EFFector       Vol. 14, No. 18       Aug 8, 2001     [email protected]

  A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation     ISSN 1062-9424

   In the 178th Issue of EFFector (now with over 28,500 subscribers!):

    * Donate Your Tax Refund to EFF!
    * Join EFF in Fundraising Dinner with Ed Felten in DC
    * ALERT: Tell the DoJ to Drop the Charges Against Dmitry!
    * EFF Asks California Court to Quash "John Doe" Subpoena
    * California Court Asserts Jurisdiction Over Non-resident Internet
      Publisher
    * Administrivia

  For more information on EFF activities & alerts: http://www.eff.org

  To join EFF or make an additional donation:
  http://www.eff.org/support/
  EFF is a member-supported non-profit. Please sign up as a member
  today!
    _________________________________________________________________

Donate your tax refund to the EFF!

 Free the Internet with help from President Bush & Co.

  We need your help now more than ever! Please make a US-tax-deductible
  contribution to the Electronic Frontier Foundation!

   http://www.eff.org/support/
    _________________________________________________________________


Join EFF in Fundraising Dinner with Ed Felten

 Washington, D.C., Aug. 15.

  Join the Electronic Frontier Foundation in celebration of the
  presentation of Professor Ed Felten's "Reading Between the Lines:
  Lessons from the SDMI Challenge" at the USENIX Security Symposium in
  Washington, DC, on August 15th, 2001! Come and meet Professor Felten,
  his research team, and legal team, and support EFF's legal battle to
  get this paper presented. We will be dining at the prestigious Red
  Sage restaurant after the panel discussion on SDMI/DMCA, which runs
  from 6:30-7pm ET, on the evening of August 15th.

  Time's running out! There are only 10 spots left, so sign up early!
  Contact Contact Katie by e-mail at [email protected] or by phone at +1
  415-436-9333 x104 to reserve a spot. The price of admission to the
  celebration with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Ed Felten, his
  research team, and the legal team is $250, which includes dinner and
  wine at the legendary Red Sage restaurant.

  The Red Sage is just around the block from the JW Marriott Hotel. We
  will be gathering in the Continental room at 7:30pm, and dinner will
  begin at 8:00pm.

  Come support the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) in defending our
  rights to think, speak, and share our ideas, thoughts, and needs using
  new technologies!
    _________________________________________________________________


ALERT: Tell the DoJ to Drop the Charges Against Dmitry!

 Letter-writing campaign to set Sklyarov free for real

   Introduction:

  Dmitry Sklyarov, a Russian programmer & cryptographic researcher
  visiting the US for a conference was arrested in Las Vegas on charges
  of "trafficking in a product designed to circumvent copyright
  protection measures" in violation of the anticircumention provisions
  of the questionably-constitutional Digital Millennium Copyright Act
  (DMCA), for helping create software that decrypts the Adobe eBook
  format to bypass hampering restrictions that publishers may impose.
  On. Mon., Aug. 6, Dmitry was released on bail pending trial in Silicon
  Valley, must remain in California, and has a pre-trial hearing slated
  for Aug. 23, 2001.

   What YOU Can Do:

  Write to, call, fax and e-mail the US Attorney General's office, and
  if you have time that of several other Justice Department officials.
  You can use the sample letter and phone script below, and the contact
  information that follows it.

     Sample Letter

  This is just a sample. It will be most effective if you send something
  similar but in your own words

    Dear Attorney General Ashcroft:

    I want to express my dismay and disappointment with the Justice
    Department that it arrested and plans to prosecute visiting Russian
    programmer Dmitry Sklyarov. This is a travesty of justice, all in
    the name of protecting software industry interests at the cost of
    basic civil liberties. This is fast becoming an international
    incident, with foreign academics dropping out of US-based research
    programs and conferences. Organized protests have been held around
    the country and in Moscow. This is a major embarassment for "the
    Home of the Free" and a grave injustice to an innocent foreign
    national.

    Sklyarov and the company he works for did nothing wrong, and
    nothing illegal under US or Russian law. Pointing out security
    weaknesses in poorly-designed systems is part and parcel of the
    computer security field. And helping people convert content from
    one format to another that they can use is not a crime.  The
    complainant, Adobe, has even backed out of the case, leaving no
    alleged victim for the Dept. of Justice to defend in the first place.

    The anticircumvention provisions of the Digital Millennium
    Copyright Act (DMCA) being used against him were clearly never
    intended to censor software with substantial legitimate uses, or
    research, in this way, as you yourself pointed out in the
    Congressional record, as a Senator when the DMCA was being
    considered for passage.

    The charges should be dropped immediately, and Dmitry should be
    allowed to return to his family in Russia where he belongs.

    Sincerely,
    [Your full name]
    [Your address]

  [Change "as you yourself" to "as Attorney General Ashcroft himself" in
  versions to be sent to Ashcroft deputies & others]

     Sample Phone Script

  This too would be best recast in your own words.

    I would like to address some comments to Attorney General Ashcroft.

    I want to express my dismay and disappointment with the Justice
    Department that it arrested and plans to prosecute visiting Russian
    programmer Dmitry Sklyarov. The provisions of the Digital
    Millennium Copyright Act being used against him were clearly never
    intended to censor research in this way. The charges should be
    dropped immediately, and Dmitry should be allowed to return to his
    family in Russia where he belongs.

    Thank you.

  [Probably the best approximation of the pronunciation of "Dmitry
  Sklyarov" that most English-speakers can muster will be "DiMEE-tree
  Skluh-YAH-roff", we're told, though it isn't exact.]

     Who to contact

  It is most effective to send postal letters, faxes, phone calls, and
  e-mail, in descending order, to the head of the DoJ, the Criminal
  Division deputy, the Deputy Assitant in charge of computer crimes, and
  the Northern District of California US Attorney, in descending order.
  If you have only a little time to spare, please at least fax A.G.
  Ashcroft. If you have more time to spare, please work your way down
  the list, sending letters, faxes and email, and calling, each
  government representative in turn (some of the numbers are the same,
  but you can call/fax and address your comments to each person
  separately). For e-mail, mention who it is addressed to in the subject
  line or in a salutation at the top of the message body. If you don't
  have writer's cramp yet, try sending letters-to-the-editor to your
  local (and even some national) papers and other media outlets (see
  last issue of EFFector for more information on how to do that.)

  John Ashcroft
  Attorney General
  US Deptartment of Justice
  950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
  Washington, DC 20530-0001

  Fax: +1 202-514-6113 (Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section)
  attn: AG Ashcroft

  Phone: +1 202-514-2601 (Criminal Division)
  "I would like to address some comments to Attorney General
  Ashcroft..."

  E-mail: [email protected]
  attn: AG Ashcroft


  Extras:

  Michael Chertoff
  Assistant Attorney General
  Criminal Division
  950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
  Washington, DC 20530-0001

  Fax: +1 202-514-6113 (Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section)
  attn: AAG Chertoff

  Phone: +1 202-514-2601 (Criminal Division)
  "I would like to address some comments to Assitant AG Chertoff..."

  E-mail: [email protected]
  attn: AAG Chertoff

  Mary Ellen Warlow
  Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General
  US Deptartment of Justice
  Criminal Division
  950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
  Washington, DC 20530-0001

  Fax: +1 202-514-6113 (Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section)
  attn: DAAG Warlow

  Phone: +1 202-514-1026 (Computer Crime & Intellectual Property
  Section)
  "I would like to address some comments to Deputy Assitant AG
  Warlow..."

  E-mail: [email protected]> attn: DAAG Warlow

  David Shapiro
  Acting US Attorney / Criminal Chief
  450 Golden Gate Ave., Box 36055,
  San Francisco, CA 94102

  Phone: +1 415-436-7200
  "I would like to address some comments to US Attorney Shapiro..."

  Fax: +1 415-436-7234
  attn: US Atty. Shapiro

  E-mail: no address known


     Tips:

  Please remember to be polite but firm. Ranting, swearing,
  incohesiveness or lack of clear resolve will not make a good
  impression. Try to make it brief (1-3 paragraphs written, or a few
  sentences spoken) and clear, without getting into nitpicky details.
  "Super-activists" may also wish to send similar communiques to the
  office of the President, the Speaker of the House, the President
  Pro-Tempore of the Senate, and the Majority and Minority leaders of
  both houses of Congress. See EFF's "Contacting Congress and Other
  Government Representatives" Factsheet for more information:
    http://www.eff.org/congress/

     Activists Around the World

  If you are not a US resident, the US Department of Justice is unlikely
  to care about your opinion. It will be more effective for you to write
  to your country's equivalent of our Department of State (i.e., the
  branch that covers international diplomacy) and urge them to express
  their concerns to the US Dept. of State, and the US President (who
  ultimately controls the Justice Department). Ask your government to
  let our government know that prosecution of innocent foreign nationals
  under injust and questionably-valid laws is not going to go unnoticed
  anywhere, and can only harm trade and other relations.

   Background:

  For more information about the US v. Sklyarov Case see:
    http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Sklyarov/

  For yet more information on the DMCA see:
    http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/

  Frequently Asked Questions (and Answers) About the US v. Sklyarov
  Case:
    http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Sklyarov/us_v_sklyarov_faq.html

  For more information on the grassroots effort to free Dmitry Sklyarov,
  see:
    http://www.freesklyarov.org/

  To join the free-sklyarov mailing list, see:
    http://zork.net/mailman/listinfo/free-sklyarov/

   About EFF:

  The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil liberties
  organization working to protect rights in the digital world. Founded
  in 1990, EFF actively encourages and challenges industry and
  government to support free expression, privacy, and openness in the
  information society. EFF is a member-supported organization and
  maintains one of the most linked-to Web sites in the world:
    http://www.eff.org

   Media Contacts:

    Will Doherty, EFF Online Activist / Press Relations
    [email protected]
    +1 415-436-9333 x111

    Robin Gross, EFF Staff Attorney - Intellectual Property
    [email protected]
    +1 415-863-5459

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


EFF Asks California Court to Quash "John Doe" Subpoena

 Argues that High Standard is Required Before Terminating First Amendment
 Rights of Anonymous Internet Speakers.

   For Immediate Release: Aug. 7, 2001

   Contacts:

    Lee Tien, EFF Senior Staff Attorney,
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x102

    Lauren Gelman, EFF Public Policy Dir.
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333

  San Francisco, CA - A California state court will hear oral argument
  this week in a case that may determine the legal standard California
  will apply to subpoenas requesting the identity of anonymous Internet
  speakers.

  The case involves a subpoena issued by Pre-Paid Legal Services Inc. of
  Oklahoma (PPLS) requesting the identity of eight posters on Yahoo!'s
  "Pre-Paid" message board. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
  represents two of the J. Does whose identities were subpoenaed, in a
  dispute between PPLS and another (known) party.

  PPLS argues that it needs the Does' identities to determine whether
  they are subject to a voluntary injunction preventing former sales
  associates who work for a competitor from revealing PPLS's trade
  secrets. The messages cited by PPLS, however, indicate only that the
  eight Does were critical of the company and how it treats its
  associates. EFF will argue that revealing the identity of these
  speakers will give PPLS the opportunity to punish its critics for
  speaking out against it.

  "Without proper safeguards on Doe subpoenas, a company can use a court
  as a detective agency to ferret out its critics," said EFF's Lee Tien.
  "We hope that the court will adopt a standard that protects anonymous
  speech against such subpoenas."

  Tien will ask the court to apply a four part test adopted by the
  federal court in Doe v. 2TheMart.com, Inc., 140 F. Supp.2d 1088 (W.D.
  Wash., 2001) ("2TheMart") to determine whether a subpoena for the
  identity of non-party Internet speakers should be upheld. That test
  asks:
   1. Was the subpoena brought in good faith?
   2. Does the information relate to a core claim or defense?
   3. Is the identifying information directly and materially relevant to
      that claim or defense?
   4. Is the information available from other sources?

  The 2TheMart decision was issued as a result of a motion to quash
  brought jointly by the EFF and the ACLU of Washington on behalf of a
  J. Doe whose identity had been subpoenaed by 2TheMart.com, Inc. "We
  were extremely pleased that the court set such a high standard for
  protecting the identity of anonymous online speakers in 2TheMart,"
  said Lauren Gelman, EFF's director of public policy. "EFF will
  continue to defend the rights of J. Does to speak anonymously on the
  Internet until companies realize that they can no longer turn to the
  courts when they want to silence their critics."

  The case will be heard on Friday, August 10th, at 9:00 AM, before the
  Honorable Neil Cabrinha in Department 18 of the Santa Clara County
  Superior Court.

  The documents filed in the case (PPLS v. Sturtz) are available at:
    http://www.eff.org/Legal/Cases/PrePaid_Legal_v_Sturtz/

  More information on the 2TheMart case can be found at:
    http://www.eff.org/Legal/Cases/2TheMart_case/

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


California Court Asserts Jurisdiction Over Non-resident Internet Publisher

   For Immediate Release: August 8, 2001

   Contact:

    Robin Gross, EFF Staff Attorney - Intellectual Property,
      [email protected],
      +1 415-436-9333 x112

    Lee Tien, EFF Senior Staff Attorney,
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x102

  On August 7th, the California Sixth Appellate District issued an
  opinion denying Matthew Pavlovich's motion to dismiss the case against
  him for lack of personal jurisdiction over him.

  Pavlovich, who was a college student in Indiana and now lives in
  Texas, claims postings made to the LiVID mailing list, which he ran
  from his home computer should not subject him to defending himself in
  California. LiVID is an open source development team working to build
  a DVD player compatible with the Linux operating system that could
  compete with the movie studios' monopoly on DVD players. In January
  2000, a California judge issued an injunction banning dozens of
  individuals, including Pavlovich, from publishing DeCSS computer code.

  Today, the court held that because Pavlovich knew the movie business
  was in California, publishing information that might have an effect on
  its profits was a sufficient connection to find Pavlovich within the
  court's purview.

  This ruling magnifies the ability of Hollywood or other businesses to
  successfully sue anyone in the world who publishes information on the
  Internet which the movie studios claim could hurt their profits.
  Pavlovich is considering an appeal of the order to the California
  Supreme Court on Constitutional Due Process grounds.

  Text of ruling:
    http://www.eff.org/Cases/DVDCCA_case/
  20010807_pavlovich_appelate_ruling.html

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


Administrivia

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