Computer underground Digest Tue Jul 23, 1996 Volume 8 : Issue 55 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, #8.55 (Tue, Jul 23, 1996) File 1--(fwd) lecture about internet and censorship (fwd) File 2--"Cyber-Rights" Platform Plank - FINAL DISCUSSION PERIOD (fwd) File 3--Online Dispute Resolution, etc. (fwd) File 4--Re: Response to CUD re: selling wind File 5--NYT -- IRC-based child molestation ring busted (7/17/96) File 6--U.S. GOV'T PLANS COMPUTER EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAM (fwd) File 7--(Fwd) $50K Hacker challenge File 8--Access control, Censorship, and Precision File 9--Computer Literacy Bookshops events File 10--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: Sun, 9 Jun 1996 13:26:59 -0500 (CDT) From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM> Subject: File 1--(fwd) lecture about internet and censorship (fwd) This is a speech on internet censorship given by the managing director of the Dutch Internet Service Provider which created the child pornography "hotline" that I forwarded about a month ago. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From--felipe@xs4all.nl (Felipe Rodriquez) Date--8 Jun 1996 17:29:50 GMT A lecture i gave at the international liberals congress: Hello, I am Felipe Rodriquez, Managing director of Xs4all Internet, a mayor dutch provider, and Im also chairman of the dutch foundation of internet providers. I was asked to do a short lecture about Internet and censorship. Internet is an emerging market, and at the same time an exciting new social environment. A space of communications between people of different nations, with different habits, traditions and legal codes. Internet is a place without borders. Information travels from one country to another in a split second. From here to the United States it takes 100 milliseconds. To Japan the information travels within 300 milliseconds. Nicaragua takes 250 milliseconds and to Australia it takes the bits and bytes 400 milliseconds. Information crosses many borders on its path to the final destination. This challenges the concept of regionally defined cultures. The world becomes a global village of many cultures. Those cultures are not necessarily confined to a certain region or location. They are on the Net, and thus independent of location. The environment and conditions on the Net change quickly. New possibilities of communicating with other people emerge on an almost daily basis. Today people can sound-talk over the Internet, play games together, send pictures, send video transmissions, radio et cetera. Never before have people been communicating so massively, on an intenational scale. Every person is a medium that generates network traffic. This mash of global cultures, all communicating with eachother, creates a culture shock. Every culture has its own traditions and codes, and naturally tries to protect and nurture these values.The traditional way of protecting ones culture and traditions has always been through legislation and social control. It is legislation that now threatens most of the worldwide cultures on Internet. Legislation on Internet is a slippery road. A communication technology on this scale is a new concept. It is difficult to legislate a global social environment. The main problem is the fact that countries try to legislate a global environment through their own culturally defined moral codes. Different things are allowed in different countries. In the US it is allowed to make racist comments, in Holland it is not. So you see a migration of the information that dutch neo-nazi groups put on the Internet. Vice versa the United States has strict laws against obsenity, that are much more tolerant in Holland. Now you see a migration of pornographic material towards Holland. From both countries the information is published on a world wide scale. Implementation of law for Internet should include a harmonisation of some kind in the area of international legislation. The United States has implemented the Communications Decency Act. This law defines unacceptable speech on Internet. You can be criminally prosecuted for saying the word fuck or other indecent words, if you are an American. Anything indecent is being supressed. This proves to be a law that is impossible to uphold. The United States government webservers violate the Communications Decency Act. On the White House webserver there is a picture of a painting that is displayed. The painting shows a family of a mother with her two children. One of the children is nude. According to the Decency Act it is forbidden to display this image on the Internet. There are similar examples on other government systems in the US. This communications decency act is now being challenged as being unconstitutional by a group of organisations on Internet that has more than 40.000 supporters. Other countries like China, Vietnam and Saudi Arabia have even stricter guidelines for Internet. No one can use the Internet without prior government permission. These governments introduce strict control on the gateways that connect them to the Net. These countries are afraid that Internet will give their citizens access to information against their government and political structure. The Internet is too democratic for them. Germany had ordered Compuserve to block off all groups about sex, and Compuserve then had no other way to shut these groupsdown worldwide. Eventually the german ambassador had to explain this action to President Clinton. A local law was influencing cultures in other countries. France arrested two internet-providers a couple of weeks ago. They where held responsible for the publication of child-pornography that was foumd on the Net. They did not distribute it themselves, but it was available somewhere on Internet. After global concern, the french minister of Interior admitted the arrests where a mistake, and that the providers could not be held liable. Prudence is needed because experience must first be aquired. You cannot legislate something you do not know anything about, but it happens everywhere on Internet. Resulting in unworkable situations, and repression of the people and the market. Many problems on Internet can be dealt with today. One of those problems is Child Pornography. In Holland we have started a hotline against child pornography on Internet. If we get a report about a dutch user that is transmitting child-pornography, then we send him a warning. If that does not stop him, we report that user to the police. The user gets his chance to test the legal system. The hotline does not censor, it warns and reports. This project is a cooperation between the foundation of dutch internetproviders, the dutch criminal intelligence agency, a psychologist, a couple of internet users and the national bureau against racial discrimination. The hotline is based on existing law, and proves that no extra law is needed to fight child-pornography on Internet. Im a firm believer of first trying all the intruments that the existing legislation has to offer. Why bother about new laws if existing rules are sufficient ? One of the common concerns is the availabality of obscene and violent information to children. This is the main argument in the United Stated to impose strict rules for the Net. But there are already techniques that can protect children from seeing any these materials. There is software that is especially made for the purpose of creating a safe Internet. There is a demand from the market to create these programs, and thus they are created. Protection of the children on the Net is not a government task, but an educational task of the parents of the children. Instead of regulating a worldwide network one could also think of imposing an age limit. Pridence is needed to find solutions for these new problems. Business can only thrive in a stable environment. And rushing in all kinds of repressive measures is not a stabilising factor. It is often easier to impose new legislation, than it is to repair old bad legislation. Thank you ! -- Felipe Rodriquez - XS4ALL Internet - finger felipe@xs4all.nl for http://xs4all.nl/~felipe/ - Managing Director - pub pgp-key 1024/A07C02F9 pgp Key fingerprint = 32 36 C3 D9 02 42 79 C6 D1 9F 63 EB A7 30 8B 1A ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 14 Jul 1996 18:25:52 -0700 (PDT) From: baby-X <baby-x@zoom.com> Subject: File 2--"Cyber-Rights" Platform Plank - FINAL DISCUSSION PERIOD (fwd) You've probably already seen this elsewhere, but I figured I'd send it your way directly. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Christopher D. Frankonis - Rootless Cosmopolitan cyberPOLIS - Communicate This Culture Draft "Cyber-Rights" Platform Plank http://www.cypher.net/cyberPOLIS/platform-plank.html ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Submissions of platform proposals to both the Democratic and Republican Parties are due by the first week of August. The Libertarians have already held their convention, but will receive a copy of this plank proposal anyway, as will Perot's Reform Party if it can ever be determined who to send it to. Therefore, I am opening a final period of discussion on the proposed "cyber-rights" platform plank -- beginning at the start of Sunday, July 14, and ending at the close of Wednesday, July 17. Please try to focus the discussion in the following locations (although I will be tracking the entire handful of lists and groups this announcement is being posted to): the Bonfire mailing list (see http://www.well.com/user/jonl/bonfire.html) the cyberPOLIS mailing list (see http://www.cypher.net/cyberPOLIS/discussion.html) alt.culture.internet alt.politics.datahighway comp.org.eff.talk At the close of the final discussion period, the draft platform plank will be considered to be in a fixed state; development will be over. For the two weeks between Wednesday, July 17, and Wednesday, July 31, an email address will be made available for collecting the names of individuals and groups which wish to signify their support for the plank. The collection of names will be appended to the plank proposal, and sent along with the text of the plank to each of the four parties being targeted. Note: Do NOT send me any of this now. When the time comes, I will announce the appropriate address. And so, without further explanation, here is the current version (the 2nd, in fact) of the proposed "cyber-rights" platform plank: [ Respect for Freedom in the Information Age ] "As the most participatory form of mass speech yet developed, the Internet deserves the highest protection from government intrusion." - Judge Stewart Dalzell The [BLANK] Party takes special recognition of the unique characteristics of computer-mediated communication. As the nation and the world experience the Information Revolution, we must rise to the challenge of embracing the achievements and the promise of the global Internet. To this end, we affirm that the new world of cyberspace calls for a commitment to these essential values of American liberty: * The right to speak, express oneself, and associate freely. * The right to privacy, whether through the use of anonymity, pseudonymity, encryption, or other means. * The right of the individual to control both the information they access and the information they provide. As the people of America and those of nations around the world come closer together through the power of computer networking, the [BLANK] Party embraces the spirit of freedom embodied by this new medium. ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 16 Jul 1996 21:46:13 -0500 (CDT) From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM> Subject: File 3--Online Dispute Resolution, etc. (fwd) ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date-- Thu, 11 Jul 1996 13:09:43 -0400 From-- Ethan Katsh <katsh@LEGAL.UMASS.EDU> Some members of this list may have in interest in (or know someone who has a need for) the Online Ombuds Office, which can be found at http://www.ombuds.org. This is a pilot project aimed at using online tools to try to resolve disputes arising out of online activities (and even non-online activities). There is no charge for the use of the service, since most of our costs are covered by a grant from the National Center for Automated Information Research. If you belong to any listservs or newsgroups where disputes arising out of online activities are discussed, I'd be most grateful if you would mention the project and our URL. We are particularly interested in disputes involving copyrights, domain names, First Amendment, online service providers, and harassment. Our home page even describes a little reward for the parties in the first disputes that we settle in these areas. !~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~`~! ! Ethan Katsh Internet: Katsh@Legal.umass.edu ! ! Professor VOICE: 413-545-5879 ! ! Department of Legal Studies FAX: 413-545-1640 ! ! University of Massachusetts ! ! 216 Hampshire House ! ! Amherst, MA 01003 ! ! Co-Director, Online Ombuds Office ! ! http://www.ombuds.org ! ------------------------------ Date: Tue, 9 Jul 1996 13:52:38 -0700 From: Barry Gold <bgold@platinum.com> Subject: File 4--Re: Response to CUD re: selling wind To: Roland Dobbins, Seems to me that CUD is being about as balanced as usual. They published your "right-wing rant", just as they published the "left-wing rant" you were objecting to. You are quite correct about the "liberal" Clinton administration trying to foist key-escrow (like Clipper), "anti-terrorism" legislation that uses guilt-by-association, and has violated the rights of individuals in their quest to force various "militias" to submit. (Although I'm not sure that the Clinton admin can really be blamed for Ruby Ridge -- that was already planned before he took office, and bureaucracies have a certain inertia.) In any case, if they are to be blamed for the idiocies at Ruby Ridge and Waco, they are equally entitled to take credit for learning from past mistakes and working out a negotiated settlement with the "Free Men". I'm not sure about "filegate". Maybe it's an enemies list. But it seems just as likely to me (a computer professional) that it resulted from somebody searching an outdated list of white-house employees. Seems to me if Clinton wanted to keep an enemies list, he could have picked a better list than a bunch of former white-house employees and applicants. However, I maintain an open mind on this, as additional evidence may turn at any time. But I really must take issue with your bringing up SDI. Yes, weapons are made to be used. That's one reason why we maintained and continue to maintain our own weapons. It lets any foreign power who might think of using such weapons on the U.S. know that the result will be the total destruction of whatever country they are ruling. But the SDI was, and remains, a chimera. Vaporware, impossible to build. I just happen to have a relevant LA Times column, which I will quote part of: David L. Parnas(1) spent two days listening to Air Force briefings, then in June 1985 he resigned from the advisory panel, concluding that the fundamental computer requirements for strategic defense could never be satisfied. ... His basic points are simple and unalterable: By its nature, strategic ballistic missile defense cannot be tested in its conditions of use -- we can't fire a missile at Los Angeles to see if our defense works. And no computer system of even modest complexity has ever been considered reliable without extensive testing in actual conditions of use. ... National ballistic missile defense, of course, would require computer software of both unimaginable(sic) complexity and infallible trustworthiness -- and it would have to work correctly the first time it was ever used. ... Furthermore, the long lead time and elaborate facilities required to build an intercontinental missile mean that the U.S. and its allies would be able to deal with such a threat(2) from a rogue state in others(sic) ways -- via a preemptive strike, for example. Above quoted from "Innovation" column, by Gary Chapman, Los Angeles Times, Monday, July 8, 1996, page D6. I note that Chapman ignores the many missiles left in the former Soviet Union. These are mostly controlled by the Russian military, regardless of where they are physically located. And Russia seems to have other things than intercontinental war on its mind. This could change in the future, of course. But I suspect it would be cheaper to just buy the missiles than to build even the prototype SDI ($31-60 billion; we have spent over "$100 billion on ... research so far, without noticeable progress."(ibid)) Also ignored by proponents of SDI is that there are other methods of delivering weapons of mass destruction than ICBMs. If Russia _did_ become a threat again, they could use submarine-launched missiles, which are harder to defend against because they travel tens or hundreds of miles instead of thousands. And the smaller "rogue states" that indulge in terrorism could get quite satisfactory results by smuggling the weapons into the U.S. and assembling them in whichever city they want to destroy. It would be difficult to completely destroy the U.S. with short range or smuggled in weapons, but you could certainly deliver a lot of terror, just the sort of thing those dictators would enjoy. Except for one thing -- the retaliatory strike would leave them radioactive dust, or if they happened to have a deep enough bunker to survive it, no army and a radioactive wasteland to "rule" over. The same thing would happen to anyone who launched a more massive missile strike, of course. So, who are we to fear? Anyone who is weighing risks against gains will see there is nothing to be gained by using such weapons against U.S. territory. And in spite of propaganda labelling Hussein and Kaddafi "madmen", they are quite sane, just working from goals we don't understand. And if someone crazy does come to power (Hitler, perhaps), SDI will not prevent him from smuggling in weapons. In fact, assuming such a ruler (or a stateless terrorist group for that matter) could lay hands on enough fissionables, this would be at least as efficient a method of using them as launching missiles. Missiles have a way of failing, their payloads refusing to go off. Worse, after you've figured out how to build a fission bomb (not that difficult, most of the info is now available in libraries), you _still_ have to figure out how to build the missiles, a much more difficult task. (Or spend a lot of money to buy them, then hope you can maintain them in working condition until its time to use them.) Thank you, I'd rather use the 31-60 billion to lower taxes or reduce the national debt. --- (1) a famous software engineer and a member of the panel charged with looking at the computer requrirements for an SDI system. (2) e.g., the occasional threats by the current rulers of North Korea, Iraq, and Libya. ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 17 Jul 1996 19:59:47 -0700 (PDT) From: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com> Subject: File 5--NYT -- IRC-based child molestation ring busted (7/17/96) The New York Times, July 17, 1996, p. A10. 16 Indicted On Charges Of Internet Pornography Allegations of Molestation Are Also Filed By Tim Golden San Jose, Calif., July 16 -- [...] Today, Federal officials said the girl in a small central California town had led them to one of the more distant frontiers of sexual crime. In an indictment handed up here, a Federal grand jury charged 16 people in the United States and abroad with joining in a pornography ring that was effectively an on-line pedophilia club. Its members shared homemade pictures, recounted their sexual experiences with children and even chatted electronically as two of the men molested a 10-year-old girl, the authorities said. The case appeared likely to heighten concerns about the spread of child pornography over the Internet. Debate has grown steadily over whether or how the government should impose obscenity standards in cyberspace, and Republican leaders have increasingly attacked the Clinton Administration for being insufficiently vigorous in the prosecution of on-line pornography cases. [...] In addition to 13 men arrested around the United States, officials said the group included members in Finland, Canada and Australia. Although arrest warrants have been issued for those three, officials said they were still only known by their computer aliases. [...] With help from Customs Service investigators in Silicon Valley, F.B.I. agents eventually uncovered computer files that began to trace the scope of the Orchid Club, one of the thousands of virtual conference rooms of Internet Relay Chat. Officials said they did not have to conduct wire-tap surveillance or break into encrypted files; two of the accused conspirators collaborated with investigators, going on-line in the presence of law-enforcement agents to help track other members of the club. ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 8 Jul 1996 08:56:51 -0400 (EDT) From: Noah <noah@enabled.com> Subject: File 6--U.S. GOV'T PLANS COMPUTER EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAM (fwd) U.S. GOV'T PLANS COMPUTER EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAM The federal government is planning a centralized emergency response team to respond to attacks on the U.S. information infrastructure. The Computer Emergency Response Team at Carnegie Mellon University, which is financed through the Defense Department, will play a major role in developing the new interagency group, which will handle security concerns related to the Internet, the telephone system, electronic banking systems, and the computerized systems that operate the country's oil pipelines and electrical power grids. (Chronicle of Higher Education 5 Jul 96 A19) AT&T TARGETS CYBERSPACE AT&T's recent investment in Nets Inc., through its spin-off of New Media Services to Jim Manzi's Industry.Net, signals its plans to become a one-stop shop for electronic communications -- from e-mail and Internet access to cellular calling and satellite TV. The company's primary strategy is to sign up millions of customers for its WorldNet Internet access service. The company will also provide its corporate customers a "hosting" service called EasyCommerce, which will create and operate corporate Web sites. At the same time, the company has scrapped Network Notes and is looking to get rid of its Imagination Network, an online gaming service; it's also considering phasing out Personalink, a messaging service that uses General Magic technology. (Business Week 8 Jul 96 p120) ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Jul 1996 23:10:49 +0000 From: David Smith <bladex@bga.com> Subject: File 7--(Fwd) $50K Hacker challenge I saw this article in a recent edition of Online Business Today. ------- Forwarded Message Follows ------- Date-- Tue, 25 Jun 1996 09:08:17 -0400 (EDT) From-- Home Page Press <obt@hpp.com> <sections snipped> ************************************************** Hackers $50K challenge to break Net security system World Star Holdings in Winnipeg, Canada is looking for trouble. If they find it, they're willing to pay $50,000 to the first person who can break their security system. The company has issued an open invitation to take the "World Star Cybertest '96: The Ultimate Internet Security Challenge," in order to demonstrate the Company's Internet security system. Personal email challenges have been sent to high profile names such as Bill Gates, Ken Rowe at the National Center for Super Computing, Dr. Paul Penfield, Department of Computer Science at the M.I.T. School of Engineering and researchers Drew Dean and Dean Wallach of Princeton University. OBT's paid subscription newsletter Online Business Consultant has recently quoted the Princeton team in several Java security reports including "Deadly Black Widow On The Web: Her Name is JAVA," "Java Black Widows---Sun Declares War," Be Afraid. Be Very Afraid" and "The Business Assassin." To read these reports go to Home Page Press http://www.hpp.com and scroll down the front page. Brian Greenberg, President of World Star said, "I personally signed, sealed and emailed the invitations and am very anxious to see some of the individuals respond to the challenge. I am confident that our system is, at this time, the most secure in cyberspace." World Star Holdings, Ltd., is a provider of interactive "transactable" Internet services and Internet security technology which Greenberg claims has been proven impenetrable. The Company launched its online contest offering more than $50,000 in cash and prizes to the first person able to break its security system. According to the test's scenario hackers are enticed into a virtual bank interior in search of a vault. The challenge is to unlock it and find a list of prizes with inventory numbers and a hidden "cyberkey" number. OBT staff used Home Page Press's Go.Fetch (beta) personal agent software to retrieve the World Star site and was returned only five pages. If you're successful, call World Star at 204-943-2256. Get to it hackers. Bust into World Star at http://205.200.247.10 to get the cash! ************************************************** ============================ ============================ ONLINE BUSINESS TODAY(TM) NEWSLETTER: Vol 2 (#6) MORNING FINAL THURSDAY, JUNE 24, 1996 OBT@HPP.COM ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 15 Jul 96 07:30:34 GMT From: "David G. Bell" <dbell@zhochaka.demon.co.uk> Subject: File 8--Access control, Censorship, and Precision For me, the most disturbing part of the Meeks story about control of access to parts of the Internet was the allegation of a lack of precision in defining controlled sites, so that sites with a similar, but not identical, URL could be blocked. I imagine that a smart lawyer could make a case for damages out of that one. Contrast it with the iSTAR story. The list of newsgroups they have refused to handle is pretty clear, and while different countries, even different States in the USA, have different limits, pretty well all of the newsgroups have names which strongly suggest an illegal content in many jurisdictions. About the only one which I was surprised to see was the newsgroup for pictures of cheerleaders, but on an international network of networks, it isn't hard to find differences in age limits, which would make a picture of a 17-year-old legal in one country, and illegal in another. At least the censors and controllers have a reason for their actions, and one which I believe can be defended. The danger in both the stories is that so much is being done in secret, and these actions should be challenged, should be publically debated, rather than imposed in secret. Here in the UK we have what is officially a film _classification_ system, backed by law. Mostly, it seems to work pretty well. There are stories about scenes being cut from films to get a less restrictive classification. It has also been claimed that no film can be released in the UK which shows the use of nunchaku, because of some decision taken by the current head of the BBFC. It can be argued that too many people on the Internet fail to accept responsibility for what they make available. The scary thing about the secrecy surrounding efforts to classify or censor material, is that it suggests that the people taking the decisions are afraid to accept their responsibilities. Date: Thu, 18 Jul 1996 23:23:16 -0400 (EDT) From: Noah <noah@enabled.com> Subject: File 9--Computer Literacy Bookshops events From -Noah noah@enabled.com ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date--Thu, 18 Jul 96 18:05:19 PDT From--CLB Event Accounement <announce@clbooks.com> AN EVENT AT COMPUTER LITERACY BOOKSHOPS ----------------------------------------------------------- Logical Synthesis with Verilog HDL --------------------------------------------------------- a free presentation by Samir Palnitkar What is? Logic Synthesis Impact of Logic Synthesis Synthesis Design Flow Sequential Circuit Synthesis Example Samir Palnitkar is the president of Indus Consulting Services, Inc. in Sunnyvale, CA; a company which offers training and consulting services for chip design and verification. As a member of the technical staff at Sun Microsystems, he was involved in several successful microprocessor, ASIC and system design projects. He's also been a consultant to chip design companies, semiconductor houses and EDA companies. He has also taught Verilog and Synthesis courses to engineers at various companies. Samir has published several technical papers and is the holder of two U.S. Patents. Mr. Palnitkar is the author of "Verilog HDL: A Guide to Design and Synthesis. Date: Tuesday, July 30, 1996 Time: 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Location: Computer Literacy Bookshop 2590 N First St (at Trimble) San Jose, (408) 435-1118 DID YOU KNOW THAT OUR EVENTS ARE POSTED ON OUR WEB PAGE? http://www.clbooks.com/ Stay tuned. There are more events to come. August 7, 1996 Tons of Practial Experience with the Shlaer-Mellor Method with Leon Starr August 17, 1996 Power of Ignorance (C++ Templates) with Andrew Koenig August 21, 1996 Web Multimedia Techniques with Tay Vaughan Events at our stores are always free. ------------------------------------------------------------ If you would like to receive e-mail announcements for upcoming store events, simply write to: events_ca-request@clbooks.com (for events held at our California stores) events_va-request@clbooks.com (for events held at our Virginia store) -------------------------------------------------------------- If you have signed up for email announcements but have not received any, or wish to be removed from this list, please contact us. We add names by request only. **************************************************** Computer Literacy Bookshops, Inc. Cherrie C. Chiu eventinfo_va@clbooks.com (408) 435-5015 x116 ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 21 Mar 1996 22:51:01 CST From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu> Subject: File 10--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 Apr, 1996) Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are available at no cost electronically. CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line: SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS. The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-0303), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115, USA. 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