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- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (Harel Barzilai)
- Subject: PROFILE: Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Message-ID: <1993Jan24.072353.28568@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Sun, 24 Jan 1993 07:23:53 GMT
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- [Search for "@" for their email --Harel]
- ************************************************************************
- General Information about the Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ************************************************************************
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is dedicated to the pursuit of
- policies and activities that will advance freedom and openness in
- computer-based communications. It is a member-supported, nonprofit group
- that grew from the conviction that a new public interest organization was
- needed in the information age; that this organization would enhance and
- protect the democratic potential of new computer communications technology.
- From the beginning, the EFF determined to become an organization that would
- combine technical, legal, and public policy expertise, and would apply
- these skills to the myriad issues and concerns that arise whenever a new
- communications medium is born.
-
- By remaining faithful to this initial vision, the EFF has become an
- organized voice for the burgeoning community of nationally and
- internationally networked computer users. It performs the multiple roles of
- guardian, advocate, and innovator to serve and protect the public interest
- in the information age.
-
- Goals of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, 1990-1992
-
- 1. To engage in and support educational activities that increase the
- popular understanding of the opportunities and challenges posed by
- computing and telecommunications.
-
- 2. To develop among policymakers a clearer comprehension of the issues
- underlying free and open telecommunications.
-
- 3. To support the creation of legal and structural approaches that will
- ease the assimilation of these new technologies by society.
-
- 4. To raise public awareness about civil liberties issues arising from the
- rapid advances in computer-based communications media.
-
- 5. To support litigation in the public interest to preserve, protect, and
- extend constitutional rights to the realm of computing and
- telecommunications technology.
-
- 6. To encourage and support the development of new tools that will endow
- nontechnical users with full and easy access to computer-based
- telecommunications.
-
- Two years after its inception, the EFF is striving to meet these goals and
- fulfill its mission in many ways:
-
- * The EFF is intensely involved in public advocacy and policy-making in
- the telecommunications arena at the federal level.
-
- * The EFF is constantly reaching out for new members, be they individuals,
- companies, or groups, that are united in their desire for an open and
- affordable National Public Information Network that embodies the finest
- traditional values of the United States.
-
- * The EFF is managing a public domain software development program that
- promises wide access to existing and future networks without intensive
- training.
-
- * The EFF is active in keeping the present and future costs of network
- access low to ensure that this nation and the world not devolve into the
- "information rich" and the "information poor."
-
- * The EFF has commissioned studies on the future of computer networks, their
- practicality, and their impact on the nation and the world.
-
- * The EFF is supporting an expanded electronic and print publication
- program to inform people of the issues on the electronic frontier, and to
- help both new and experienced network users maximize their own and the
- technology's potential.
-
- * The EFF builds and manages coalitions of public interest, academic and
- corporate groups and concerned individuals for specific actions on
- specific items of legislation and policy on the federal and state level.
-
- * The EFF helps to defend people wrongly accused of computer crime, and to
- ensure that users of these new technologies are extended the full range
- of constitutional protection.
-
- * The EFF provides advice and counsel on new issues arising in this
- information age to citizens, companies, government organizations, the
- media, and other public interest groups.
-
- * The EFF works to raise the consciousness of citizens, companies, and
- government bodies regarding both the rights and responsibilities of
- computer network users through speeches, panels, interviews, meetings,
- and publications.
-
- * The EFF actively manages discussion groups on several major computer
- conferencing systems, and is a presence in many more.
-
- * The EFF maintains a legal hotline for people in need of advice or
- references in the case of legal difficulties arising from computer-based
- communications.
-
- * The EFF, in both its Cambridge and Washington offices, remains alert
- for opportunities to influence public awareness and shape public
- policies in order to maximize freedom, competitiveness, and civil
- liberties in the electronic social environments created by new
- computer and communications technologies.
-
- In short, thanks to the moral, technical, and financial support of our
- members and constituents, the EFF in two short years is well on its way to
- fulfilling its original goals. Emerging out of the computer networks it
- represents, the EFF has become an organization that people, companies, the
- media, and governments turn to when they look for insight into questions
- involving new communications technologies and life on the electronic
- frontier.
-
- EFF's Open Platform Proposal
-
- The EFF is urging Congress to establish an Open Platform for Information
- Services in the United States. We advocate the rapid deployment of widely
- available, affordable ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network). We
- believe that this can be the basis of a consumer information delivery
- system to be used until national switched broadband options become
- available in the 21st century.
-
- Narrowband ISDN, if offered nationwide and priced at affordable,
- mass-market rates, can offer end-to-end digital service without major
- infrastructure investments. With an ISDN platform in place, information
- entrepreneurs will soon be able to reach an expanded market in which to
- offer text, video, and interactive multimedia services. Public agencies,
- private communications, computer, and publishing firms, and even
- individuals will be able to access an inexpensive, widely available medium
- in which to publish and communicate electronically.
-
- Other networks and technologies such as the cable television network may
- also play an important role in providing digital access, but because of the
- public telephone network's ubiquity and common carrier regime, ISDN has a
- key role to play. ISDN will not only spur innovation, it will establish,
- with appropriate safeguards, a level playing field for all who wish to
- provide information services over the telephone network.
-
- For many months, the EFF has been exploring the technical and economic
- feasibility of our Open Platform Proposal. We have received valuable
- comments and support from key players among the regional Bell operating
- companies, interexchange carriers, information providers, our members,
- individuals on the Internet or associated systems, and public service
- commissions. All these believe that ISDN can play a crucial role in
- developing the information arena for the benefit of all today. As of July
- 1992, we have reached the following conclusions:
-
- 1. ISDN can meet many of the information needs of residential and
- commercial users long before a public, switched broadband network is
- available. For example, with advances in compression technology, ISDN
- makes it possible to distribute interactive voice, data, and video
- services over the copper wire telephone network currently in place
- throughout the nation.
-
- 2. ISDN can be deployed nationwide within the next three to five years
- without massive infrastructure investment or new technology development.
-
- 3. ISDN can be tariffed as a basic service at affordable rates.
-
- 4. ISDN is a critical and even necessary transitional technology on the
- path toward the future broadband fiber optic national public network.
-
- 5. The benefits of other networks that are already important information
- distribution media can be enhanced by interconnection with a digital
- narrowband ISDN telephone network.
-
- We are optimistic that ISDN is an important step on the path to the
- development of a telecommunications infrastructure that meets the diverse
- needs of the nation. As a result we are now working to get the principles
- of the Open Platform Proposal adopted as legislation in Congress, and
- by public utility commissions nationwide.
-
- To do this we are building a coalition behind our proposal. In recent
- months, we have garnered the interest and support of key computer firms,
- including Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, Apple Computer, Novell, Lotus and
- Adobe. We are now seeking support for the Open Platform Proposal from the
- communications industry, consumer groups, library associations, other
- nonprofit public interest groups, and our membership. If we work together,
- we can break the telecommunications deadlock and take a significant step
- toward a national public network.
-
- Structure of the EFF
-
- The EFF maintains offices in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C.
-
- EFF/Cambridge deals with member services, publications, legal counsel,
- technical development, and the support of our online discussion and news
- groups.
-
- EFF/Cambridge also maintains the central library and our main computing
- facilities, including eff.org proper, which hosts our mailing lists;
- ftp.eff.org, home of our anonymous ftp archives; and wais.eff.org, our WAIS
- archive site.
-
- EFF/Washington is charged with policy-making, coalition building,
- congressional liaison, and the administration of the Communications Policy
- Forum.
-
- The EFF is a nonprofit 501(c)3 organization. It is an operating foundation
- and does not make grants. The EFF is a membership organization with both
- individual and corporate members from throughout the United States and the
- world.
-
- EFF/Cambridge
-
- * We organize and maintain continuing online newsletters and active
- discussion groups on USENET (comp.org.eff.talk, comp.org.eff.news, also
- available as Internet mailing lists), which are read by 25,000 to 50,000
- people a month; on the WELL (Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link), whose
- membership is about 5,000, and on CompuServe, which has over 900,000
- subscribers. In addition, much of our material is echoed to BIX, GEnie,
- Fidonet, America Online, and numerous other electronic bulletin board
- systems in the United States and around the world.
-
- * To advance ease of use and maximum connectivity, we have launched the
- Intersuite Project. Working with Software Tool and Die, operators of The
- World, a public access Unix system in Brookline, Massachusetts, we will
- develop an easy series of applications for connecting to the Internet
- from personal computers. Once completed in 1993, these applications will
- be released into the public domain.
-
- * As our major conference of the year, we inspired and helped to organize
- both the first and second Computers, Freedom and Privacy conferences
- (CFP). CFP is an annual four-day event that brings together, in search of
- knowledge and common ground, representatives from computer networking,
- law enforcement, and privacy advocate groups.
-
- * In order to recognize worthy individuals, the EFF organized and hosted
- the first annual Pioneer Awards (at CFP II). This event, which drew
- hundreds of nominations, honored five outstanding individuals who had
- contributed to the growth of computer-based communications.
-
- * To keep our members and other interested parties apprised of our
- activities, we have produced and distributed more than 30 issues of our
- electronic newsletter, EFFector Online.
-
- * We have published the first two issues of our quarterly print newsletter,
- EFFector, as well as numerous policy studies and white papers, such as
- the seminal "Building the Open Road."
-
- * We continue to expand our presence on, and usefulness to, the Internet
- with our connected systems, which have recently been enlarged to five Sun
- SPARCstations and six gigabytes of disk storage.
-
- * To take advantage of this technology, we created a heavily used FTP
- archive on ftp.eff.org. This archive provides documents on computer
- networking and privacy law as well as a number of online publications.
-
- * Because we believe in finding common cause with a multiplicity of
- organizations, we have hosted groups such as Index on Censorship and the
- Computers and Academic Freedom mailing lists on our systems.
-
- * In order to fulfill our role as a bridge between often disparate interest
- groups, EFF staff members have spoken to groups of librarians, software
- and hardware developers, law enforcement officers, lawyers, and many
- others on the issues of civil liberties and computer networking.
-
- * Using our library and personal resources, we have built solid
- relationships with both print and broadcast media to become a "place of
- first and last resort" for reporters covering stories involving
- telecommunications policy, legislation, and the new information
- technology.
-
- * To make it easier to use networking, we have begun a complete guide to
- the Net for both novices and experienced users for publication in late
- 1992.
-
- * Because of early work with the Massachusetts legislature, we have been
- invited to spearhead the Massachusetts Computer Crime Commission,
- established to study the need for new or revised laws addressing computer
- crime.
-
- * As part of our efforts to educate, we have spoken at and participated in
- the conferences of various members of the judicial and law enforcement
- community, such as the High Tech Criminal Investigation Association, the
- American Society of Criminologists, and the FBI.
-
- * We have contributed articles and position papers to such publications as
- The Quill, Communications of the ACM, Discover, and Scientific American.
-
- * We have routinely given legal information and advice to lawyers, online
- systems, system operators, the media, and individuals about the evolving
- case law in the area of computer-based communications.
-
- * We have repeatedly aided students in restoring computer accounts
- suspended merely for showing interest in information relating to system
- security.
-
- * We are pursuing litigation against the Secret Service to establish
- constitutional limits on the search and seizure of computers, BBS
- systems, books, and manuscripts at Steve Jackson Games in Austin, Texas.
-
- * We have lobbied effectively at the state level to change legislation
- inimical to computer networking and are represented on the Massachusetts
- Computer Crime Commission.
-
- EFF/Washington, D.C.
-
- With the advent of the Washington office, the EFF has begun the complicated
- and arduous task of tracking pending legislation and working with numerous
- policymaking bodies and organizations.
-
- * The EFF in Washington leads the way in moving the elements of the Open
- Platform Proposal into the legislative process.
-
- * The EFF is leading the coalition of telephone, computer, communications
- and public interest groups to oppose the recent FBI-sponsored initiative
- to require all communications firms, as well as public and private
- networks, to automatically enable wiretapping and anti-encryption in
- digitized communications.
-
- * To foster the dialogue about the shape and design of the national public
- network, EFF administers the Communications Policy Forum. The CPF offers
- consumer and public interest groups, telecom companies, computer industry
- groups, and policymakers a forum in which to discuss telecommuncations
- issues. It conducts meetings and workshops and undertakes nonpartisan
- research. It is cosponsored by the Consumer Federation of America and the
- ACLU.
-
- * We have filed formal briefs with the FCC regarding the regulation of 900
- numbers that support the position that 900 numbers and other information
- services be carried on a common carrier basis.
-
- * We have testified several times before the Federal Communications
- Commission concerning the public access and design needs of the National
- Research and Education network.
-
- * We are helping to define the issues of protecting BBSs, Internet sites,
- and other telecommunications carriers from unwarranted risks and
- liabilities.
-
- * In response to legislation passed in the House to make it a crime to scan
- cellular telephone signals, the EFF has commitments from the Senate to
- either substitute or include a feasibility study of cellular encryption
- in the FCC appropriations bill along with the scanner penalties.
-
- * The EFF is credited by sponsors with having helped to enact the High
- Performance Computer Act of 1991.
-
- * In November, 1991, the EFF joined in a public interest letter to the
- House and Senate commerce committees, urging them to ensure that phone
- companies carry all 900 number services without regard to content.
-
- * The EFF has joined with the IIA, the ACLU, ADAPSO, the Software
- Publishers Association, and others to oppose H.R. 191 and similar
- legislation in the Senate to give the government a software exception
- under Section 105 of the copyright act, which prohibits the government to
- copyright public information.
-
- * The EFF is working with the information industry and library associations
- to prevent Congress from passing Section 534 of the Maritime Act, which
- would allow the Federal Maritime Commission to charge above cost for
- electronic data, thus exercising a quasi-copyright over government
- information.
-
- * This year the Senate introduced legislation, S. 1940, to establish an
- electronic freedom of information act (EFOIA) to ensure that public
- access to information applies to electronic public data. The EFF
- spearheaded the legislation and helped to draft it.
-
- * The EFF is now a proponent of legislation before Congress to establish a
- positive obligation on the part of government agencies to disseminate
- information in electronic as well as paper formats. Compromise
- legislation satisfactory to the administration, information industry,
- library groups, and public interest organizations is in the works. These
- are known as amendments to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1992.
-
- * We have endorsed H.R. 3459, the Improvement of Information Access Act,
- introduced by Representative Major Owens, and indicated our willingness
- to work on the GPO WINDO proposal, H.R. 2772. In our view, all of these
- bills support broader public access to information and should be
- enacted into law.
-
- * We have supported OMB's recently published Revised Circular A-130 on
- government information dissemination policy, which embodies broad
- principles endorsing active and equitable federal agency dissemination of
- electronic public information, at marginal cost, through a diversity of
- public and private sources.
-
- * We commissioned a study, now complete, from Economics and Technology,
- Inc., of Boston that establishes the affordability of ISDN when fully
- deployed.
-
- * We have been developing and promoting guidelines for magistrates who
- issue search warrants for computer data and hardware.
-
- * We write a monthly legal column for an electronic bulletin board
- magazine, BBS Callers Digest.
-
- * We have met with specialized usergroups such as Senior Net and the Public
- Library Association, to work on shared goals and concerns.
-
- * We have researched civil liberties issues related to telephone company
- efforts to reclassify hobbyist BBSs from residential to business
- services.
-
- How to Connect to the EFF
-
- Internet and USENET:
-
- General information requests, submissions for EFFector Online, and the like
- can be mailed to eff@eff.org.
-
- If you receive any USENET newsgroups, your site may carry the newsgroups
- comp.org.eff.news and comp.org.eff.talk. The former is a moderated
- newsgroup for announcements, newsletters, and other information; the latter
- is an unmoderated discussion group for discussing the EFF and issues
- relating to the electronic frontier.
-
- For those unable to read the newsgroups, there are redistributions via
- electronic mail. Send requests to be added to or dropped from the eff-news
- mailing list to eff-request@eff.org.
-
- Mail eff-talk-request@eff.org to be added to a redistribution of
- comp.org.eff.talk by mail; please note that it can be extremely high-volume
- at times.
-
- A document library containing all of the EFF news releases, John
- Barlow's "Crime and Puzzlement", and other publications of interest is
- available via anonymous FTP from ftp.eff.org. Mail ftphelp@eff.org if
- you have questions, or are unable to use FTP.
-
- To be on a mailing list specific to a discussion of technical and policy
- issues relating to the EFF's Open Platform Initiative, send a request to
- pub-infra-request@eff.org.
-
- The WELL:
-
- There is an active EFF conference on the WELL, as well as many other
- related conferences of interest to EFF supporters. Access to the WELL is
- $15/month plus $2/hour. Outside the San Francisco area, telecom access
- for $5/hour is available through the CompuServe Packet Network. If you
- have an Internet connection, you can reach the WELL via telnet at
- well.sf.ca.us; otherwise, dial +1 415 332 6106 (data).
-
- CompuServe:
-
- Our forum on CompuServe has also opened recently. GO EFFSIG to join. Many
- of the files on ftp.eff.org, as well as other items of interest, are
- mirrored in the EFFSIG Libraries.
-
- Our Addresses:
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.
- 155 Second Street
- Cambridge, Massachusetts 02141
- +1 617 864 0665
- +1 617 864 0866 FAX
- Internet: eff@eff.org
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.
- 666 Pennsylvania Avenue S.E., Suite 303
- Washington, D.C. 20003
- +1 202 544 9237
- +1 202 547 5481 FAX
- Internet: eff@eff.org
-
- 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.
-
- If you support our goals and our work, you can show that support by
- becoming a member now. Members receive our quarterly newsletter, EFFECTOR,
- our bi-weekly electronic newsletter, EFFector Online (if you have an
- electronic address that can be reached through the Net), and special
- releases and other notices on our activities. But because we believe that
- support should be freely given, you can receive these things even if you do
- not elect to become a member.
-
- Your membership/donation is fully tax deductible.
-
- Our memberships are $20.00 per year for students, $40.00 per year for
- regular members, and $100.00 per year for organizations. You may, of
- course, donate more if you wish.
-
- Our privacy policy: The Electronic Frontier Foundation will never, under
- any circumstances, sell any part of its membership list. We will, from
- time to time, share this list with other non-profit organizations whose
- work we determine to be in line with our goals. But with us, member
- privacy is the default. This means that you must actively grant us
- permission to share your name with other groups. If you do not grant
- explicit permission, we assume that you do not wish your membership
- disclosed to any group for any reason.
-
- =========================================================================
- Mail to: The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.
- 155 Second St. #AB
- Cambridge, MA 02141
-
- I wish to become a member of the EFF. I enclose: $_______
- $20.00 (student or low income membership)
- $40.00 (regular membership)
- $100.00 (Corporate or organizational membership.
- This allows any organization to
- become a member of EFF. It allows
- such an organization, if it wishes
- to designate up to five individuals
- within the organization as members.)
-
- [ ] I enclose an additional donation of $_______
-
- Name:
-
- Organization:
-
- Address:
-
- City or Town:
-
- State: Zip: Phone: ( ) (optional)
-
- FAX: ( ) (optional)
-
- Email address:
-
- I enclose a check [ ].
- Please charge my membership in the amount of $
- to my Mastercard [ ] Visa [ ] American Express [ ]
-
- Number:
-
- Expiration date:
-
- Signature: ________________________________________________
-
- Date:
-
- I hereby grant permission to the EFF to share my name with
- other non-profit groups from time to time as it deems
- appropriate [ ].
- Initials:___________________________
-
- ``````````````````^^^^^^^^^^^^''''''''''''''''''
- Last Update: 12 August 1992
-