the day of protest generated 20,000 to 30,000 phone calls in one day," Seiger said. "But what's missing from that=8Awhen I talk to members of Congress an= d their staff, is the sort of image of who these people are. There's this=8Aidea that the Internet community, for better or for worse, is=8Aeith= er college kids or these freaked-out libertarian hackers with long hair and beards. Those are wonderful people, all of them, but they're not the only part of the Net community." The answer to this dilemma is making personal contact with your legislators. "Go to your town meetings when your representative is in town talking about the issues," Seiger added. "Go there=8Aintroduce yourself, sa= y, 'Hi=8AI'm an avid Internet user and I voted for you in the last election, a= nd I have some concerns about some of the policy choices that Congress has made=8A.' Introduce them to your ISP, introduce them to a web publishing house, introduce them to somebody who's trying to make a living, even if it's just one person, using the Net. Let them see that, in fact, this is a constituency that they can respond to and be rewarded for responding to." Lebkowsky points out that making those kind of personal connections, in "meatspace," means a lot. "It'll be sometime before the average guy or the average politician comprehends 'virtual life.' My experience tells me that community never quite kicks in so long as it is strictly virtual=8Ait's onl= y when we meet as meat that we connect on all levels," he said. As for how to start a local organization, Lebkowsky is, "working on a guide for local orgs that I'll distribute freely online, and later I'll beef it up so that it can be published as a book," he said. "Otherwise, folks needing help can email EFF-Austin's directors <eff-austin-directors@io.com> and check out our web page at http://www.eff-austin.org. Also check web pages for other orgs: http://www.eff.org, http://www.cdt.org, http://www.vtw.org, http://www.epic.org, etc." Here's some advice to consider when starting your own group (from Lebkowsky and McCandlish): -- Establish an online presence. Find an ISP or other system that will provide a comp account. -- Set up an email list (majordomo, listserv, etc.) for members and interested persons. -- Create a web page and perhaps a gopher. Include a membership form on the web page. -- Recruit members online and in meatspace. Keep dues low. -- Organize your constituency online and offline; keep their loyalty; work them into activity - you want activists, not lurkers. -- Build resources for the public - especially an online library of documents. Give back to the community that supports you in more ways than one. -- Seek those with experience where you need it - communicating online, dealing with policymakers, public relations, fundraising, design and publication, legislative and legal analysis, fiscal management. Proceed to learn these skills internally, as well. -- Get to know the press. Learn to use the traditional media effectively. -- Get to know the police. EFF-Austin has a police liaison (Bruce Sterling). One of his jobs is to ensure that the police know who we are and will call us for consultation. -- Research, research, research. Learn your issues and their legalities like the back of your hand. Become an authoritative voice on the matters that concern your organization. -- Educate legislators about the issues. Educate the press and public as we= ll. -- Take public positions. Craft statements, press releases and action alerts. Keep your constituency and the public updated on hot issues. -- Organize events to highlight the issues. -- Work with, not against, other organizations. Build coalitions, work cooperatively. -- Deal reasonably with criticism. -- Minimize costs. ### +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ This transmission was brought to you by.... THE CDA DISASTER NETWORK The CDA Disaster Network is a moderated distribution list providing up-to-the-minute bulletins and background on efforts to overturn the Communications Decency Act. To subscribe, send email to <majordomo@wired.com> with "subscribe cda-bulletin" in the message body. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 29 May 1996 05:17:06 -0700 (PDT) From: jonl@well.com Subject: File 2--bonfire: organizing online Bob Anderson and I have set up an email list, bonfire, specifically for discussions (or meta-discussions) of the issues of organizing local online activist orgs. This is related to the evolution of a organizer's guide that will eventually be placed online somewhere (and may be included in a published anthology). Who knows where this will go? Please join us: To subscribe send mail to: bonfire-request@podbox.austin.tx.us With this is in the body of the message ADD address To get a copy of the 'Organize Locally' rough draft send mail to the same address with this in the body: FAQ -- Jon Lebkowsky <jonl@wired.com> http://www.well.com/~jonl Electronic Frontiers Forum, 7PM PST Thursdays <http://www.hotwired.com/eff> ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 27 May 96 06:22:16 EDT From: Swamp Ratte <sratte@phantom.com> Subject: File 3--cDc has a plan for your life!-5/27 _ _ ((___)) [ x x ] cDc communications \ / Press Release (' ') May 27th, 1996 (U) Est. 1986 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT: sratte@phantom.com PRAISE HER BLESSED NAME Death is good. Recent events in Great Britain only underscore the lack of true understanding of the so-called Mad Cow imbroglio. This situation is _not_ a disaster. As was prophesyed by the enlightened ones, "a sign would come from the verdant isle...where many hooves would point to the heavens and...countless beasts would be cast into a great fire." It was further revealed that, "...their baleful agony would choke the nation as their souls flew free from their mighty torment." What was foretold has come to pass. The milk of deliverance is at hand. The lactic jihad has begun. CULT OF THE DEAD COW (cDc) has preserved the Bovine mysteries throughout the ages. We have worked in secret. We have kept faith with the lustrous truth, knowing that one day our time would come. The dawn has broken. Let those who have hungered for meaning gather now. CULT OF THE DEAD COW has moved from the margins to the epicentre. And as was further prophesyed, "ye shall make it known on the great device" and send your message "throughout the world inside itself". It is now time for us to begin our universal ministry on the world's most powerful medium. We are not here to make billions of dollars from the digisphere as the godless are. We are here to tell the truth. CULT OF THE DEAD COW has arrived to tell all humankind that the COW will seize its rightful dominion and be honored above all idols and pretenders. Let the torment of their fiery demise be an instruction to us all. How far are you from the furnace? Who will hear your cries? CULT OF THE DEAD COW is that bridge between you and eternity. THE COW is your comfort and solace and a giving helper to all who call. In the coming weeks and months while all of England's moneychangers mourn their loss, think of this. There are far more important things in this world than the loss of lucre. Think of your immortal soul and your place in the cosmos. Do not let millions of innocents writhe in deepest agony for naught. It is the foulest affront to THE COW to be sold like a slave and butchered without care. Ponder these things and know that CULT OF THE DEAD COW will free you from noxious ignorance and be a lamp to your eternal salvation. We will have more to say. Fools better recognize: CULT OF THE DEAD COW is the publishing division of cDc communications. Established in 1986, cDc is the largest and oldest organization of the telecommunications underground worldwide. You thirst for our body of work, you know you do. Find it at: web://www.l0pht.com/cdc.html, ftp/gopher from cascade.net, or old-school BBS from 806.794.4362 entry:kill. For further information, contact: email:sratte@phantom.com or snail:pob 53011, lubbock, tx, 79424, usa. #### Copyright (c) 1996 cDc communications and OXblood Ruffin. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 May 1996 13:30:33 -0700 From: jwarren@WELL.COM(Jim Warren) Subject: File 4--about Friday's "Congress and the Internet" Beltway hearing Last Friday (5/24) morning, east coast time, a congressional subcommittee held a hearing on Congress and the Internet. And they accepted testimony by email -- to an AOL address (cyberrep@aol.com) -- from anyone who happened to discover that the hearing was scheduled and happening. As far as I know, *no* committee staffer nor committee member made *any* attempt whatsoever to spread announcement of the hearing across the net that was its focus. If such a non-Beltway announcement was even attempted, it certainly wasn't successful. Nonetheless, whether it was intended or not, by the committee chair or its members, a DC insider leaked word of the hearing out beyond the Beltway <gasp!> -- at least to a *few* of us -- and I had entire *hours* of advanced warning in which to draft the following submission to the committee. I caught on C-SPAN, how this was reported by the committee chair -- the briefist of excerpts of the most innocuous, least substantive (least controversial :-) recommendations that I submitted. What he read was part of what I wrote, but very different from the *real* meat of my testimony -- that wasn't nearly as long as one committee member's [Beilenson, Democrat-CA] rambling chit-chat about how much he enjoyed visiting Colorado a few years back. (Now *that's* really pertinent to Congress and the Internet; isn't it? And then they wonder why so many of us are so bitterly cynical about how Congress and the Beltway insiders operate!) --jim <circulate freely> [emailed 5:02pm *Pacific* time, on 5/23/96, for 5/24 morn East Coast hearing] From--jwarren@well.com (Jim Warren) Subject--comments from a citizen-activist beyond the Beltway Dear Rules Committee members -- I will forego the flowerly language and risk candid brevity: Those of us who have no hired lobbyists in Washington can *effectively* participate in the process of our own governance *only* to the extent that (1) we have TIMELY access to ADEQUATE information about issues BEFORE they are functionally decided by the committees of our elected representatives, and (2) those who vote on decisions that impact us all give balanced consideration to the comments and pleas from all of those who will be impacted, who wish to be heard. The global Internet can greatly facilitate such access. Here are some suggested groundrules: 1. To allow an *informed* electorate: Any documents prepared by congressional staff or Members using a word-processor should be placed on "free" [tax-supported] public-access congressional Internet file-servers AT THE SAME TIME that paper or faxed copies are made available to lobbyists and special interest representatives inside the Beltway or in donors' offices. To do anything less, *unnecessarily* continues to benefit and empower the few at the expense of the many -- notably including most of the Members' constituents. The California legislature has been doing much of this since 1994; other state legislatures are also beginning to do so. For Members of Congress to say that they can't do it is simply unbelievable. We all understand that, "knowledge is power," and that senior Members and committee Chairs use selective disclosure to empower themselves and those whom they favor, and use delayed disclosure to emasculate their opponents. But we citizens *should* be treated as those whom Members favor. Members should *not* CONTINUE to treat citizens, in this way, as opponents. Empower the electorate beyond the Beltway to participate in their [our!] own governance -- even when it means sharing the power held by senior Members. If legislation is laudible, it -- and its mark-up and analyses and reports and drafts -- can withstand the bright light of *timely*, nationwide public access and scrutiny. Technology now makes it possible to empower representative democracy by allowing citizens the *option* of being fully and timely informed. Please -- do so! 2. Regarding the handling of electronic mail sent to elected representatives -- who vote on decisions that effect *everyone* (*not* merely those constituents or party members who can re-elect them): Elected representatives who accept campaign contributions from sources other than constituents in their districts, should also accept email from senders other than constituents in their districts, and should be comparably responsive. Anything less simply provides concrete, measurable *evidence* that government belongs only to those who can buy it, and further *valdates* citizen cynicism about Congress, Washington and their [our!] powerlessness against the big-bucks "Beltway bandits." These are merely two worthy starting points. There is much more that can be done to facilitate and enhance representative democracy via well-established, well-understood information technology and public networking. Please, honor your Office by allowing all of us to have effective access. Please -- delay no longer! I remain, Sincerely, /s/ Jim Warren GovAccess list-owner/editor, advocate & columnist (jwarren@well.com) 345 Swett Rd., Woodside CA 94062; voice/415-851-7075; fax/<# upon request> [1994 James Madison Freedom-of-Information Award, Society of Professional Journalists - Nor.Cal.; 1994 Hugh M. Hefner First-Amendment Award, Playboy Foundation; 1992 Pioneer Award, Electronic Frontier Foundation (its first year); founded the Computers, Freedom & Privacy Conferences, InfoWorld magazine, etc.] === EXPLANATION OF WHAT GOVACCESS IS & WHERE TO FIND ITS ARCHIVES === GovAccess is a list distributing irregular info & advocacy regarding technology and civil liberties, citizen access to government - and government access to citizens, covert and overt. To add or drop GovAccess, email to Majordomo@well.com ('Subject' ignored) with message: [un]subscribe GovAccess YourEmailAddress (insert your eaddr) For brief description of GovAccess, send the message: info GovAccess Past postings are at ftp.cpsr.org: /cpsr/states/california/govaccess and by WWW at http://www.cpsr.org/cpsr/states/california/govaccess . Also forwarded to USENET's comp.org.cpsr.talk by CPSR's Al Whaley. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 28 May 1996 10:17:35 -0400 From: Wes Morgan <morgan@ENGR.UKY.EDU> Subject: File 5--Re: Civil Liberties and Encryption >Date--23 May 96 04:00:19 EDT >From--Lance Rose <72230.2044@CompuServe.COM> >Subject--File 1--The Civil Liberies On-line Circus > >Whoa -- let's circle back to the top now. Isn't an indecency standard >of some sort very much in place for television today? And isn't >television a hugely popular mass medium, at the very center of U.S. >and other societies? It's inarguably clear that television is popular, but that is not the question at hand. We must consider the participation of the "average Joe" (or, to borrow a legal phrase, a "reasonable person") in the medium. Television *is* popular, but it is hardly open to the average Joe; when was the last time your neighbor broadcast a television program? The production facilities required, even for the most rudimentary public-access-channel documentary, create an effective barrier to mass participation. Television is a one-way street; its 'heavy hitters' can easily afford the control structure (and legal/regulatory bureaucracy) necessary to follow the indecency standards. This bureaucracy trickles down to the level of the indi- vidual network affiliate... The Net, on the other hand, actively encourages participation; indeed, it makes such participation almost trivially simple. Your neighbor *can* reach millions via the Internet; Web pages are cross-linked around the world, Usenet postings reach into the cracks and crevices of the online world (until very recently, a large mainframe site re- portedly receives Usenet news on a weekly *magtape*!), and email flits among the nest of systems called the Internet. The problem, however, lies in the fact that the typical Joe can't afford a flock of legal eagles to appease the regulators; Bill's BBS isn't going to keep an attorney on retainer to handle complaints of this sort. Is it reasonable to expect such a compliance mechanism from _ad hoc_ publishers like Net contributors? >But what is crypto, really, but just an awkward way of hiding >things? We're not talking about the underlying math, of course, >designed by guys next to whose intellects most of us are just chimps >in lab cages. Rather, what is crypto used for? It is used to hide >a message right in someone else's face. It is like sticking a >self-incriminating note in a physical capsule that is uncrackably >hard and strong, then lobbing the capsule through the window of a >police station to sit in the middle of the floor among a bunch of >cops, powerless to open it up and figure out how to get the perp. Actually, it's more like placing a postal message in an envelope, instead of using a postcard. Would you like to receive your monthly banking statement on a postcard, open to anyone who handles it? How about the results of those medical tests you took last week? >Gee, is that really the best way to hide a message (given that the >cops" first move will be to look outside for those responsible)? Or >is it better to leave the cops blissfully unaware of the message's >existence, or its true nature, so they never even get close to the >point of having an encrypted message they're trying to crack? Given the ease with which Internet traffic can be monitored and/or logged, encryption provides the same level of privacy (*not* neces- sarily security) as do envelopes in the postal medium. What's wrong with that? >Far more elegant and effective means of attaining secrecy exist today, >and will be devised in the future. That's where the action will be >after the dust has cleared on today's crypto rights battles, no >matter who "wins" them. What might some of those "elegant and effective means" be? Remember, we have to limit ourselves to those tools available to Joe AOLer, Bill BBS-in-my-basement and Jane College-Student. >3. The proposed "National Information Infrastructure" copyright >legislation. There's a lot of fire and brimstone being spewed over >this one, but who has really looked at the proposed law? There >ain't much there. > >One part of the proposed law gives a copyright owner control over >"transmissions" of works online. The opposing civil liberties >people say this will make browsing on the Net illegal. What? If memory serves, _Basic Four v. MAI_ held that maintaining a copy in RAM can violate copyright, even if that copy is a transitory one-shot. Since browsing the Web is just that - loading a copy of a document into RAM - one could make the argument (as you do, later in your message) that such browsing is already illegal. >If the new proposal turns the current "copying" right into a >so-called "transmission" right when it happens across a network, >this is no more than a change in terminology. The same factors >described above apply as much to "transmissions" involving browsing >users as to "copying" involving browsing users. Changes in terminology can have substantial ramifications - just ask the European folks about the new Web policies, in which Web transmissions are now termed "broadcasts" and treated in the same vein as television and radio broadcasts. >Here comes the part that you may find hard to believe: in all the >battles mentioned above, I personally side with the civil liberties >groups every single time. Then why the criticisms? It looks like >these groups, with their admirable principles and agendas, are >increasingly getting lost in hyperbole and losing important >perspective. Frankly, the shrillness is beginning to hurt my ears. You're on the mark with this comment. It's very important that the Net public present a calm, factual case in each of these matters; too many are resorting to histrionics and hyperbole. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 3 May 1996 16:24:44 -0300 (ADT) From: InfoLink <infolink@fox.nstn.ca> Subject: File 6--More Information about Getting Online (Conference) The following is a draft of the agenda of Getting Online: Communities on the Internet, a conference to be held in Ottawa 20-23 June, 1996. We look forward to the interest and response of the community sector and the 'Net community in general. Please forward as appropriate. ____________________________________________________________ GETTING ONLINE: COMMUNITIES ON THE INTERNET ____________________________________________________________ Draft Agenda ____________________________________________________________ Thursday, June 20 0830-0900 Registration for Pre-Conference Workshops 0900-1230 Pre-Conference Workshops: Session A (choose 1 stream) A1. The Internet, communications and research A2. Uploading and downloading common file types A3. Basics of HTML and home page construction 1230-1330 Lunch 1330-1700 Pre-Conference Workshops: Session B B1. Efficiently finding the information you need B2. Introduction to creating Gopher & FTP sites B3. Introduction to forms and CGI scripts ____________________________________________________________ Friday, June 21 0830-0900 Registration for conference 0900-0930 Welcome, purpose of event, review of agenda 0930-0945 Video from Africa - Don Richardson, UN FAO 0945-1045 ABCs of Access Michael Richardson, Community Consultant Greg Searle, IDRC Leslie Shade, Community Consultant Terry Lewycky, BlueSky FreeNet (invited) 1045-1115 Break 1115-1230 Concurrent Community Session: Session A A1. Success Stories from Cyberspace * Rural Nets John Stevenson, CSpace (invited) * Environmental/Sustainable Development Sites Justine Ackman, Environmental Inter Network, Web (?) A2. Success Stories from Cyberspace * Youth Networks Mark Surman, Kids from Kanata, Web Janet Longmore, Community in Schools (invited) * Education Networks Dalia Naujokaites, St Elizabeth School, Ottawa Dick Holland, Ursula Franklin Academy, Toronto 1230-1400 Lunch with Keynote Speaker: John Ralston Saul, author of _Voltaire's Bastards_ and _The Unconscious Civilization_ 1400-1515 Concurrent Community Sessions: Session B B1. Success Stories from Cyberspace * Aboriginal Networks Melanie Goodchild, Raindancer Interactive * Union Resources Kerry Pither, CUPW B2. Success Stories from Cyberspace * International/Peace Networks Bellanet (?) Helene Mousseau, CARE * Ethnocultural Networks 1515-1545 Concurrent Community Sessions: Session C C1. Success Stories from Cyberspace * Seniors' Networks Seniors' Computer Information Project (?) One Voice, Seniors' Network (?) * Health/Disabilities Networks Chuck Letourneau, Adaptive Computer Technology Centre C2. Success Stories from Cyberspace * Women's Networks * Social Service Resources Lyz Rykert, Family Service Association, Metro Toronto Simon Mielniczuk, Ont. Prevention Clearinghouse (invtd) ____________________________________________________________ Saturday, June 22 0830-1015 Impact on Work and Community Theresa Johnson, PSAC Kerry Pither, CUPW Sid Schniad, Telecommunications Workers Union (invited) Moderator: Garth Graham, Telecommunities Canada 1015-1045 Break 1045-1215 Networking by Community of Interest I: Concurrent Discussion Groups What resources do we have? What can community groups do to acquire the resources necessary to establish an online presence? What can social sector groups offer Internet service providers in exchange for service? What internal resources do groups have to generate content? 1215-1330 Lunch with Keynote Speaker: Heather Menzies, author of _Fastforward and Out of Control_ and _Whose Brave New World?_ 1330-1430 Internet Service Providers Panel Jesse Hirsch, LocalGlobal Access Moderator: Mark Bell, Monitor Magazine 1430-1500 Moderated Discussion: Participants and Panel 1500-1530 Break 1530-1700 Networking by Community of Interest II: Concurrent Discussion Groups Where are we going? What do we need? How can social sector groups coordinate their interests, concerns and needs to gain the consideration of Internet businesses and government policy makers? ____________________________________________________________ Sunday, June 23 0830-1030 Reports back from discussion groups. Summaries of previous day's discussions with action points highlighted. How can an overview of promises, potentials and pitfalls be achieved? What points should it take into account? 1030-1100 Break 1100-1230 Networking Fair (topics, sessions to be set and arranged by participants - suggestions follow) * Fundraising for a Network * Women in Cyberspace * How to Organize a Community Online * Technical Resources * Sustainability, Environment and Economy * Development, Local and International * Caucuses at will 1230-1400 Lunch 1400-1530 Goals for the Year Coalition for Public Information (?) Public Interest Advocacy Centre (?) Alliance for a Connected Canada (?) * Audience feedback John Thurston, PhD jthursto@fox.nstn.ca Manager of Emerging Technologies ag264@freenet.carleton.ca InfoLink Consultants 613 594-5960 (work) Ottawa, Ontario 613 737-9648 (home) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu> Subject: File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996) Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. 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Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts unless absolutely necessary. DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not violate copyright protections. ------------------------------ End of Computer Underground Digest #8.40 ************************************