EFFector       Vol. 14, No. 21       Aug 24, 2001     [email protected]

  A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation     ISSN 1062-9424

   In the 181st Issue of EFFector (now with over 28,700 subscribers!):

    * Russian Programmer to Appear in California Court
    * EFF Argues Against DVD Software Ban
    * EFF Music Fest in Golden Gate Park
    * ALERT: Opt Out of "Credit Spam" with a Phone Call
    * EFF Welcomes Board, Staff Members
    * EFF at LinuxWorld Conference
    * 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 nonprofit. Please sign up as a member today!
    _________________________________________________________________

Russian Programmer to Appear in California Court

 Dmitry Sklyarov Issues Statement Thanking Supporters

   Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Advisory

   For Immediate Release: August 24, 2001

   Contacts:

    Robin Gross, EFF Intellectual Property Attorney,
      [email protected]
      +1 415 436-9333 x112 (office),
      +1 415-637-5310 (cell)

    Cindy Cohn, EFF Legal Director
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x108 (office),
      +1 415-823-2148 (cell)

  San Jose, California - Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov will appear
  in a California federal court this Thursday, August 30, for an
  arraignment on charges of trafficking in a copyright circumvention
  device. For programming a software application that appears to be
  legal in Moscow where he wrote it, Sklyarov -- who is out of custody
  on $50,000 bail -- faces a potential prison term of five years and a
  $500,000 fine.

  The arraignment is scheduled for 9:30 AM Pacific time with US
  Magistrate Judge Richard Seeborg presiding, in courtroom 4, 5th floor
  of the Federal District Court for the Northern District of California,
  San Jose Branch, 280 South 1st Street, in San Jose, California.

  Well-dressed observers plan to attend the arraignment and nonviolent
  protests are scheduled in Moscow (Russia), London (England), Boston,
  Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Black Rock City, Nevada. The
  San Francisco protest will likely be well-attended since it will start
  during the Linux World conference in front of the Moscone Center at
  11:30 AM on August 30.

  Dmitry Skylarov issued the following statement thanking the activists
  who have taken up his cause:

    To everyone who spent their time helping me:

    During the three weeks I spent in jail I learned that many people
    were protesting against my arrest. I also learned that Adobe
    withdrew its support of my arrest after meeting with EFF. But I was
    not able to see that or to read letters and articles about my case.

    After being released from jail on August 6, I was really surprised
    and impressed by the scale of the action and the number of people
    involved in the protests. I'm not an IT superman. I'm just a
    programmer, like many others. It was unexpected by me that so many
    people would support a guy from another country that nobody heard
    about before.

    Your support means a lot to me and my family and makes a difference
    for all.

    This experience is going to change me in a profound way that I
    cannot even appreciate fully as yet. Thank you very much.

    -- Dmitry Sklyarov

  Directions and map to San Jose Federal Building:

http://www.cand.uscourts.gov/cand/CourtInfo.nsf/6f311f8841e7da2488256405006827f0/f3b46c67b334132e88256682007f6ba9?OpenDocument

  Background on the Sklyarov case:
    http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Sklyarov/

  Calendar of protests related to the Sklyarov case:
    http://freesklyarov.org/calendar/
    _________________________________________________________________


EFF Argues Against DVD Software Ban

 Prior Restraint of Internet Publishers Unconstitutional

   Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Release

   For Immediate Release: Thursday, August 23, 2001

   Contacts:

    David Greene, FAP Executive Director / Staff Counsel
      [email protected]
      +1 510-208-7744

    Robin Gross, EFF Intellectual Property Attorney
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x112
      +1 415-637-5310 (cell)

  San Jose, California - A California appeals court today heard a debate
  over whether a lower court should have ordered dozens of Internet
  publishers to "stop the presses" pending the outcome of a California
  trade secrets trial.

  In January 2000, as part of a trade secrets case brought by the motion
  picture industry, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge William
  Elfving ordered Andrew Bunner and numerous other defendants to halt
  Internet publication of DeCSS pending the outcome of the trial. DeCSS
  is free software that allows people to play DVDs without technological
  restrictions, such as platform limitations and region codes, that are
  imposed by movie studios.

  Today Bunner, represented by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
  and the First Amendment Project (FAP), argued on appeal that this
  injunction violates his free speech rights under the First Amendment
  and the California Constitution. The argument took place in San Jose
  before three judges of the Sixth District California Court of Appeals.

  "It is well established that publishers of computer code are protected
  by the First Amendment. In granting the injunction against Mr. Bunner,
  the Superior Court failed to adequately consider Bunner's First
  Amendment rights," said David Greene, Executive Director and staff
  counsel to the First Amendment Project, who argued the appeal on
  behalf of Mr. Bunner. "The mere invocation of 'trade secrets' does not
  trump a publisher's First Amendment rights."

  During today's oral arguments, the judges clearly appreciated the
  important First Amendment issues raised and asked probing questions of
  both sides. Upon completion of the oral arguments, the court took the
  matter under submission. A decision is expected in approximately 4-8
  weeks.

  Background on the DVD Copy Control Assoc., Inc. v. Bunner case:
    http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/DVDCCA_case/

 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/

 About FAP:

  The First Amendment Project is a nonprofit, public interest law firm
  and advocacy organization dedicated to protecting and promoting
  freedom of information, expression, and petition. FAP provides advice,
  educational materials, and legal representation to its core
  constituency of activists, journalists, and artists in service of
  these fundamental liberties and has a website at:
    http://thefirstamendment.org/

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________



Electronic Frontier Foundation Music Fest in Golden Gate Park

 Wavy Gravy, John Perry Barlow Host "Share In" for Artists' Rights

   Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Release

   For Immediate Release: Thursday, August 23, 2001

   Contacts:

    Katina Bishop, EFF Offline Activist / Education Dir.
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x101

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

  San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and ten Bay
  Area bands invite you to an open air concert for everyone who loves
  music from to 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM on Saturday, September 8, 2001. EFF's
  "Share In" will feature musicians performing in Golden Gate Park near
  the intersection of Haight and Stanyan streets. Artists participating
  in this event will permit recording of their performances by those in
  attendance in support of EFF's Open Audio License (OAL).

  Ten bands will play in two stage areas in the meadow. Hosting the main
  stage are Wavy Gravy and EFF co-founder John Perry Barlow. Musicians
  performing at the event include singer/songwriter Adrian West, the
  jazzy Alex Buccat Quartet featuring Sanaz, folk/pop band Atticus
  Scout, high-altitude bluegrass string band Hot Buttered Rum, soulful
  solo performer Michael Musika, the political satirists of The Planning
  Commission, Berkeley-based party band Shady Lady, classical Indian
  instrumentalists Srini and Raja, acoustic rock performer Vanessa Lowe,
  and singer/songwriter Wendy Haynes.

  EFF developed the Open Audio License to help artists share their work
  with others without giving up the recognition they deserve for
  creating the art. Based on the open source and free software
  initiatives for software development, the OAL encourages artists to
  share with one another and their fans.

  Adoption of the OAL does not mean that an artist goes unrewarded for
  his or her work. On the contrary, the OAL permits artists to share
  single tracks or performances and gain widespread recognition for
  their work without relying on intermediaries. EFF encourages new
  models of music distribution in the digital world that benefit the
  artists themselves. One of the great qualities of the Internet is that
  the overhead for packaging and distributing music, which is where most
  of the money is currently spent by record companies, is drastically
  reduced. EFF is committed to developing tools that empower artists to
  take control over their own art and to be compensated appropriately
  for their works.

  EFF believes that many of the laws and technologies being developed
  today to protect intellectual property actually harm the public's
  First Amendment and fair use rights and make criminals of people doing
  perfectly legitimate things. We are striving to help artists realize
  the full potential of the Internet for reaching their fans by
  challenging restrictive laws in courtrooms and through fun public
  education events, like this one.

  In addition to the music, the Share In will showcase booths with the
  performing artists' music and tie-dye Share In T-shirts. There will
  also be booths hosted by EFF and outside sponsors, including artists'
  rights organizations and independent labels. Ben and Jerry's will
  donate a portion of the event's ice cream sales to EFF.

  This is an event for all ages. Bring your family and friends, kids
  welcome. Hear great music, enjoy Ben and Jerry's ice cream, and
  support a great cause.

  Event sponsors include: Guitar Center, Berkman Center for Law and
  Technology, Future of Music Coalition, and the SF Bay Guardian.

  Information on EFF's Campaign for Audiovisual Free Expression and the
  Open Audio License is available at:
    http://www.eff.org/cafe

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


ALERT: Opt Out of "Credit Spam" with a Phone Call

   Electronic Frontier Foundation ACTION ALERT

   (Issued: Aug. 23, 2001 / Expires: Sep. 23, 2001)

 Introduction:

  The 1999 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), a financial services
  "overhaul" law, included certain privacy provisions regulating
  financial services institutions and credit bureaus. The statute,
  unfortunately, did nothing to prevent consumer credit reporting
  companies -- such as Experian, Trans Union, Equifax/TRW, and Novus --
  from providing your credit and contact information to credit card
  companies for marketing purposes.

  The GLBA did provide the right to "opt out" of this consumer credit
  reporting information disclosure with a simple, free, phone call.

  The credit bureaus have not widely advertised their Automated Opt-Out
  System, already in operation for several years. This system exists
  only for opting out of lists of names that have been "screened" to
  receive "pre-approved" credit card offers.

  NOTE: This credit bureau opt-out capability has nothing to do with the
  July 1 GLBA provisions, which are related to the privacy notices you
  have received from your bank(s). Please read and act on those bank
  notices, too, as they contain additional disclosure opt-out mechanisms
  that apply to financial services.

  A recent anonymous "alert" about the GLBA has circulated widely on the
  Internet, claiming that on July 1, 2001, provisions of the GLBA went
  into effect that would allow credit reporting companies to provide
  detailed credit history about any American to "anyone who requests
  it", but that consumers can opt out of this disclosure. In truth,
  credit agencies are subject to a number restrictions in this area, as
  are banks and other financial institutions, the actual targets of the
  July 1 legal restrictions.

 What YOU Can Do Now:

    * Call the credit agencies' 1-888-567-8688 number to opt out of
      postal and telemarketing (and possibly e-mail) "credit spam".
      Listen carefully and wait until given the option to press "3" (do
      not press "1" - this will only opt you out for 2 years, while
      option 3 will opt you out permanently). You will be prompted for
      your phone number, to confirm your address, for your first & last
      name and middle initial (spoken and spelled), and for your Social
      Security Number (Taxpayer ID Number for non-citizens), in that
      order, and should thereafter receive a confirmation by postal mail
      within a few weeks. At the end of the automated process you'll be
      given the option to opt out additional family members.
    * Read and act on the (differing and unrelated) opt-out instructions
      you received in the mail from your financial institutions. If you
      have lost these notices or want more information, the Privacy
      Rights NOW ampaign has details:
        http://www.privacyrightsnow.org/optout.htm
    * Spread the word. Please feel free to pass on this alert (to
      individuals you know and to appropriate forums only).
    * If you receive an inaccurate "July 1 credit alert", please do NOT
      forward it, and if possible instead forward this EFF correction
      and alert to any known recipients and senders of the inaccurate
      alert. (The inaccurate alert typically begins, "As of July 1st,
      the four major credit bureaus"..., and may have a subject line of
      "Keep your privacy".)
    * Contact your legislators about privacy issues, and urge them to
      pass stronger privacy protections, against both corporate and
      governmental abuse of your personally-identifiable information.
      For information on how to contact your legislators and other
      government officials, see the EFF "Contacting Congress and Other
      Policymakers" guide at:
        http://www.eff.org/congress.html
    * Join EFF! For membership information see:
        http://www.eff.org/support/

 Privacy Campaign:

  This alert about the little-known credit spam opt-out system is part
  of a larger EFF campaign to highlight how extensively companies and
  governmental agencies share and use your personal information online
  and offline, and what you can do about it.

  Check the EFF Privacy Now! Campaign website regularly for additional
  alerts and news:
    http://www.eff.org/privnow/

  For more information about the GLBA, see:
    http://search.yahoo.com/bin/search?p=Gramm-Leach-Bliley

 Additional resources:

  EFF Topics - Privacy:
    http://www.eff.org/Privacy/

  Privacy Rights NOW campaign to petition FTC to improve financial &
  credit privacy regs:
    http://www.privacyrightsnow.org/

  Privacy Rights Clearinghouse:
    http://www.privacyrights.org/

  Electronic Privacy Information Center:
    http://www.epic.org/

  Contact:

   Lauren Gelman, EFF Public Policy Director
     [email protected]
     +1 415 436 9333 x106

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


Electronic Frontier Foundation Welcomes Board, Staff Members

 Place, von Lohmann, Schoen Join Online Civil Liberties Group

   Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Release

   For Immediate Release: Friday, August 24, 2001

   Contacts:

    Shari Steele, EFF Executive Director
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x103

    John Place, EFF Board Member
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333

    Fred von Lohmann, EFF Senior Intellectual Property Attorney
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x123

    Seth Schoen, EFF Staff Technologist
      [email protected]
      +1 415-436-9333 x107

  San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) welcomes John
  Place onto its Board of Directors, as well as new staff members Fred
  von Lohmann as Senior Intellectual Property Attorney, and Seth Schoen
  as Staff Technologist. These additions reinforce EFF's standing as the
  leading civil liberties organization working to protect rights in the
  digital world.

  "I am so proud to see the organization bringing in such amazing
  talent," said EFF Executive Director Shari Steele. "These three people
  have lots of wisdom and a strong commitment to civil liberties. I'm
  really looking forward to working with all of them."

  EFF Board Member John Place served as Yahoo! Inc.'s General Counsel
  between 1997 and 2001 and was the first in-house attorney hired by the
  Internet company. There he managed a department that eventually grew
  to over 55 attorneys worldwide and was responsible for the company's
  legal affairs as well as its domestic and international public policy
  and government relations efforts. Place, who lives in the Silicon
  Valley with his wife and two children, also worked as Senior Corporate
  Counsel at Adobe Systems Incorporated. He holds a J.D. from Stanford
  Law School and a B.S. in Economics from San Jose State University. The
  Los Angeles Daily Journal named Place as one of the 100 most
  influential attorneys in California in both 1999 and 2000.

  "Our nation was founded on liberty," commented Place. "I am proud to
  join EFF in its pioneering work to ensure that our historic freedoms
  continue to thrive in the digital age."

  Before hiring on as EFF's Senior Intellectual Property Attorney, Fred
  von Lohmann researched the implications of peer-to-peer technologies
  on the future of copyright law, serving as a Visiting Researcher with
  the Berkeley Center for Law & Technology, a research center associated
  with the Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at
  Berkeley. Prior to Boalt, Mr. von Lohmann practiced law with Morrison
  & Foerster, a large international law firm based in San Francisco. He
  earned his J.D. degree from Stanford Law School, where he helped
  organize Stanford's first-ever course on legal issues in cyberspace.
  As a law clerk to Judge Betty B. Fletcher of the Ninth Circuit Court
  of Appeals, he assisted the judge with Bernstein v. Department of
  State, the EFF's ground-breaking case relating to encryption and free
  expression.

  Mr. von Lohmann will drive EFF's effort to legitimize reverse
  engineering efforts by software programmers. He will also focus on
  issues arising from the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and
  emerging peer-to-peer technologies. He joins EFF staff attorney Robin
  Gross and EFF board members Larry Lessig and Pamela Samuelson,
  rounding out the EFF intellectual property team.

  "As Dmitry Sklyarov's prosecution illustrates, intellectual property
  laws have become dangerously unbalanced, threatening both free
  expression and innovation," said von Lohmann. "EFF saw this before
  most, and I'm proud to be a part of its efforts to restore some of the
  balance we've lost."

  Seth Schoen is creating the position of EFF Staff Technologist,
  helping other technologists understand the civil liberties
  implications of their work; EFF staff better understand the underlying
  technology related to EFF's legal work; and the public understand what
  the technology products they use really do. Schoen comes to EFF from
  Linuxcare, where he worked for two years as a senior consultant. While
  at Linuxcare, Schoen helped create the Linuxcare Bootable Business
  Card CD-ROM. Prior to Linuxcare, Schoen worked at AtreNet, the
  National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center at Lawrence
  Berkeley National Laboratory, and Toronto Dominion Bank. Schoen
  attended the University of California at Berkeley with a Chancellor's
  Scholarship.

  Schoen remarked, "I've been a fan of EFF for many years. I'm honored
  to become a part of the organization and to have the opportunity to
  work with such accomplished civil liberties advocates."

  For more information about EFF's staff, board of directors and key
  volunteers, see:
    http://www.eff.org/contact/

                                 - end -
    _________________________________________________________________


EFF at LinuxWorld Conference

  Come visit the Electronic Frontier Foundation in person at LinuxWorld
  2001, August 28-30. We will be taking donations for the important work
  we do and for the ever-popular EFF bumper stickers. It's a great
  opportunity to talk with EFF staff about all things EFF. For new
  members who join on the spot - and for those who ask nicely - we have
  a special giveaway for the Linux community. We will also have candy if
  you're hungry.

  EFF has 50 free exhibits-only passes to LinuxWorld available. Simply
  email [email protected] for yours - first come, first served.

  EFF at LinuxWorld Location:
  Booth #562
  Moscone Convention Center
  747 Howard Street
  San Francisco CA 94103 USA

  For more information, please see:
    http://www.linuxworldexpo.com

  *****

  Free Dmitry Party at LinuxWorld

  If you're in San Francisco on Wednesday August 29, come check out
  representatives of EFF at a fundraising party for Dmitry Sklyarov. EFF
  board member Lawrence Lessig will be speaking, as will Free Software
  Foundation President Richard Stallman. And there will be beer, music,
  and much merriment!

  Located close to the LinuxWorld Expo:
  201 Ritch Street, 2nd Floor
  San Francisco
  7:30 PM to 12 midnight

  For more information please see:
    http://www.allseer.com/dmitryfundraisingparty/

  *****
  Free Dmitry March from LinuxWorld to Federal Building

  While you're at LinuxWorld, join EFF members, the Free-Sklyarov
  mailing list, and the community at large in a protest march to the
  Federal Building in San Francisco starting at at 11:30 AM on Thursday,
  August 30. Protesters will gather at Moscone North on the public
  sidewalk on Howard Street between 3rd and 4th Streets and marching
  approximately nine blocks to the Federal Building.

  For more information please see:
    http://zork.net/pipermail/free-sklyarov/2001-August/003774.html
  and
    http://freesklyarov.org/
    _________________________________________________________________


Administrivia

  EFFector is published by:

  The Electronic Frontier Foundation
  454 Shotwell Street
  San Francisco CA 94110-1914 USA
  +1 415 436 9333 (voice)
  +1 415 436 9993 (fax)
  http://www.eff.org/

  Editors:
  Katina Bishop, EFF Education & Offline Activism Director
  Stanton McCandlish, EFF Technical Director/Webmaster
  [email protected]

  To Join EFF online, or make an additional donation, go to:
  http://www.eff.org/support/

  Membership & donation queries: [email protected]
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    _________________________________________________________________