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- EFFector Online Volume 5 No. 12 7/9/1993 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
- In this issue:
- EFF Has Moved
- Online Congressional Hearing
- To Be at Liberty, by John Perry Barlow
- Announcement of Group Meeting
- Request for Help from Canadian Readers
- Job Openings at EFF
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
-
- *************
- EFF Has Moved
- *************
- On July 2, EFF moved. Please note our new address and telephone numbers:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1001 G Street, N.W.
- Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001
- 202/347-5400 voice
- 202/393-5509 fax
-
- Our e-mail address is the same, eff@eff.org.
-
-
- ****************************
- Online Congressional Hearing
- ****************************
- On July 26 at 9:30AM EDT, the Subcommittee on Telecommunications
- and Finance of the U.S. House of Representatives will hold the first
- Congressional Hearing ever held over a computer network. The oversight
- hearing on "The Role of Government in Cyberspace" will take place in
- the Grand Ballroom of the National Press Club at 14th and F Streets,
- N.W., Washington, D.C. The hearing is open to the public. An open
- house will be held from 3-5PM on the same day in the same location and
- is also open to the public.
-
- Chairman Markey has asked that this historic occasion demonstrate
- the potential and diversity of the global Internet. Thirty Sparcstations
- will be in the hearing room, allowing members of Congress, staff, and
- their guests to read e-mail, use Gopher menus, read testimony in WAIS
- databases, browse the World Wide Web, and otherwise use the resources
- of the global Internet as part of the hearing.
-
- Some witnesses for the hearing will testify remotely, sending audio
- and video over the Internet. Audio and video of the hearing will also
- be multicast over the Multicast Backbone (MBONE). We are hoping that
- C-SPAN and other traditional media will also carry the event. *MORE
- DETAILS ON MBONE AND OTHER WAYS TO WATCH THE HEARINGS REMOTELY WILL BE
- FORTHCOMING SHORTLY.*
-
- One of the primary points that we are hoping to demonstrate is
- the diversity and size of the Internet. We have therefore established
- an electronic mail address by which people on the Internet can communicate
- with the Subcommittee before and during the hearing:
-
- congress@town.hall.org
-
- We encourage you to send your comments on what the role of government
- should be in the information age to this address. Your comments to this
- address will be made part of the public record of the hearing. Feel free
- to carry on a dialogue with others on a mailing list, cc'ing the e-mail
- address.
-
- Your cards and letters to congress@town.hall.org will help
- demonstrate that there are people who use the Internet as part of their
- personal and professional lives. We encourage you to send comments on
- the role of government in cyberspace, on what role cyberspace should play
- in government (e.g., whether government data be made available on the
- Internet), on how the Internet should be built and financed, on how you
- use the Internet, and on any other topic you feel is appropriate. This
- is your chance to show the U.S. Congress that there is a constituency
- that cares about this global infrastructure.
-
- If you would like to communicate with a human being about the
- hearing, you may send your comments and questions to:
-
- hearing-info@town.hall.org
-
- Support for the Internet Town Hall is provided by Sun Microsystems
- and O'Reilly & Associates. Additional support for the July 26 on-line
- congressional hearing is being provided by ARPA, BBN Communications,
- the National Press Club, Xerox PARC, and many other organizations.
-
- Network connectivity for the Internet Town Hall is provided by
- UUNET Technologies.
-
-
- ****************
- To Be at Liberty
- ****************
- John Perry Barlow wrote this essay for an upcoming PBS special on liberty.
- This is the text of what will be a quarter of the show. The other three
- essayists include Salman Rushdie.
-
-
- To Be At Liberty
- An Essay for Public Television
-
- Text by John Perry Barlow
- Video production by Todd Rundgren
-
- Let me tell you where I'm coming from. I grew up on a ranch near Pinedale,
- Wyoming, a very free town not far from the middle of nowhere.
-
- It was the kind of place where a state legislator could actually say, "If
- the English language was good enough for our Lord Jesus Christ, it's good
- enough for our school children."
-
- Though surely a hick town, it was also a real community. There was a lot
- of trust. Neither the locks nor the lawyers got used much. People knew
- each other and tried to let one another be. After all, they'd come to that
- wild and remote place to be free. Liberty was a fierce practice among
- them. That it might also be a legal guarantee seemed irrelevant.
-
- It seems to me that elsewhere in America, liberty is far more a matter of
- law than practice. The Bill of Rights is still on the books, and they'd
- have a hell of a time putting you in jail for just saying something, but
- how free are we?
-
- Whatever the guarantees, I believe liberty resides in its exercise. Liberty
- is really about the ability to feel free and behave accordingly. You are
- only as free as you act.
-
- Free people must be willing to speak up...and listen. They can't merely
- consume the fruits of freedom, they have to produce them.
-
- This exercise of liberty requires that people trust one another and the
- institutions they make together. They have to feel at home in their
- society.
-
- Well, Americans don't appear to trust each other much these days. Why else
- would we employ three times more lawyers per capita than we did in 1970?
-
- Why else would our universities be so determined to impose tolerance that
- they'll expel you for saying what you think and never notice the irony?
-
- Why else would we teach our kids to fear all strangers? Why else have we
- become so afraid to look one another in the eye?
-
- We have come to regard trust as foolishness and fear as necessary. We live
- in terror that the people around us might figure out what we're actually
- thinking.
-
- Frankly, this America doesn't feel very free to me at all. What has
- happened to our liberty?
-
- I think much of the answer lies in the critical difference between
- information and experience.
-
- These days we view most of our world through a television screen. Most of
- our knowledge comes from information about things, not experience with
- them.
-
- Let me return to Pinedale for an example. Those folks killed each other
- pretty regularly, but there wasn't much fear. They knew each other, and if
- somebody got shot, it wasn't too hard to figure out why.
-
- Homicide was not abstract. It was a familiar threat, like wild horses or winter.
-
- And you also knew that today's opponent might be the only person along to
- pull you out of a snowdrift tomorrow. So tolerance and trust were
- practical necessities. Living more or less safely in a world we
- understood, we found liberty an easy thing to keep.
-
- But elsewhere, as I say, the average American's sense of the world has
- likely been derived by staring at it through the one-way tunnel of
- information.
-
- What the media's taught my fellow citizens is that all the world is
- dangerous in some irrational, non-specific way. Terrorists are everywhere.
- Nature is in open rebellion. Making love can kill you. Your fellow humans
- are liars in suits, thugs, zealots, psychopaths, and, mostly, victims who
- look a lot like you.
-
- Television amplifies the world's mayhem and gives you no way to talk back.
- No way to ask, "Is this the way the world is?" Just as right now it's
- giving you no way to argue with me.
-
- Why does television prefer terrifying images? Because it lives on your
- attention. That's what television is really selling. And scaring the hell
- out of you is, like sex, one of those really efficient ways to get your
- undivided focus. To gain it, they flood your living room with images
- designed to hit your fear glands like electricity.
-
- So we have erected a glowing altar in the center of our lives that feeds on
- our terror, and Fear has become our national religion.
-
- We ask the government to defend us against the virtual goblins that stream
- from the tube, and the government has obliged us.
-
- For example, in 1992, a total of two Americans died in terrorist attacks.
- Not what I'd call a major threat. But our fear of them is so real that we
- spend tens of billions a year to protect ourselves from terrorism. For many
- Americans, making the car payments depends on keeping this fear alive.
-
- But you cannot build a society of general trust in an atmosphere of general
- fear. The fearful are never free.
-
- If we are to fight back - if we are to regain the courage necessary to the
- practice of liberty - we are going to have to stage another kind of
- revolution. We need to find a new means of understanding the world that
- takes no profit from our fear.
-
- We need a medium that, like life itself, allows us to probe it for the
- truth. We need, in essence, to cut out the middlemen and speak directly to
- one another. Indeed, we need a place where we can share information
- unfiltered by the needs and desires of either Big Brother or the Marketing
- Department down at Channel Six.
-
- Such a medium may be spreading across the planet in a thickening web of
- connected computers called the "Internet." Through the Internet I can
- already get a personal connection with people all over the globe, learning
- from those on the scene what's really going on. Through the Internet I can
- publish my own understandings to whomever might be interested, in whatever
- numbers.
-
- During the War in the Persian Gulf, I was able to get minute by minute
- reports from the laptop computers of soldiers in the field. The picture
- they presented felt far more detailed, more troubling and ambiguous, than
- the mass hallucination presented on CNN.
-
- The Internet is also creating a new place...many call it Cyberspace...where
- new communities like Pinedale can form. The big difference will be that
- these Cyberspace communities will be possible among people whose bodies are
- located in many different places in the world.
-
- Direct communication should breed understanding and tolerance. Our fears
- will be far easier to check out. We may begin to understand that these
- distant and sometimes alien creatures are real people whose rights are
- directly connected to our own.
-
- I imagine the gathering places of Cyberspace, some as intimate as
- Pinedale's Wrangler Cafe, some more vast than Tienanmen Square. I imagine
- us meeting there in conditions of trust and liberty that no government will
- be able to deny.
-
- I imagine a world, quite soon to come, in which ideas can spread like fire,
- as Jefferson said, "expansible over all space, without lessening their
- density at any point, and like the air in which we breathe... incapable of
- confinement or exclusive appropriation by anyone."
-
- If ideas can spread like fire, then freedom, like water, will flow around
- or over those that stand in its way. In Cyberspace, I hope that this truth
- will be self-evident.
-
-
- *****************************
- Announcement of Group Meeting
- *****************************
- Hypereal Group Meeting: The Aesthetics of Presence -
- towards an ethic of design
- Sunday, July 11 within interactive technologies
- 7:00 pm
- Sunken Room - Genesee Co-op
- 713 Monroe Ave Rochester, NY
-
- Free and open to the public.
-
- For more information, contact:
- Haim Bodek
- hb003b@uhura.cc.rochester.edu
- 716-442-6231
- Hypereal Group
- P.O. Box 18572
- Rochester, NY 14618
-
-
- **************************************
- Request for Help from Canadian Readers
- **************************************
- Peter Hum, a reporter with a major Canadian newspaper called the Ottawa
- Citizen (circulation about 200,000 in an area of about 1 million) is
- interested in learning about encryption issues in Canada. Anyone with
- information can send e-mail to Peter at af391@freenet.carleton.ca, or call
- him at (613) 596-3761.
-
-
- *******************
- Job Openings at EFF
- *******************
- SYSTEMS ADMINISTRATOR
-
- EFF is looking for a dependable, organized, hands-on SysAdmin with 2-3
- years experience to manage a cluster of Sun Sparcstations serving as our
- Internet host in our Washington, DC, office. The successful candidate must
- know UNIX applications, including sendmail, ftp archive, Gopher, DNS &
- WAIS. S/he must be able to customize, install & debug in C. Extensive Mac
- (System 7, LocalTalk, Ethernet, MacTCP) experience is also required to
- manage our Mac LAN & bus applications. This person will be responsible for
- hardware & software acquisition & maintenance & our 50-port PBX telephone
- system.
-
- Our SysAdmin must enjoy a high energy, interrupt-driven environment. Good
- communications skills (writing & speaking) & a user-friendly attitude are
- required. A BS in CS, EE, MIS or a related field is helpful. Interest in
- EFF's mission & an ability to advise EFF staff members on technical issues
- related to public policy is preferred.
-
- Salary negotiable with excellent benefits. Send resume, cover letter &
- salary requirements by 7/20 to:
-
- EFF SysAdmin
- 238 Main Street
- Cambridge, MA 02142
- Attn: L. Breit
-
- by e-mail (ASCII only, please): lbreit@eff.org
- no phone calls
-
- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
- RECEPTIONIST
-
- EFF and its upstairs neighbors are looking for a telephone receptionist.
- Computer and phone experience preferred. Must be professional, personable,
- courteous, extremely reliable and graceful under pressure. All applicants
- should be content with a permanent position as a receptionist with our
- organizations. Competitive salary with good benefits.
-
- E-mail your resume (ASCII) to erickson@eff.org, or fax to (202) 393-5509.
- You may also mail your resume to:
-
- Receptionist Search
- 1001 G Street, NW
- Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001
- Attn: K. Erickson
-
- No phone calls, please. Resumes should be received by 7/20. EFF is an
- equal opportunity employer.
-
-
- =============================================================
-
- EFFector Online is published biweekly by:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1001 G Street, N.W., Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001 USA
- Phone: +1 202 347 5400 FAX: +1 202 393 5509
- Internet Address: eff@eff.org
-
- Coordination, production and shipping by Shari Steele,
- Director of Legal Services & Community Outreach (ssteele@eff.org)
-
- Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. Signed
- articles do not necessarily represent the view of the EFF. To reproduce
- signed articles individually, please contact the authors for their express
- permission.
-
- *This newsletter is printed on 100% recycled electrons.*
- =============================================================
-
- MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- In order to continue the work already begun and to expand our efforts and
- activities into other realms of the electronic frontier, we need the
- financial support of individuals and organizations.
-
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- becoming a member now. Members receive our bi-weekly electronic newsletter,
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-
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-
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-
- =============================================================
- Mail to:
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- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1001 G Street, N.W.
- Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001 USA
-
- Membership rates:
- $20.00 (student or low income membership)
- $40.00 (regular membership)
-
-
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- [ ] I enclose an additional donation of $_______
-
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