Computer underground Digest    Sun  Mar 12, 1995   Volume 7 : Issue 20
                          ISSN  1004-042X

      Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer ([email protected])
      Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
      Semi-retiring Shadow Archivist: Stanton McCandlish
      Correspondent Extra-ordinaire:  David Smith
      Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
                         Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
                         Ian Dickinson
      Monster Editor:    Loch Nesshrdlu

CONTENTS, #7.20 (Sun, Mar 12, 1995)

File 1--NPTN 1995 Annual Meeting (fwd)
File 2--GII Free Expression Letter
File 3--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 26 Feb, 1995)

CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Date: Sun, 22 Jan 1995 11:06:37 -0600 (CST)
From: David Smith <[email protected]>
Subject: File 1--NPTN 1995 Annual Meeting (fwd)

              ---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date--Fri, 20 Jan 1995 14:49:17 -0500 (EST)
From--Peter F. Harter <[email protected]>


<REPOST FREELY AND WIDELY IN ITS ENTIRETY>

       NPTN's Annual Affiliate & Organizing Committee Meeting -- 1995:
           An International Free-Net Community Computing Conference


                               MAY 17-20, 1995

            In The Valley of the Sun at Arizona State University,
             Computing Commons Building, Tempe, Arizona, U.S.A.


                               Sponsored By:

               The National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN)

            Arizona Telecommunication Community (AzTeC) Computing

               Arizona State Public Information Network (ASPIN)


1.      The Annual Meeting:

NPTN is proud to announce the preliminary details for the Annual Affiliate
and Organizing Committee Meeting.  AzTeC, NPTN's first Free-Net Affiliate
in Arizona, is playing host with Arizona State University at their tremendous
Computing Commons facility.  This announcement is preliminary in scope but
all details of place and time are set.  Registration forms and detailed
travel and entertainment information will be forthcoming.

The purpose of this announcement is to alert the Free-Net community and its
friends and interested parties of what promises to be a watershed event.
1994 was an exciting year for Free-Nets in terms of growth and issues.
1995 promises to be even more critical as the medium we work and play in
changes around us.

Free-Net community computing systems lead the community networking movement;
however, many issues and potential problems demand comprehensive review and
discussion.  Without a convergence of ideas and thinking, progress and
future growth will be difficult.  Hence the Annual Meeting will be a
working meeting involving the direct participation of folks from Free-Net
Affiliates, Organizing Committees, and special guest experts.  (Please see
the call for participation and topic suggestions below.)

It is not a conference where speakers pontificate about how things can be
or should be.  Instead, the structure and strategy focuses on enlisting the
creativity, energy, and leadership of members of the Free-Net family
itself.  While the Annual Meeting will be an open meeting (e.g., users,
companies, institutions, other community computer systems), priority will
be given to NPTN Affiliates and Organizing Committees.

Work product and resolution of issues is key; however, fun is in the mix:
High profile speakers will be featured in the evenings; information
describing entertainment options will made available so that one can take
in Arizona before and or after the Annual Meeting.

New information is integrated into the Annual Meeting: A vendor array area
will be available for attendees to peruse and sample.  Vendors will come
from a wide variety of nonprofit and commercial areas.


2.      The Preliminary Agenda:

Since the Annual Meeting focuses on hitting hard issues head on, a structure
has been devised.  This structure aims to provide a robust exchange of
information and discussion by all in attendance by breaking down issues
into topic tracks, numbered in no particularly order or importance below.
These track numbers correspond to the panels and work groups in the
following proposed agenda.  Since it is a proposed agenda, however, it is
subject to change based upon ideas submitted during the call for
participation phase (see below).

Topic Tracks:
                                       # 1  -  Legal
                                       # 2  -  Funding
                                       # 3  -  Content
                                       # 4  -  Management
                                       # 5  -  Technical

Daily Schedule:

<PLEASE NOTE: This is a draft agenda and will be modified as suggestions
are made by participants and attendees so that the Annual Meeting will
fulfill the interests of Affiliates and Organizing Committees.>


WEDNESDAY, MAY 17, 1995: "Registration & Settling In"

2-8pm           Registration materials, refreshments at the Computing Commons.

6-10pm          Dinner in "Old Town" Tempe: Folks can enjoy the diverse cuisine
               offered in this fine town, engage in "birds of a feather" groups
               at local watering holes, and meet those folks behind the e-mail.


THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1995: "State of the Network & Opportunities Ahead"

7:30-8:30       Continental Breakfast (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)
               -- Time to check e-mail at the electronic cafe of free computer
               terminals, to check out the vendor array, to continue some of
               those conversations from last night over some coffee, fresh
               fruit, juice, bagels and other fare.

8:30-8:40       Welcoming Remarks --  Peter Harter (NPTN), Joe Askins (AzTeC),
               and Skip Brand (ASPIN)

8:40-9:00       State of the Free-Net Network Address -- Dr. Thomas Grundner
               (NPTN)

9:00-10:30      Panel I: "Concepts of a Free-Net"
               * Moderator - leads panel through a dialogue and facilitates Q&A
               * Five panelists present and then lead work groups in the
                 afternoon.
               # 1 -   Competition with private industry.
               # 2 -   Fees and types of fee based revenue streams.
               # 3 -   Local Content: Local people and institutions using and
                       developing Local information resources to fulfill Local
                       information needs under Local governance and
                       participation.
               # 4 -   Defining a Free-Net that is manageable and
                       sustainable.
               # 5 -   The Rural Information Network: Advances in hardware,
                       software and communications technologies that make
                       starting and operating a Free-Net easier and more
                       effective.

10:30-11:00     Refreshment Break (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)

11:00-12:30     Panel II: "Laws and Liabilities of Electronic Communities"
               * Moderator --
               * Five panelists --
               # 1 -   Insurance issues, needs, and packages.
               # 2 -   Advertising / Information Providers.
               # 3 -   Copyright Infringement.

               # 4 -   Acceptable Use Policies and User Registration Contracts.
               # 5 -   Security Issues and Contingency Plans.

12:30-1:30      Boxed Lunch (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)  Take your
               lunch with you to enjoy the breezes along the walks lined with
               palm trees or up to the plaza gazing over campus to relax and
               take in the sunshine.

1:30-3:00       Panel I Work Groups: Break out into discussion groups led by
               topic track panelists; policy development and production of
               summary reports.

3:00-3:30       Refreshment Break (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)

3:30-5:00       Panel II Work Groups: Break out into discussion groups led by
               topic track panelists; policy development and production of
               summary reports.

5:00-6:00       Break: Visit the electronic cafe to do e-mail, the vendor array
               in the Kaleidoscope Room, talk a walk around campus and town,
               help your work group chair put together his summary report and
               submit it electronically, or take a swim at your hotel.

6:00-7:00       Happy Hour

7:00-9:00       Banquet Dinner & Pizzazz Speaker either live or via CU-See-Me
               with Q&A.


FRIDAY, MAY 19, 1995

7:30-8:30       Continental Breakfast (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)
               -- Time to check e-mail at the electronic cafe of free computer
               terminals,  to check out the vendor array, to continue some of
               those conversations from last night over some coffee, fresh
               fruit, juice, bagels and other fare.

8:30-9:00       International Issues in Community Computing -- TBA

9:00-10:30      Panel III: "Economics & Sustainability Structures"
               * Moderator --
               * Five panelists --
               # 1 -   501(c)(3): Revenue Streams and Funding Sources.
               # 2 -   New Business Model for Free-Nets.
               # 3 -   Content  as a revenue stream.
               # 4 -   Financial planning and purchasing strategies.
               # 5 -   Configuration and scaling up to meet demand: scalable
                       dialup versus network access.

10:30-11:00     Refreshment Break (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)

11:00-12:30     Panel IV: "Global Gateway: Paths Forward"
               * Moderator --
               * Five panelists --
               # 1 -   Transborder, regional, and cross-industry Partnerships
                                       or
                       Access Issues As Seen From Afar
               # 2 -   NTIA's TIIAP 1995 and other grants in building the GII
               # 3 -   WWW  and linking Tempe to Timbuktu
               # 4 -   Agile Business Practices in an international medium
               # 5 -   Platform and system standardization?  Solutions toward
                       seamless operation of a decentralized network of
                       disparate community computer systems.

12:30-1:30      Boxed Lunch (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)  Take your
               lunch with you to enjoy the breezes along the walks lined with
               palm trees or up to the plaza gazing over campus to relax and
               take in the sunshine.

1:30-3:00       Panel III Work Groups: Break out into discussion groups led by
               topic track panelists; policy development and production of
               summary reports.

3:00-3:30       Refreshment Break (Kaleidoscope Room & Computing Commons)

3:30-5:00       Panel IV Work Groups: Break out into discussion groups led by
               topic track panelists; policy development and production of
               summary reports.

5:00-6:00       Break: Visit the electronic cafe to do e-mail, the vendor array
               in the Kaleidoscope Room, talk a walk around campus and town,
               help your work group chair put together his summary report and
               submit it electronically, or take a swim at your hotel.

6:00-7:00       Happy Hour

7:00-9:00       Banquet Dinner & Pizzazz Speaker either live or via CU-See-Me
               with Q&A.


SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1995

**      This day is for NPTN Affiliates and Organizing Committees only.   **

8:00-8:30       Continental Breakfast (Computer Commons)

8:30-11:00      Affiliate Council Meeting: Making an underutilized resource
               productive and how NPTN can better support its work.

10:00           Refreshments

11:00-1:30      Board of Trustees Meeting

12:00           Boxed lunches

1:30 ---        Golf, touring, dinner in Phoenix for birds of a feather....


Call for Participation:

Since this meeting is for the members of the Free-Net family, participation
is integral to the Annual Meeting.  Participation entails speaking on a
panel and then leading and chairing the corresponding work group in the
afternoon that same day.  Preparation would not be lengthy as one's panel
remarks will only be fifteen minutes in length.  The substance of one's
thoughts will come out during the Q&A sessions following each panel and
during the intensive work groups in the afternoon which will produce an
electronic summary of their conclusions that will be published in an Annual
Meeting report.  Interested parties should submit a topic and brief
explanation of why they are interested in speaking to NPTN, care of
<[email protected]> --  the "call for participation" mailbox.  Participants will
be selected and finalized by May 1, 1995.

All panel discussion and work group break out rooms are equipped with
computers, audio-visual equipment, white boards, and other tools. Special
requests for equipment and or setup will be answered and accommodated as
best can be done.


Registration Information:

Quality and attendee satisfaction is a high priority: From complimentary
telephone debit cards, to guest Internet accounts, to computer terminal and
printer use privileges, to a highly results driven agenda, the Annual
Meeting aims to fulfill people's interests and needs during their stay in
Tempe.  The Annual Meeting fee goes toward defraying food, facilities, and
materials costs.  NPTN, AzTec, and ASPIN have budgeted the event at an
at-cost rate so that none of us loses our shirts:

For NPTN Affiliates & Organizing Committees:

PRE-REGISTRATION (BEFORE April 15, 1995)        -       $150.00 U.S.

LATE REGISTRATION (AFTER April 15, 1995)        -       $200.00 U.S.

For All Others:

PRE-REGISTRATION (BEFORE April 15, 1995)        -       $200.00 U.S.

LATE REGISTRATION (AFTER April 15, 1995)        -       $250.00 U.S.


Accommodations & Transportation:

Since Arizona State University resides in a "college town" hotels,
restaurants, bars, shops and various points of interest are all within a
few minutes walk of the campus and the Computing Commons building.  Three
hotels have been selected for their rates and proximity to campus.  Special
rates have been negotiated; however, earlier reservations are necessary in
order to guarantee the low Annual Meeting rate.  Most provide for a free
shuttle from the Phoenix International Airport -- a commercial shuttle is
also available for a nominal fee.  Hence, renting a car for the duration of
the Annual Meeting is unnecessary. However, in making plans to travel to
Tempe, one can certainly rent a car to see some of the sights nearby before
and or after the Meeting.  (More tourism information will be made available
soon.)  It is recommended that one make airline reservations earlier so as
to take advantage of discounts.

A detailed listing of hotels, pricing, and contact information will be made
available to those that inquire to <[email protected]> -- "annual meeting
questions" e-mail address.

It is recommended that individuals considering attending make their hotel
reservations in advance as hotel space in May in Tempe, AZ, can be at a
premium due to other conferences and events.  From our surveying of hotels
it is recommended that folks make their hotel arrangements before March 10,
1995.


GENERAL QUESTIONS:

General conference questions can be directed to <[email protected]> -- "annual
meeting questions".


MORE INFORMATION COMING!!!

This material and additional details will become available on NPTN's Web
site <http://www.nptn.org/> after Feb. 1, 1995.  Further updates and
details can be had at NPTN's ftp site and by e-mail and by snailmail after
Feb. 1st.


END.
*****

---
Peter F. Harter, Executive Director & General Counsel
The National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN)
Offices: 30680 Bainbridge Road, Solon, Ohio  44139-2268  U.S.A.
U.S. Mail: P.O. Box 1987, Cleveland, Ohio  44106-0187  U.S.A.
E-mail: [email protected]  Voice: 216/498-4050  Fax: 216/498-4051
Free-Net is a service mark of NPTN registered in the U.S. and other
countries.

------------------------------

Date: 17 Feb 1995 14:15:16 -0500
From: "Dave Banisar" <[email protected]>
Subject: File 2--GII Free Expression Letter

         ------------------
    HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH
    ------------------

    For Immediate Release

    For Further Information, Please Contact:

    Ann Beeson         phone:  212-972-8400 x258
                       e-mail:  [email protected]
    Gara LaMarche      phone:  212-972-8400 x207
                       e-mail:  [email protected]
    Marc Rotenberg     phone:  202-544-9240
                       e-mail:  [email protected]


    HUMAN RIGHTS AND CIVIL LIBERTIES GROUPS URGE GORE
    TO PROTECT FREE EXPRESSION ON INFO-HIGHWAY

    February 16, 1995 -- A coalition of leading human rights and
    civil liberties groups today urged Vice President Al Gore to
    carry the banner of free speech to Brussels where the G-7
    will meet next week to discuss the future of the global
    information infrastructure (GII).  The coalition alleges
    that the current U.S. agenda for the GII is incomplete
    because it fails to include core free expression principles.

    The Clinton Administration has stated that it wants to
    achieve support from the G-7 for five basic principles for
    building the GII:  encouraging private investment; promoting
    competition; creating a flexible regulatory environment;
    providing open access to networks and services for providers
    and users; and ensuring universal service.  The
    Administration gave a detailed description of these
    principles in a document released yesterday entitled "The
    Global Information Infrastructure:  Agenda for Cooperation."

    The coalition asks the U.S. to add a "sixth principle" for
    adoption at next week's G-7 gathering that "explicitly
    recognizes a commitment to protect and promote the free
    exchange of information and ideas on the GII."  The letter
    (a copy of which is attached) recommends that the Clinton
    Administration:

       -protect against censorship and promote diverse ideas and
    viewpoints on the GII.
       -support broad access to the GII by people of all
    nations.
       -promote strong information privacy rights on the GII.

    The group points to the inevitable impact the GII will have
    on social, political, and economic life.  If properly
    designed, the GII will "motivate citizens to become more
    involved in decisionmaking at local and global levels as
    they organize, debate, and share information unrestricted by
    geographic distances or national borders."

    The letter was signed by Human Rights Watch, Electronic
    Privacy Information Center, American Civil Liberties Union,
    American Library Association, Article 19, Center for
    Democracy and Technology, Electronic Frontier Foundation,
    People for the American Way, and Privacy International.

 ----------------------


    February 16, 1995

    The Honorable Al Gore
    Vice President of the United States
    S212 Capitol Building
    Washington, D.C.  20510

    Dear Mr. Vice President:

    We understand that you will be addressing the G-7
    Ministerial Conference on the Information Society, which
    takes place in Brussels February 25-26, 1995.  The
    undersigned represent leading human rights and civil
    liberties organizations dedicated to promoting free
    expression in the new information age.  We write today to
    ask you to urge the G-7 ministers to adhere to international
    free expression principles in any international agreement
    regarding the development, content, control and deployment
    of the global information infrastructure (GII).

    Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
    proclaims:

    *Everyone has the right . . . to seek, receive and impart
    information and ideas through any media and regardless of
    frontiers.*

    Since the Universal Declaration was adopted in 1948, the
    ability of individuals to exercise their free expression
    rights has been transformed by technological advances.
    Today, interactive communications technologies provide an
    opportunity to reinvigorate Article 19 by empowering
    citizens to seek, receive and impart information and ideas
    instantaneously, across the globe.

    The GII can motivate citizens to become more involved in
    decisionmaking at local and global levels as they organize,
    debate, and share information unrestricted by geographic
    distances or national borders.  Increased citizen awareness
    and involvement will contribute to the spread of democratic
    values.  In particular, the GII has the potential to:

       *       permit individuals with common interests to
    organize themselves in forums to debate public policy
    issues.
       *       provide instant access to a wide range of
    information.
       *       increase citizen oversight of government affairs.
       *       decentralize political decisionmaking.
       *       empower users to become active producers of
    information rather than passive consumers.

    Already, existing online networks empower citizens
    worldwide.  Individuals in war-torn countries have used the
    Internet and other online networks to report human rights
    abuses quickly to the outside world.  When traditional means
    of communication broke down and the war in Sarajevo made it
    impossible for civilians to leave their homes without
    risking their lives, many citizens used online technology to
    communicate with family members, the international press,
    and humanitarian relief agencies.  People from across the
    globe are communicating online to fight censorship,
    scrutinize government, and exchange information and
    strategies on an endless array of subjects.

    However, the GII's inevitable impact on social, political, and
    economic life presents risks as well as opportunities.
    Although the extraordinary potential for a GII has been
    suggested by existing online communications networks, the
    present online community is still quite limited.  Only
    countries with a sophisticated telecommunications
    infrastructure are able to take advantage of online
    technology.  While the Internet has reached more than 150
    countries, two-thirds of the Internet host computers are in
    the U.S., and the 15 countries with the most Internet hosts
    account for 96% of all Internet hosts worldwide.  As a recent
    report noted, "the Internet's diffusion appears to be
    inversely related to the occurrence of humanitarian crises --
    it is precisely those nations that lack a strong presence on
    the Net where wars, famines and dictators abound."

    Even in countries with advanced telecommunications
    infrastructures, only persons with access to equipment and
    training can take advantage of new information resources.
    General illiteracy remains the primary obstacle to computer
    literacy.  And while the GII may foster an unprecedented
    sharing of cultural traditions, current users of online
    technology are primarily American, affluent, white, and
    male.

    Finally, some governments have inhibited online expression
    through limitations on the use of encryption technology,
    restrictive access practices, and content liability laws.
    Just as authoritarian governments control other forms of
    media, governments may restrict access to the GII out of fear
    that citizens will use it to undermine government authority.
    In India, exorbitant licensing fees operate to exclude many
    people from online services, and an archaic telegraph law
    requires online carriers to ensure that no obscene or
    objectionable messages are carried on their networks.  In
    Singapore, users of Teleview, the government's sophisticated
    public interactive information system, must agree not to use
    the service to send "any message which is offensive on moral,
    religious, communal, or political grounds."  Even the United
    States has continued to impose restrictions on the free flow
    of technologies designed to provide users with greater privacy
    and to foster freedom of communication.

    The undersigned organizations have reviewed "The Global
    Information Infrastructure:  Agenda for Cooperation."  We
    understand that the U.S. hopes to achieve support among G-7
    countries for five core principles as the basis for a global
    information infrastructure:  encouraging private investment;
    promoting competition; creating a flexible regulatory
    framework; providing open access to the network for all
    information service providers; and ensuring universal
    service.  We recognize the importance of these principles in
    providing a foundation for a GII and applaud the
    administration's support of universal service.  However, we
    believe that the administration has failed to address some
    core free expression principles.  Absent consideration of
    these principles, the current U.S. position on the future of
    the GII is incomplete.

    To reduce the risks of the GII and to maximize its potential
    to promote democracy, the GII must adopt and expand upon
    international standards of free expression.  The following
    international rights and freedoms are of particular
    relevance to online activity:

    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)

       *       Article 19:  "Everyone has the right to freedom
    of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to
    hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and
    impart information and ideas through any media and
    regardless of frontiers."
       *       Article 7:  "All are equal before the law and are
    entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of
    the law."
       *       Article 12:  "No one shall be subjected to
    arbitrary interference with his privacy, family, home or
    correspondence."
       *       Article 18:  "Everyone has the right to freedom
    of thought, conscience and religion."
       *       Article 20:  "Everyone has the right to freedom
    of peaceful assembly and association."
       *       Article 21:  "Everyone has the right to take part
    in the government of his country."
       *       Article 27:  "Everyone has the right freely to
    participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy
    the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its
    benefits."

    The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
    (ICCPR)

       *       Article 19:  The right "to hold opinions without
    interference" and "to seek, receive and impart information
    and ideas of all kinds, regardless of frontiers . . .
    through any media."
       *       Article 17:  Freedom from "arbitrary or unlawful
    interference with privacy, family, home or correspondence."
       *       Article 18:  "Freedom of thought, conscience and
    religion."
       *       Article 21:  "The right of peaceful assembly."
       *       Article 22:  "The right to freedom of association
    with others."
       *       Article 25:  The right "to take part in the
    conduct of public affairs."
       *       Article 26:  "All persons are equal before the
    law and are entitled without any discrimination to equal
    protection of the law. . . . [T]he law shall prohibit any
    discrimination and guarantee to all persons equal and
    effective protection against discrimination on any ground
    such as race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or
    other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or
    other status."

    All of the G-7 members, including the United States, are
    parties to the ICCPR.  The International Covenant on
    Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, the American
    Convention on Human Rights, the European Convention for the
    Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, and the
    African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights also contain
    important free expression standards which should be
    considered in developing the GII.

    In the strong tradition of free speech protection under the
    First Amendment of the United States Constitution, the U.S.
    should advocate for the universal application of two
    important free expression principles not yet codified in
    international law.  First, the U.S. should advocate for an
    explicit prohibition against prior censorship.  Second, the
    U.S. should promote an explicit prohibition against
    restrictions of free expression by indirect methods such as
    the abuse of government or private controls over newsprint,
    radio broadcasting frequencies, or equipment used in the
    dissemination of information, or by any other means tending
    to impede the communication and circulation of ideas and
    opinions.

    Recommendations:

    The undersigned organizations have identified three
    principal areas of concern regarding free expression and the
    GII:  content regulation, access, and information privacy.
    We recommend the following guidelines to address those
    concerns.

       Content Issues

    Recognizing the mandates of Articles 7, 18, 19, and 20 of
    the UDHR, and Articles 18, 19, 21, 22, and 26 of the ICCPR,
    we call on the Clinton Administration to protect the free
    exchange of information and ideas on the GII.

       *       Prior censorship of online communications should
    be expressly prohibited on the GII.
       *       Any restrictions of online speech content should
    be clearly stated in the law and should be limited to direct
    and immediate incitement of acts of violence.
       *       Laws that restrict online speech content should
    distinguish between the liability of content providers and
    the liability of data carriers.
       *       Online free expression should not be restricted
    by indirect means such as the abuse of government or private
    controls over computer hardware or software,
    telecommunications infrastructure, or other equipment
    essential to the operation of the GII.
       *       The GII should promote noncommercial public
    discourse.
       *       The right of anonymity should be preserved on the
    GII.
       *       The GII should promote the wide dissemination of
    diverse ideas and viewpoints from a wide variety of
    information sources.
       *       The GII should enable individuals to organize and
    form online associations freely and without interference.

       Access Issues

    Recognizing the mandates of Articles 7, 19, 20, 21, and 27
    of the UDHR, and Articles 19, 21, 22, 25, and 26 of the
    ICCPR, we call on the Clinton Administration to support
    broad access by individuals and groups to the GII
    development process, to online training, and to the GII
    itself.

       *       Governments should provide full disclosure of
    information infrastructure development plans and should
    encourage democratic participation in all aspects of the
    development process.
       *       The GII development process should not exclude
    citizens from countries that are currently unstable
    economically, have insufficient infrastructure, or lack
    sophisticated technology.
       *       The GII should provide nondiscriminatory access
    to online technology.
       *       To guarantee a full range of viewpoints, the GII
    should provide access to a diversity of information
    providers, including noncommercial educational, artistic,
    and other public interest service providers.
       *       The GII should provide two-way communication and
    should enable individuals to publish their own information
    and ideas.
       *       To protect diversity of access, the GII should
    have open and interoperable standards.
       *       Deployment of the GII should not have the purpose
    or effect of discriminating on the basis of race, colour,
    sex, language, religion, political or other opinion,
    national or social origin, property, birth or other status.
       *       The GII should encourage citizens to take an
    active role in public affairs by providing access to
    government information.
       *       Governments should encourage widespread use of
    the GII and should strive to provide adequate training.

       Information Privacy

    Recognizing the mandates of Article 12 of the UDHR and
    Article 17 of the ICCPR, we call on the Clinton
    Administration to promote strong information privacy rights
    on the GII.  Online communications are particularly
    susceptible to unauthorized scrutiny.  Encryption technology
    is needed to ensure that individuals and groups may
    communicate without fear of eavesdropping.  Lack of
    information privacy would inhibit online speech and
    unnecessarily limit the diversity of voices on the GII.

       *       Governments should ensure enforceable legal
    protections against unauthorized scrutiny and use by private
    or public entities of personal information on the GII.
       *       Personal information generated on the GII for one
    purpose should not be used for an unrelated purpose or
    disclosed without the person's informed consent.
       *       Individuals should be able to review personal
    information on the GII and to correct inaccurate
    information.
       *       The GII should provide privacy measures for
    transactional information as well as content.
       *       The Clinton Administration should oppose controls
    on the export and import of communications technologies,
    including encryption.

       *       Users of the GII should be able to encrypt their
    communications and information without restriction.
       *       Governments should be permitted to conduct
    investigations on the GII pursuant only to lawful authority
    and subject to judicial review.

    The G-7 Ministerial Conference on the Information Society
    will focus international attention on the development of the
    global information infrastructure.  We encourage the Clinton
    Administration to use this opportunity not simply to promote
    free expression values in principle, but to secure these
    values through specific decisions regarding the development,
    content, control and deployment of the GII.  We request that
    the U.S. add a "sixth principle" for adoption by the G-7
    gathering that explicitly recognizes a commitment to protect
    and promote the free exchange of ideas and information on the
    GII.  The U.S. is seen as the world's champion of the
    fundamental right of free expression, and it should continue
    to carry the free speech banner as it shapes the development
    of the GII.

    Sincerely,

    Gara LaMarche, Director
    Ann Beeson, Bradford Wiley Fellow
    Free Expression Project
    Human Rights Watch

    Marc Rotenberg
    Executive Director
    Electronic Privacy Information Center

    Ira Glasser
    Executive Director
    American Civil Liberties Union

    Judith F. Krug
    Director, Office for Intellectual Freedom
    American Library Association

    Sandy Coliver
    Law Program Director
    Article 19 International Centre Against Censorship

    Jerry Berman
    Executive Director
    Center for Democracy and Technology

    Andrew Taubman
    Executive Director
    Electronic Frontier Foundation

    Arthur J. Kropp
    President
    People for the American Way

    Simon Davies
    Director General
    Privacy International


    cc:  The Honorable Ronald Brown
         United States Secretary of Commerce


___________________________________________________________________
David Banisar ([email protected])       * 202-544-9240 (tel)
Electronic Privacy Information Center * 202-547-5482 (fax)
666 Pennsylvania Ave, SE, Suite 301  * ftp/gopher/wais cpsr.org
Washington, DC 20003                * HTTP://epic.digicash.com/epic

------------------------------

Date: Sun, 26 Feb 1995 22:51:01 CDT
From: CuD Moderators <[email protected]>
Subject: File 3--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 26 Feb, 1995)

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 a one-line message:  SUB CUDIGEST  your name
Send it to [email protected] or [email protected]
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.

To UNSUB, send a one-line message:   UNSUB <your name>
Send it to [email protected] or [email protected]
(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)

Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;"
On Delphi in the General Discussion database of the Internet SIG;
on RIPCO BBS (312) 528-5020 (and via Ripco on  internet);
and on Rune Stone BBS (IIRGWHQ) (203) 832-8441.
CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
1:11/70; unlisted nodes and points welcome.

EUROPE:  In BELGIUM: Virtual Access BBS:  +32-69-844-019 (ringdown)
        In ITALY: Bits against the Empire BBS:  +39-464-435189
        In LUXEMBOURG: ComNet BBS:  +352-466893

 UNITED STATES:  etext.archive.umich.edu (192.131.22.8)  in /pub/CuD/
                 ftp.eff.org (192.88.144.4) in /pub/Publications/CuD/
                 aql.gatech.edu (128.61.10.53) in /pub/eff/cud/
                 world.std.com in /src/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
                 uceng.uc.edu in /pub/wuarchive/doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
                 wuarchive.wustl.edu in /doc/EFF/Publications/CuD/
 EUROPE:         nic.funet.fi in pub/doc/cud/ (Finland)
                 ftp.warwick.ac.uk in pub/cud/ (United Kingdom)

 JAPAN:          ftp.glocom.ac.jp /mirror/ftp.eff.org/Publications/CuD
                 ftp://www.rcac.tdi.co.jp/pub/mirror/CuD

The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
Cu Digest WWW site at:
 URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu:80/~cudigest

COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
diverse views.  CuD material may  be reprinted for non-profit as long
as the source is cited. Authors hold a presumptive copyright, and
they should be contacted for reprint permission.  It is assumed that
non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
specified.  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 #7.20
************************************