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-
- Newsgroups: alt.censorship,alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk,alt.internet.services,news.misc,alt.answers,news.answers
- Subject: How to Receive Banned Newsgroups FAQ (11/30/94)
- Followup-To: alt.censorship
- Reply-To: banned-faq@uiuc.edu (How to get banned newsgroups FAQ)
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.EDU
- Expires: 30 Dec 1994 00:00:00 GMT
- Summary: This is a list of frequently-asked questions (and answers)
- about how to get banned newsgroups.
-
- Archive-name: usenet/banned-groups-faq
- Last-modified: 11/30/94
- Version: 1.1
-
- Posted near the middle of each month to alt.censorship,
- alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk, alt.internet.services, news.misc,
- alt.answers, and news.answers.
-
- Prepared by Joseph Gebis (j-gebis@uiuc.edu).
- Please address any additions, comments, or corrections to
- banned-faq@uiuc.edu.
-
- The newest version of the "How to Receive Banned Newsgroups FAQ" is
- available electronically by many different methods. See section 6.3 for
- details.
-
- Section 1 describes this document. Section 2 provides most of the
- quick information you need to find out how to receive banned newsgroups.
- Sections 3-5 contain other information relating to the topic. Section 6
- contains more information about this document.
-
- All information in this article is presented solely for
- informational purposes. Joseph Gebis takes no responsibility for any
- information contained within this article.
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Chapter 1: Overview and Introduction
- 1.1 What is this faq?
- 1.2 What is needed to get news?
- 1.3 Other notes
- Chapter 2: How to get Banned Newsgroups
- 2.1 Not-for-profit news providers
- 2.2 Commercial news providers
- 2.3 Open nntp sites
- 2.4 Gopher
- 2.5 Mail to news gateways
- 2.6 Internet services list
- 2.7 I only have access to...
- Chapter 3: Ethics of Banned Newsgroups
- 3.1 What is a "banned newsgroup"?
- 3.2 Should news administrators be allowed to ban newsgroups?
- 3.3 Should people be allowed to describe how to receive banned
- newsgroups?
- 3.4 Are newsgroups libraries?
- 3.5 Do we really need this faq?
- 3.6 Online references pertaining to electronic freedom and privacy
- Chapter 4: Legalities of Banned Newsgroups
- 4.1 Legal responsibilities of news administrators
- 4.2 Is it legal to describe how to receive banned newsgroups?
- 4.3 Legal references pertaining to banned newsgroups
- Chapter 5: Further Information on References Mentioned
- 5.1 Information on Freenets
- 5.2 Information on Library Policy Statements Archive Access
- 5.3 Information on EFF
- 5.4 Information on the Legal List
- Chapter 6: Information on this Faq
- 6.1 Who compiled this faq?
- 6.2 How do I submit additions, comments, and corrections?
- 6.3 How do I get the latest version of the faq?
- 6.4 What other information do you need?
- 6.5 Is there an html version on this faq?
- 6.6 Who are all the wonderful people that added information to the
- faq?
- 6.7 Who else needs to be thanked?
- 6.8 References
- 6.9 Disclaimer
-
- ========================================================================
- Chapter 1: Overview and Introduction
-
- "I cannot convince myself that there is anyone so wise, so universally
- comprehensive in his judgment, that he can be trusted with the power to
- tell others: 'You shall not express yourself thus, you shall not
- describe your own experiences; or depict the fantasies which your mind
- has created; or laugh at what others set up as respectable; or question
- old beliefs; or contradict the dogmas of the church, of our society, our
- economic systems, and our political orthodoxy.'"
- - Jake Zeitlin
-
- 1.1 What is this faq?
-
- This faq was originally intended to be a compilation of other
- information sources about ways to get newsgroups. It has become more
- than that, in a few ways. I'm trying to include information on how to
- access any internet resource from any other one (although the emphasis
- of this document is still on newsgroups), and it has become, I hope, a
- document discussing important ethical issues.
-
- 1.2 What is needed to get news?
-
- There are two things needed to "get" news in the fullest sense of
- the word. First of all, you need a source of news, and a means of
- accessing that source; this will allow you to read other people's
- messages. Secondly, you need a way to post new articles to news.
- This document will allow you to find different ways to do both.
-
- 1.3 Other notes
-
- I tried to make sure I gave credit for every file I use in this
- document; if you notice something not credited, or miscredited, tell me.
- Also, tell me if the information is wrong; some information included in
- this document changes fairly often.
- I tried to use "[BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: #]" when starting a direct, or
- only slightly edited, reference from a file. The number is the number
- of the full reference, given at the end of this document. Every
- "[BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: #]" is matched by a "[END INCLUDED FILE]".
- I use "[BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: #]" when I use selected
- sections, or have had to do heavy editing on a file. The number is the
- number of the full reference, given at the end of this document. Every
- "[BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: #]" is matched by a
- "[END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]". It is recommended that you do get
- the file if you want to see the original, unedited version. I have
- tried to remain faithful to the original intent and purpose of every
- included document.
- If any reference is wrong, please tell me.
-
- ========================================================================
- Chapter 2: How to get Banned Newsgroups
-
- 2.1 Not-for-profit news providers
-
- A good way to get banned newsgroups is to use a free news provider.
- Many free news providers also provide access to many other important
- services. A partial list includes:
-
- Cyberspace
- ----------
-
- Telnet to cyberspace.org and login as "newuser". From there, you
- can follow the menus and get a new shell account; from this account, you
- can access news directly, or telnet to any of the below places.
-
- Freenets
- --------
-
- There are many freenets. These are networks at which the charge for
- using is nothing, or very little. Most of them tell you how to log in
- to them; for the ones that do not, look in the parenthesized comment
- beside it in this listing.
- I have not had a chance to look through all these; some or all may
- not provide guest news access (or news access at all). This list is
- from the Internet Services List. Instructions on obtaining it are
- below.
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 1]
- bigsky.bigsly.dillon.mt.us (login: bbs)
- freenet.buffalo.edu
- cap.gwu.edu (login: guest password: visitor)
- freenet-in-a.cwru.edu (login: guest)
- freenet-in-b.cwru.edu (login: guest)
- freenet-in-c.cwru.edu (login: guest)
- bigcat.missouri.edu
- freenet.hsc.colorado.edu
- 136.176.5.114
- 132.162.32.99 (login: guest)
- freenet.carleton.ca
- rgfn.epcc.edu
- sendit.epcc.edu (login: bss password: sendit2me)
- freenet.fsu.edu
- leo.nmc.edu
- cbos.uc.edu
- garbo.uwasa.fi (login: guest)
- freenet.victoria.bc.ca
- vdoe386.vak12ed.edu (login: guest password: guest)
- yfn2.ysu.edu (login: visitor)
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Another large list was posted by David W. Morgan
- (damorgan@nyx10.cs.du.edu). I'm not sure if this list will be posted on
- a regular basis. This list was posted in alt.internet.services.
- Included at the bottom of this list was the message "For more
- information write to info@nptn.org".
-
- Hermes
- ------
-
- Telnet to hermes.merit.edu. From there, you can get an account and
- can access news and other internet services.
-
- Nyx
- ---
- To access nyx, telnet to nyx.cs.du.edu. There is a very easy
- to use menu system; you can follow those menus. To get easy
- access to newsgroups, login as "guest" (don't use the quotation marks).
- Then type:
- l (look around the system)
- qa (quick access to what works)
- n (netnews)
-
- then simply type the name of the group to which you would like
- access.
- Nyx will not allow guest users to post to newsgroups.
- Looking around nyx is free; to get a full account requires you to
- register.
-
- Prairienet
- ----------
-
- Prairienet is a site that offers free accounts to residents of
- Illinois; people outside of Illinois must pay $50, but they can look
- around for free.
- To try Prairienet out, telnet to firefly.prairienet.org and login as
- "visitor".
-
- Um-m-net
- --------
-
- Telnet m-net.ann-arbor.mi.us. For which host, enter "um-m-net".
- Enter "g" for guest. For login, enter "newuser".
-
- UNC BBS
- -------
-
- Telnet launchpad.unc.edu and login as "launch".
-
- 2.2 Commercial news providers
-
- Disclaimer: I am not related to any of the following service providers.
-
- If you cannot access some news groups, you can always turn to a
- commercial news providers. These news providers will give you shell
- access, news, dialup lines, and more (for a fee). To find out what
- commercial internet service providers exist in your area, get one of the
- commercial service provider lists.
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 2]
- Other sources
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The PDIAL list: the authority on (full) Internet access sites. Get it
- from <info-deli-server@netcom.com> body "Send PDIAL".
-
- The NIXPUB list: this is primarily a list of mail/news sites, although
- it includes many full access sites as well. Get it from
- <mail-server@bts.com> with subject/body: "get PUB nixpub.{long|short}"
- or by FTP from VFL.Paramax.com:/pub/pubnet/nixpub.{long|short}.
-
- I would also strongly suggest accessing Peter Scott's excellent Hytelnet
- service at the University of Saskatchewan. Telnet to access.usask.ca
- login: hytelnet. Information on both pay systems and freenets (which can
- often provide the level of needed access) can be found on this site.
- Note that, while there are other Hytelnet sites, USask is the most up to
- date.
- Regional hints -
-
- National service providers:
- FTP to ftp.nisc.sri.com:/netinfo and FTP the files whose names begin
- with "internet-access..." - there is one for the US, and one for other
- countries. They are derived from the WHOLE INTERNET GUIDE, by Ed. Krol.
- Note that many of the providers listed in this list only deal with
- academic institutions.
- UK:
- ftp to: ftp.demon.co.uk:/pub/archives/uk-internet-list.{lng,sum}
- the lng and sum represent the long and summary lists respectively.
-
- Latin America and Caribbean:
- Gopher to gopher.rcp.net.pe (Peruvian provider - see entry). A complete
- list of contacts for Latin America and the Caribbean is available there.
-
- Australia:
- There is a "Public Networking in Australia FAQ" but I don't know of a
- site where it is archived. It is posted regularly to
- "alt.internet.access.wanted". If you're desperate and can't wait, you
- can try asking me for a copy... If there isn't too much demand, I'll
- respond to requests - otherwise I'll remove this "offer."
-
- Germany:
- See the "Individual Network" entry, and follow the instructions.
-
- France:
- FTP to grasp.insa-lyon.fr:/pub/faq-by-newsgroup/soc/soc.culture.french/
- culture-french-faq/networking/part{1|2}.
-
- I more than welcome comments, corrections and especially additions.
- Please write me at:
- Louis Raphael <raphael@orion.login.qc.ca>
- I'll do my best to answer all my mail...
-
- Special thanks to Dr. Josh Backon for providing information on
- many of the listed sites.
-
- FTP: This list is available by anonymous FTP from login.qc.ca in
- /pub/fslist/FSLISTXX where XX is the version number.
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- America Online provides access to newsgroups. AOL's number is
- (800) 827-6364, or you can call (800) 827-5808 to use their BBS (where
- software is available).
- Delphi also provides access to usenet. Delphi's number is
- (800) 695-4005, or you can call (800 695-4002 to use their BBS. Press
- enter a few times, then log on as "FREE" to try out their service, or
- "INFO" to get more info.
-
- 2.3 Open nntp sites
-
- If you do not want to use a not-for-profit or commercial news
- provider, there are open nntp sites that allow almost anyone with shell
- access and a news reader to read and post news. There used to be a list
- of open nntp sites, but those sites have since shut down. However,
- there are still some open nntp sites out there.
- To access these sites, you need a news reader that allows you to
- change which nntp site is uses. rn and all of its derivatives (trn,
- strn, xtrn, etc) all allow you to do this. I've been told that the
- newest version of nn (6.5.0, a beta version) also supports this.
-
- To access these open nntp sites, you need to set the environment
- variable "NNTPSERVER" to the site that you want to use. If you are using:
- sh or one of its derivatives (ksh, bash, zsh, etc): type
- "NNTPSERVER=open.site.name; export NNTPSERVER" (without the quotation
- marks).
- csh or one of its derivatives (tcsh): type
- "setenv NNTPSERVER open.site.name" (without the quotation marks).
-
- To access these open nntp sites with tin, you can specify that you
- want to connect to a remote site by including the "-r" option on the
- command line, or using "rtin" instead of "tin". The NNTPSERVER variable
- has to be set.
-
- It's extremely important to remember to keep separate .newsrc files
- for each machine you use. When you are going to read news at another
- site, move your .newsrc file to something else:
- "mv .newsrc .newsrc.local" (without the quotation marks).
- Then, when you are done reading news there, copy your .newsrc back
- to its original name:
- "cp .newsrc.local .newsrc" (without the quotation marks).
- Also, if you want to keep a .newsrc for the other site you read,
- make sure you copy that file to .newsrc before you read it, and copy it
- to another file when you are done reading news there.
-
- Scott Yanoff did post this list recently, which he says was taken
- from the older list on open nntpservers. Many of these may have shut
- down by now.
-
- bert.eecs.uic.edu, 128.248.166.25 (read only)
- edfder1.edf.fr, 192.54.193.133 (posting OK)
- gaia.ucs.orst.edu, 128.193.2.13 (read only)
- gateway.iitb.ernet.in, 144.16.96.2 (read only)
- hagi.noguchi.riec.tohoku.ac.jp, 130.34.202.42 (posting OK)
- iti.gov.sg, 192.122.132.130 (read only)
- news.belwue.de, 129.143.2.4 (read only)
- news.fu-berlin.de, 130.133.4.250 (posting OK)
- news.nodak.edu, 134.129.107.194 (read only)
- rocky.ucdavis.edu, 128.120.100.1 (read only)
- news.uni-hohenheim.de, 144.41.2.4 (read only)
- news.uni-stuttgart.de, 129.69.8.13
- newsserver.rrzn.uni-hannover.de, 130.75.2.1 (posting OK)
- nic.belwue.de, 129.143.2.4 (read only)
- pyr.swan.ac.uk, 137.44.1.1 (posting OK)
- shakti.ncst.ernet.in, 144.16.1.1 (posting OK)
- trdsvr.tradtech.co.jp, 133.130.1.1 (read only)
-
- Christopher K. Neitzert (neitzert@astro.ocis.temple.edu) posted this
- list of open nntp sites:
-
- sol.ctr.columbia
- umd5.umd.edu
- louie.udel.edu
- netnews.upenn.edu
-
- 2.4 Gopher
-
- Usenet news is available through gopher. To find it, search for
- "usenet news -t7" in veronica, or use these sites:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 3]
- gopher -pnntp phantom.bsu.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp phred.math.byu.edu 4321
- gopher -pnntp jupiter.cc.gettysburg.edu 3030
- gopher -pnntp gopher.ic.ac.uk 4320
- gopher -pnntp teetot.acusd.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.sdsu.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp pinus.slu.se 4324
- gopher -pnntp services.canberra.edu.au 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.cc.umanitoba.ca 4320
- gopher -pnntp anemone.uta.fi 6671
- gopher -pnntp morse.cns.vt.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.msu.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.denet.dk 4320
- gopher -pnntp rs6000.cmp.ilstu.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp cwis.oac.uci.edu 4324
- gopher -pnntp gopher.acs.oakland.edu 4320
- gopher -pnntp hengill.rhi.hi.is 4324
- gopher -pnntp mudhoney.micro.umn.edu 4324
- gopher -pnntp pinchy.micro.umn.EDU 4324
- gopher -pnntp ccat.sas.upenn.edu 4324
- gopher -pnntp info.anu.edu.au 71
- gopher -pnntp cc.nsysu.edu.tw 4320
- gopher -pnntp nuinfo.nwu.edu 4321
- gopher -pnntp knot.queensu.ca 17502
- gopher -pnntp info.mcc.ac.uk 4320
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Christopher K. Neitzert (neitzert@astro.ocis.temple.edu) posted this
- list of gopher-accessable news sites:
-
- gopher -pnntp rodeo.uwyo.edu 71
- gopher -pnntp info-server.lanl.gov 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.fsu.EDU 4320
- gopher -pnntp butler.cc.tut.fi 6671
- gopher -pnntp newsserver.rrzn.uni-hannover.de 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.rz.uni-osnabrueck.de 4320
- gopher -pnntp cd4680fs.rrze.uni-erlangen.de 4320
- gopher -pnntp infopub.uqam.ca 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.cranfield.ac.uk 4324
- gopher -pnntp gopher.edvz.uni-linz.ac.at 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.ru.ac.za 4324
- gopher -pnntp usage.csd.unsw.OZ.AU 4320
- gopher -pnntp gopher.uji.es 4320
- gopher -pnntp risc.upol.cz 4320
- gopher -pnews saturn.wwc.edu 4320
- gopher -p"1/Usenet News" aurora.latech.edu 70
- gopher -p"1/News/Usenet" milo.sdsc.edu 70
- gopher -p"1/info.sc/tech/srv.ext/news" ifdh.sc.ucl.ac.be 70
- gopher -p"1/Usenet" gopher.bham.ac.uk 70
- gopher -p"1/Internet/News" solaris.rz.tu-clausthal.de 70
- gopher -p"1/news" gopher.ictp.trieste.it 70
- gopher -p"1/news" pub.vse.cz 70
- gopher -p".news/" mirzam.ccc.upv.es 70
- gopher -p"1/.nn" olymp.wu-wien.ac.at 70
-
- 2.5 Mail to news gateways
-
- Mail to news gateways are sites that will take any article given to
- them and forward it to news. For information on these, mail
- mg5n+remailers@andrew.cmu.edu with any message, or finger
- remailer@chaos.berkeley.edu.
- From the latest version of the file that I have:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 4]
- Anonymous postings to usenet can be made by sending anonymous mail to
- one of the following mail-to-usenet gateways:
-
- group.name@demon.co.uk
- group.name@news.demon.co.uk
- group.name@bull.com
- group.name@cass.ma02.bull.com
- group.name@undergrad.math.uwaterloo.ca
- group.name@charm.magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu
- group.name@comlab.ox.ac.uk
- group.name@nic.funet.fi
- group.name@cs.dal.ca
- group.name@ug.cs.dal.ca
- group.name@paris.ics.uci.edu (removes headers)
- group.name.usenet@decwrl.dec.com (Preserves all headers)
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Some of these change fairly often.
-
- 2.6 Internet services list
-
- This is not a direct way to access news, but it does list many
- places, and it changes often.
- To get the internet services list, look in alt.internet.services,
- comp.misc, biz.comp.services, alt.bbs.internet, news.answers,
- comp.answers, or alt.answers, or ftp to rtfm.mit.edu, or archie for
- inet.services.txt, or finger yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu.
-
- 2.7 I only have access to...
-
- ...telnet.
-
- With access to telnet, you can access any of the free services
- providers listed above. You can also access one of the many gopher
- servers that will allow you to read news. These are listed in the
- internet services list. Information on this list is in section 1.7.
- Here's the relevant information from the latest version I have:
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 1]
- telnet consultant.micro.umn.edu
- telnet seymour.md.gov
- telnet gopher.msu.edu
- telnet twosocks.ces.ncsu.edu
- telnet cat.ohiolink.edu
- telnet wsuaix.csc.wsu.edu (Login: wsuinfo)
- telnet telnet.wiscinfo.wisc.edu (Login: wiscinfo)
- telnet infoslug.ucsc.edu [INFOSLUG]
- telnet infopath.ucsd.edu (Login: infopath)
- telnet sunsite.unc.edu
- telnet ux1.cso.uiuc.edu
- telnet panda.uiowa.edu
- telnet inform.umd.edu
- telnet solar.rtd.utk.edu
- telnet grits.valdosta.peachnet.edu
- telnet gopher.virginia.edu (Login: gwis)
- telnet ecosys.drdr.virginia.edu
- telnet nicol.jvnc.net (Login: NICOL)
- telnet finfo.tu-graz.ac.at (Login: info)
- telnet info.anu.edu.au (Login: info)
- telnet tolten.puc.cl [Chile]
- telnet gopher.denet.dk [Denmark]
- telnet gopher.th-darmstadt.de
- telnet ecnet.ec [Ecuador]
- telnet gopher.uv.es [Spain]
- telnet gopher.isnet.is [Iceland]
- telnet siam.mi.cnr.it [Italy]
- telnet gopher.torun.edu.pl [Poland]
- telnet info.sunet.se [Sweden]
- telnet gopher.chalmers.se [Sweden]
- telnet hugin.ub2.lu.se [Sweden]
- telnet gopher.itu.ch [Switz.]
- telnet gopher.brad.ac.uk (Login: info)
- offers: Access to other services, gophers, documents, etc. (Login:
- gopher)
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- You can also access the web via telnet. From
- http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/FAQ/Bootstrap.html#z11
- via Carl M. Kadie:
-
- telnet info.cern.ch
- telnet ukanaix.cc.ukans.edu (login: www)
- telnet www.njit.edu (login: www)
- telnet vms.huji.ac.il (login: www)
- telnet sun.uakom.cs
- telnet fserv.kfki.hu (login: www)
- telnet info.funet.fi
-
- ....email.
-
- Many groups are mirrored in a mailing list; also, some sites have
- ftp archives. The best way to find if the group you are interested in
- has this service is to check the faq; these faqs are available through
- the ftp site rtfm.mit.edu.
- Ftp service is available through email. For information on
- ftp-through-mail, look in the internet services list. Here's the
- important information from the latest info I have:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 1]
- mail ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com
- mail bitftp@pucc.princeton.edu
- mail bitftp@dearn or to bitftp@vm.gmd.de (Europe only)
- mail ftpmail@ftp.uni-stuttgart.de
- mail ftpmail@grasp.insa-lyon.fr
- mail bitftp@plearn.edu.pl or bitftp@plearn (Europe)
- mail ftpmail@doc.ic.ac.uk or ftpmail@sunsite.unc.edu
- Body-of-letter: help or ftplist for a list of anon. ftp sites.
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Also, it is possible for someone to mail you certain newsgroups with
- a simple perl script (if they have access to a shell account). For
- information on this, write me; it's still in the works.
- It's actually possible to gopher through email. From the internet
- services list:
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 1]
- mail gophermail@ncc.go.jp
- mail gophermail@calvin.edu
- mail gopher@solaris.ims.ac.jp
- mail gopher@earn.net
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Include any subject but no body.
- You can also access the web via email. Send mail to
- listserv@info.cern.ch, and include the line: "help".
- For any group that is moderated, you can submit messages directly to
- the moderator (via email) instead of the normal posting method; this is
- all a newsreader does for moderated newsgroups. To find out which
- groups are moderated and the moderation address, you can ftp to
- rtfm.mit.edu and get /pub/usenet/news.answers/moderator-list/partX,
- where "X" is the number of the separate parts.
- You can also subscribe to mailing lists that mirror newsgroups. To
- get a list of these, you can ftp to rtfm.mit.edu and get
- /pub/usenet/news.ansers/mail/news-gateways/partX, where "X" is the
- number of the separate parts.
-
- ...ftp.
-
- Many newsgroups are archived. The best way to find out about this
- is to check the faq for that group, available at rtfm.mit.edu.
-
- ....gopher.
-
- News is directly available through gopher; search for "usenet" in
- veronica, or look at the list above. Also, you can gopher to any of the
- above gopher sites to see some very full-featured gopher sites.
- It is also possible to telnet through gopher; this can be done by
- gohering to services.more.net, or be searching for "Telnet Resources" in
- veronica. The path is:
-
- services.more.net:
- Other Information and Resources (Internet)/
- Tools for surfing the net/
- Telnet Resources/
- Open telnet/
-
- From there, you can enter any telnet site (including the sites
- listed above and read news). To search for other possible open telnet
- sites, search for "telnet -t78" in veronica.
- You can also ftp through gopher; the path is:
-
- gopher.tv.umn.edu:
- 1/
- FTP Searches/
- Popular FTP Sites via Gopher/
-
- From there, you can get files from many sites.
-
- =======================================================================
- Chapter 3: Ethics of Banned Newsgroups
-
- 3.1 What is a "banned newsgroup"?
-
- A "banned newsgroup" in the strictest sense of the phrase would be
- a newsgroup to which access has been denied because of the content of
- material in that newsgroup. However, in this faq, I use a looser
- sense of the phrase: basically, any newsgroup to which access is
- impossible, difficult through normal methods, or restricted in any way.
-
- 3.2 Should news administrators be allowed to ban newsgroups?
-
- It is becoming clearer and clearer in this information age that
- newsgroups (and all electronic communication) are analogous to
- libraries. Because of this, the rules and ethics that apply to
- libraries should be applied to newsgroups.
-
- Carl M. Kadie has done some wonderful work on archiving and
- analyzing information relating to computer freedom; much of the
- information in this document, especially that relating to the
- "newsgroups as libraries" analogy, is his. See below on how to access
- his huge archive.
-
- Without going into legalities, there are some important reasons
- that news administrators would not want to provide access to certain
- news groups. These reasons include, but are not limited to:
-
- - Size limitations. Certain news groups are just too large to
- provide access to without severely limiting other newsgroups.
- - A limited feed. For example, a company or school may wish to only
- allow newsgroups related to their company or school. However, this does
- not allow them to only pick and choose from the remaining newsgroups.
-
- Of course, there are some reasons that are generally not considered
- valid. These reasons include, but are not limited to:
-
- - Copyright violations. A library (or bookstore, or the phone
- company) can not be expected to scan every article (or book, or
- communication) for illegal material.
- - Content of newsgroups. If you are willing to accept the
- "newsgroup as a library" paradigm, you can not allow or deny access to
- newsgroups based on content.
-
- The American Library Association (ALA) has said:
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 5]
- "The library is one of the great symbols of our democracy. It is a
- living embodiment of the First Amendment because it includes voices of
- dissent."1 Libraries of all types adhere to this ideal ... It is
- essential to this purpose that the library function as neutral ground in
- that marketplace. Viewpoint-based discrimination has no place in ...
- library collections or services; for the library to espouse partisan
- causes or favor particular viewpoints violates its mission.
-
- Libraries serve the function of making ideas and information
- available to all members of the society, without discrimination.
-
- The right of free access to information for all individuals is
- basic to all library service. The central thrust of the LIBRARY BILL OF
- RIGHTS is to protect and encourage the free flow of information and
- ideas. Article 5 protects the rights of an individual to use a library
- regardless of origin, age, background, or views. The American Library
- Association urges all libraries to set policies and procedures that
- reflect the basic tenets of the LIBRARY BILL OF RIGHTS, within the
- framework of Constitutional imperatives and limitations.
-
- 1. Richard R. Kreimer v. Bureau of Police for the Town of
- Morristown, et. al., ___ F. Supp. ___ (No. 90-554, May 22, 1991).
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- The Bill of Rights (from the ALA) reads, in part:
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 6]
- The American Library Association affirms that all libraries are
- forums for information and ideas, and that the following basic policies
- should guide their services.
-
- Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all
- points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not
- be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.
-
- Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups concerned
- with resisting abridgment of free expression and free access to ideas.
-
- A person's right to use a library should not be denied or abridged
- because of origin, age, background, or views.
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- Moreover, it is not only the right thing to do to allow access to
- these newsgroups; according the the "Librarian's Code of Ethics",
- librarians must stand up to attempts to ban newsgroups.
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 7]
- The Librarian's Code of Ethics
-
- II. Librarians must resist all efforts by groups or individuals to
- censor library material.
-
- III. Librarians must protect each user's right to privacy with respect
- to information sought or received and materials consulted,
- borrowed, or acquired.
-
- V. Librarians must distinguish clearly in their actions and
- statements between their personal philosophies and attitudes and
- those of an institution or professional body.
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- And there are even more general codes of ethics that could be
- applied, including the Code of Ethics for Information Scientists:
-
- [BEGIN EXCERTPS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 8]
- A Code of Ethics for Information Scientists:
-
- Information professionals should:
- * strive to make information available to individuals who need it
- * strive both to ensure accuracy and not to infringe upon privacy or
- confidentiality in providing information about individuals
- * protect each information user's and provider's right to privacy
- and confidentiality
-
- Information professionals should:
- * resist efforts to censor publications
- * play active roles in educating society to understand and
- appreciate the importance of information promoting equal
- opportunity for access to information
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- News administrators are generally not trained in law relating to
- libel, copyright violations, and pornography; they often don't have a
- good basis to judge whether or not something is in violation of the law.
- It is impossible for news administrators to scan all news.
-
- "Censorship reflects society's lack of confidence in itself. It is a
- hallmark of an authoritative regime."
- - Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart
-
- 3.3 Should people be allowed to describe how to receive banned
- newsgroups?
-
- Obviously, I believe so, since I am writing this faq. However, this
- information is already out there; both in forms of getting banned
- newsgroups, and just as general internet services. Not much information
- in this faq is new; it just hasn't always been in one spot at one time.
- In fact, I believe that it is important to describe how to receive
- banned newsgroups, and for people to excercise their rights pertaining
- to newsgroups. It is very disturbing for me to see news administrators
- declaring themselves ultimate arbitrators of what is and is not
- appropriate; even looking past the obvious problems with this, the
- decision is often made for basically arbitrary reasons.
- News administrators will only realize that they can not control what
- people can and can not read on a selective basis if people stand up for
- their rights.
- If people do not continue to excercise their rights to getting
- uncensored information, it will become easier and easier for
- organizations to infringe upon those rights. For this reason, it is
- important to keep this information alive, even if it does not directly
- apply to you at this moment. Who knows when the news situation at your
- site will change?
- Of course, this file is most useful in places where news is (even
- partially) banned; if your site has a news feed that is censored, it is
- your responsibility as a member of the electronic culture to provide
- this information to others at your site that need it.
- The only way that our rights will not be tread upon is if people
- stand up and excercise their rights. Every person that wishes to be
- able to choose has been drafted into the anti-censorship war. Even if
- access to your particular newsgroups is not being challenged today,
- every new rule and regulation takes you one step closer to the day when
- you no longer decide what you can read.
-
- "I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but
- the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to
- exercise that control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to
- take it from them, but to inform their discretion."
- - Thomas Jefferson
-
- 3.4 Are newsgroups libraries?
-
- Carl M. Kadie has made this wonderful statement, that pretty much
- sums it up:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 9]
- So what is a library?
-
- Here is my favorite definition:
-
- (From Indiana state law) "'Library' means a collection of a variety of
- books or other printed matter, audiovisual materials or other items in
- which knowledge is recorded; kept in a centralized place; for which a
- person who as knowledge of the materials, their arrangement, their use
- and of library skills is responsible; and which are for the use of
- individuals or groups in meeting their recreational, informational,
- educational, research or cultural needs."
-
- Here are some others:
-
- The best definition in the OED II is:
-
- "a public institution or establishment, charged with the care of a
- collection of books, and the duty of rendering the books accessible to
- those who require to use them."
-
- I called the American Library Association, but the folks I talked to
- did know of an official definition. They did, however, suggest looking
- in the book _American Library Laws_ (5th edition) for legal
- definitions. From the book I learned that most states do not define
- the term. Here are definitions from the states that do:
-
- California: "'School library' means an organized collection of printed
- and audiovisual materials which (a) is administered as a unit, (b) is
- located in a designed place, and (c) makes printed, audiovisual, and
- other materials as well as necessary equipment and services of a staff
- accessible to elementary and secondary school students and teachers."
-
- "'Academic library' means a library established and maintained by a
- college or university to meet the needs of its students and faculty,
- and others by agreement."
-
- Maine: "'Media center' means any library utilizing print as well as
- extensive nonprint resources and materials."
-
- Pennsylvania: "'Local Library.' Any free, public, nonsectrian library,
- whether established and maintained by a municipality or by a private
- association, corporation or group, which serves the informational,
- educational and recreational needs of all the residents of the area
- for which its governing body is responsible, by providing free access
- (including free lending and reference services) to an organized and
- currently useful collection of printed items and other materials and
- to the services of staff trained to recognized and provide for these
- needs."
-
- South Dakota: "'Public library materials,' the various forms in which
- knowledge, information, and humanity's cultural heritage
- are recorded that a public library might acquire, organized and
- make available to its clientele;"
-
- Washington State: "'Resources' are library materials which include but
- are not limited to print, nonprint (e.g., audiovisual, realia, etc.),
- and microform formats; network resources such as software, hardware,
- and equipment; electronic and magnetic records; data bases;
- communication technology; facilities; and human expertise."
-
- [According to the OED II, "realia" are " Objects which may be used as
- teaching aids but were not made for the purpose."]
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- 3.5 Do we really need this faq?
-
- If you are at a well-connected site, you may not see the need for
- this document. However, consider these recent real-world examples:
-
- - A news administrator announces that certain newsgroups will be cut
- off because of "copyright violations"
- - People at a site have to have every news message of theirs
- approved by an official member of the news administration before it will
- be posted
- - Certain articles at a site are filtered out before people are
- allowed to read news
- - People are forced to sign statements and go through other
- procedures to get access to certain newsgroups
-
- All of these examples have occurred recently. The people at these
- sites are having decisions made for them. The administrators are
- ignoring many codes of ethics. All of the people at these sites can be
- helped with information on how to get banned newsgroups.
- But even beyond that, I feel that it is important to show people
- (both news administrators and readers) that there are alternatives to
- reading a censored newsfeed. There is no way to prevent any person on
- the net from getting banned newsgroups; if you have access to any
- internet resource, you have full access to news.
-
- "The Net interprets censorship as damage and routes around it."
- - John Gilmore
-
- 3.6 Online references pertaining to electronic freedom and privacy
-
- News is a great place to discuss electronic rights. Some newsgroups
- that are good to read are:
-
- - alt.censorship
- - alt.comp-acad.freedom.announce
- - alt.comp-acad.freedom.talk
- - alt.privacy
- - comp.org.eff.announce
- - comp.org.eff.news
-
- There are also mailing lists that discuss these issues.
- To join the cypherpunks mailing list, send mail to
- "cypherpunks-request@toad.com". The submission address for the mailing
- list is "cypherpunks@toad.com".
-
- There are some web sites related to censorship and banned
- newsgroups. These include:
- http://www.cs.cmu.edu:8001/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/kcf/www/censor/index.html
- http://web.dementia.org/censorship/index.html
- http://www.mit.edu:8001/activities/safe/home.html
- http://www.mit.edu:8001/activities/safe/notsee.html
-
- ========================================================================
- Chapter 4: Legalities of Banned Newsgroups
-
- Disclaimer: I'm not a lawyer.
-
- 4.1 Legal responsibilities of news administrators
-
- There are basically two ways of looking at usenet. The first way
- is like a bookstore; there is no way the bookstore can be expected to
- scan through all the books it has to see which ones may contain
- material that is illegal or immoral. The second way is like an
- official newsletter, in which the editor is responsible for all the
- material contained within it.
- Realistically, there is no way that a news administrator can be
- expected to read through all of usenet news; there are hundreds of
- megabytes of it every week. However, news administrators that limit
- access to newsgroups based upon content are assuming responsibility
- for what is in the remaining newsgroups; they are basically accepting
- the newsletter view of usenet.
- If a news administrator limits access to news groups based upon
- content of those groups, they are basically asking for legal troubles
- for them and for all news administrators. Imagine if the phone
- company was responsible for every drug deal that occured over the
- phone lines; they would be gone in a week.
- Which way does the law view usenet? This question was partially
- answered in a recent court case, Cubby Inc. v. CompuServe. In this
- case, Cubby sued CompuServe for information that was made available
- through them.
- The court ruled in favor of CompuServe. They recognized and
- legitimized the analogy of usenet to a bookstore.
- But what about obscene images? First of all, it's important to note
- what the law considers legal. From "SEX AND THE SINGLE SYSADMIN: The
- risks of carrying graphic sexual materials" by Mike Godwin
- (mnemonic@eff.org):
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 10]
- In layman's terms, a jury (or a judge in a nonjury case) would ask
- itself something like these four questions:
- 1) Is it designed to be sexually arousing?
- 2) Is it arousing in a way that one's local community would consider
- unhealthy or immoral?
- 3) Does it depict acts whose depictions are specifically prohibited by
- state law?
- 4) Does the work, when taken as a whole, lack significant literary,
- artistic, scientific, or social value?
-
- If the answer to all four questions is "yes," the material will be
- judged obscene, and it will be Constitutional to prosecute someone for
- distributing it. (It should be noted in passing that pictures of the
- "hardness" of Playboy and Penthouse photography have never been found to
- be obscene--their appearance in digital form on Usenet sites may create
- copyright problems, but they won't create obscenity problems.)
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- It's important to note that many of the pictures similar to those
- that appear in "Playboy" on usenet are not considered obscene by the
- law.
- But what about the material that would be considered obscene? From
- the same file:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 10]
- And, in the 1959 case Smith v. California, the Court held that criminal
- obscenity statutes, like the great majority of all criminal laws, must
- require the government to prove "scienter" (essentially, "guilty
- knowledge" on the defendant's part) before that defendant can be found
- guilty. So, if the government can't prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
- a system operator knew or should have known about the obscene material
- on the system, the operator cannot be held liable for an obscenity
- crime.
-
- In short, you can't constitutionally be convicted merely for possessing
- obscene material, or for distributing obscene material you didn't know
- about.
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- 4.2 Is it legal to describe how to receive banned newsgroups?
-
- Yes. Generally, it's not illegal to distribute information about
- how to do things; people have been distributing information on how to
- make bombs, how to steal things, and how to modify electronic equipment
- for a long time, and it's totally legal to describe how to do so.
- Moreover, it's not (to my knowledge) illegal to read any banned
- newsgroups. Even if your news administrator has decided that he does
- not want you to read that group, you have no legal responsibility to
- follow his wishes. In fact, it may be illegal for him to try and force
- you to follow his wishes.
-
- "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of
- the press ..."
- - First Amendment to the Constitution
- of the United States of America
-
- 4.3 Legal references pertaining to banned newsgroups
-
- Carl M. Kadie is in charge of a wonderful reference of legal and
- ethical documents pertaining to freedom of information, especially
- electronic information.
- From the latest information I have:
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 11]
- * Computers and Academic Freedom (CAF) Archive
-
- The CAF Archive is an electronic library of information about
- computers and academic freedom.
-
- If you have gopher, the archive is browsable with the command:
- gopher -p academic gopher.eff.org
-
- If you have Mosiac or some other WWW client, go to
- http://www.eff.org/CAF/cafhome.html
-
- It is available via anonymous ftp to ftp.eff.org (192.77.172.4) in
- directory "pub/CAF". It is also available via email. For information
- on email access send email to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com. In the body of
- your note include the lines:
- connect ftp.eff.org
- cd /pub/CAF
- get caf
- cd /pub/CAF/faq
- get archive
- [END INLCUDED FILE]
-
- Note: I think that "gopher -p CAF gopher.eff.org" works, instead
- of the "... -p academic" mentioned above.
-
- A very good, in-depth discussion of legal issues affecting computers
- is "E-Law2.0: Computer Information Systems Law and System Operator
- Liability Revisited" by David J. Loundy, available through EFF's gopher.
-
- EFF is a wonderful net resource. They have a lot of online
- information pertaining to electronic freedom and privacy, including
- actual legal documents and interpretations. gopher to eff.org (via one
- of the ways mentioned above) to check it out. For more information on
- gopher, see section 5.2.
- Also, take a look at the Electronic Frontier Canada (EFC) gopher;
- David Jones (djones@insight.dcss.McMaster.CA) sent me this info on them:
- ----
- Those at Canadian institutions who know of recent instances of
- "electronic censorship", including bans on Usenet newsgroups,
- are encouraged to report it to Electronic Frontier Canada
- by sending email to "efc@graceland.uwaterloo.ca"
- for inclusion in the EFC archive:
-
- gopher -p "1/community/efc" ee.mcgill.ca
- ----
-
- "The Legal List, Law-Related Resources on the Internet and
- Elsewhere" by Erik J. Heels is a list of legal resources that may
- contain info relating to freedom of information or other net topics.
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 12]
- 2.2.1. MAILING LIST. If you wish to be added to "The Legal List"
- Mailing List, send a message in the following form:
-
- To: legal-list-request@justice.eliot.me.us
- Subject: subscribe John Smith
-
- Hi,
- I saw a reference to "The Legal List" on CompuServe.
- Thanks,
- - John
-
- The SUBJECT of the message should contain your real name. I always
- like to hear where you learned about "The Legal List," so if you
- include this information in the BODY of the message, I would greatly
- appreciate it! Version 4.0 of "The Legal List" (as well as other
- announcements) will be mailed to those on this Mailing List. To
- cancel your subscription to this Mailing List, send a message in the
- following form:
-
- To: legal-list-request@justice.eliot.me.us
- Subject: unsubscribe
-
- Please allow up to ONE WEEK for a reply to messages sent to
- legal-list-request@justice.eliot.me.us. (If you send multiple
- subscription requests, you will get multiple responses. However,
- duplicate addresses are removed before any messages are sent to
- those on "The Legal List" Mailing List, so you should not receive
- multiple copies of any messages.)
-
- 2.3. ANONYMOUS FTP. "The Legal List" is available via anonymous
- FTP from ftp.midnight.com (Midnight Networks Inc.) as
- pub/LegalList/legallist.txt. You may connect to ftp.midnight.com
- by anonymous FTP ONLY. (Please do NOT TELNET to ftp.midnight.com.)
- If you have e-mail access but you do not have FTP access, you may
- want to try DEC's FTP-via-e-mail service, FTPMAIL (see Section 4.1).
- To get "The Legal List" via e-mail from DEC's FTPMAIL service, send
- the following message to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com:
-
- connect ftp.midnight.com
- ascii
- get /pub/LegalList/README
- get /pub/LegalList/legallist.txt
- quit
-
- The files will be e-mailed to you in a day or so. If you have
- problems with FTPing to ftp.midnight.com, send a message to
- admin@midnight.com or legal-list@justice.eliot.me.us.
-
- 2.4. GOPHER. "The Legal List" is available via Gopher from the
- University of Southern Maine Gopher site (University of Maine School
- of Law, site gopher.usmacs.maine.edu).
-
- 2.4.2. OTHER KNOWN GOPHER SITES. "The Legal List" has been posted
- to the following Gopher sites:
-
- liberty.uc.wlu.edu
- Law Related Sources/Legal List...
- malahat.library.uvic.ca
- miles.library.arizona.edu
- morris.lib.udel.edu
- sluava.slu.edu
-
- Do a VERONICA search of "Legal List" to find other sites. (This is
- why it's important to include the words "The Legal List v3.0" when
- you add "The Legal List" to your Gopher site.)
-
- <+> 2.5. USENET. "The Legal List" is posted on initial release to
- misc.legal.moderated and periodically to other newsgroups (e.g.
- misc.legal, misc.legal.computing, misc.answers, and news.answers).
- It is also available via anonymous FTP from rtfm.mit.edu
- as /pub/usenet/news.answers/law/net-resources/ files part1-part3.
- To obtain a copy via e-mail from this site, send a message to
- mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with the following lines in it:
-
- send usenet/news.answers/law/net-resources/part1
- send usenet/news.answers/law/net-resources/part2
- send usenet/news.answers/law/net-resources/part3
- quit
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- ========================================================================
- Chapter 5: Further information on references mentioned
-
- 5.1 Information on Freenets
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 13]
- A popular government without popular information, or the means of
- acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or a tragedy, or per-
- haps both. Knowledge will forever govern ignorance, and a people
- who mean to be their own governors must arm themselves with the
- power which knowledge gives.
- - James Madison
-
- These words of James Madison, if anything, are of greater
- significance now then when they were first written. We, as a so-
- ciety, are at a point where whether we are going to live in an
- "Information Age" is no longer at issue. We are. The only ques-
- tion which remains is what we are going to do about it--whether
- we, as a society, will be able to use this new technology to more
- effectively "...arm ourselves with the power which knowledge
- gives."
-
- Free-Net (tm) community computer systems offer a significant
- and innovative answer to that question. They allow people un-
- paralleled access to some of the best services and resources our
- computerized Information Age has to offer; and they do it in a way
- which makes them free to the user--in much the same way that our
- public library system, for example, has been free to its patrons
- for over 100 years.
-
- For underlying it all--underlying all the time and effort
- that has gone into the development of the Free-Net concept--is one
- simple fact. We can not imagine a 21st Century which does NOT
- have free public-access community computer systems, just as our
- century had the free public library.
-
- If you agree with that belief; if you agree with us on the
- sheer inevitability of public access computing then, please, read
- on. This guide is for you.
-
- Thomas M. Grundner, Ed.D
- President
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- 5.2 Information on Library Policy Statements Archive Access
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 14]
- * Library Policy Statements
-
- Library Policy Archive
- [part of the Computers and Academic Freedom (CAF) Archive
- [part of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) Archive]]
-
- This is an on-line collection of library policy statements. It
- includes the American Library Association's Freedom To Read statement
- and the ALA Library Bill of Rights. (The ALA material is made
- available by permission of the American Library Association.)
-
- If you have gopher, the archive is browsable with the command:
- gopher -p1/CAF/library gopher.eff.org
-
- The archive is also accessible via anonymous ftp and email. Ftp to
- ftp.eff.org (192.77.172.4). It is in directory "pub/CAF/library".
- To get the file(s) by email, send email to ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com. In
- the body of your note include the lines:
- connect ftp.eff.org
- cd /pub/CAF/library
- get <filename1>
- get <filename2>
-
- where <filenameX> is the name of a file that you want. File README is
- a detailed description of the items in the directory.
-
- For more information, to make contributions, or to report typos
- contact J.S. Greenfield (greeny@eff.org).
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- 5.3 Information on EFF
-
- [BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: 15]
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) was founded in July of 1990
- to ensure that the principles embodied in the Constitution and the Bill
- of Rights are protected as new communications technologies emerge.
-
- Since its inception, EFF has worked to shape our nation's communications
- infrastructure and the policies that govern it in order to maintain and
- enhance First Amendment, privacy and other democratic values. We believe
- that our overriding public goal must be the creation of Electronic
- Democracy, so our work focuses on the establishment of:
-
- * new laws that protect citizens' basic Constitutional rights as they
- use new communications technologies,
-
- * a policy of common carriage requirements for all network providers
- so that all speech, no matter how controversial, will be carried
- without discrimination,
-
- * a National Public Network where voice, data and video services are
- accessible to all citizens on an equitable and affordable basis, and
-
- * a diversity of communities that enable all citizens to have a voice in
- the information age.
- [END INCLUDED FILE]
-
- 5.4 Information on the Legal List
-
- [BEGIN EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE: 12]
- 1.1. PURPOSE AND HISTORY. The purpose of "The Legal List" is to
- provide a consolidated list of all of the law-related resources
- available on the Internet and elsewhere. I have been "on the
- Internet" since 1984. I initially learned about the Internet by
- looking over the shoulders of my friends and co-workers (I believe
- that this is the way most people learn how to navigate the
- Internet), and then I began exploring the Internet for myself. I
- spent a great deal of 1992 exploring the Internet in search of law-
- related resources, because I wanted to know what law-related
- resources were available on the Internet. I was frustrated that of
- comprehensive list of such resources did not exist, so I created my
- own list. As I discussed what I had been doing with others, they
- began to request copies of my list. In August, 1992, I released the
- first version. I called this version "beta.4," because it was (and
- is) a work in progress.
-
- COPYRIGHT NOTICE
- Copyright (c) 1994 Erik J. Heels
- All rights reserved, except the following:
-
- I. ELECTRONIC COPYING. Permission is granted to copy "The Legal
- List" from one electronic storage or computer system to another (for
- example, to an e-mail server, FTP site, TELNET site, Gopher site,
- WWW site, WAIS site, USENET newsgroup, BBS, or any other electronic
- storage or computer system) provided that this copyright notice is
- included with all such copies. Your are encouraged to copy and
- redistribute electronic versions (as described in this section) of
- "The Legal List." If you choose to do so, please subscribe to "The
- Legal List" Mailing List (legal-list-request@justice.eliot.me.us, as
- described in Section 2.2.1) to minimize the proliferation of old
- versions of "The Legal List." (For example, if you choose to copy
- "The Legal List" to your Gopher site, please subscribe to "The Legal
- List" Mailing List so that you can update your Gopher site when the
- next version of "The Legal List" is published.)
-
- II. OTHER THAN ELECTRONIC COPYING. Permission is granted to copy
- "The Legal List" other than as described in Section I of this notice
- (including, but not limited to, printing "The Legal List" or
- otherwise making paper copies of it) under the following conditions:
- 1) This copyright notice must be included with all such copies. 2)
- If "The Legal List" is copied other than as described in Section I
- of this notice (e.g. if "The Legal List" is printed or photocopied),
- the copier must pay $9.17 to the author and must notify the author
- that "The Legal List" has been so copied. Payment must be made in
- US dollars (check or money order only, payable to "Erik J. Heels")
- and mailed to:
- The Legal List
- Attn: Erik J. Heels
- 39 Main Street
- Eliot, ME 03903-2234
- [END EXCERPTS FROM INCLUDED FILE]
-
- ========================================================================
- Chapter 6: Information on this Faq
-
- "They accused us of suppressing freedom of expression. This was a lie
- and we could not let them publish it."
- - Nelba Blandon, Interior Ministry Director of
- Censorship
-
- 6.1 Who compiled this faq?
-
- This faq was compiled by Joseph Gebis (j-gebis@uiuc.edu).
-
- 6.2 How do I submit additions, comments, and corrections?
-
- Mail anything to banned-faq@uiuc.edu. I also try to read
- alt.censorship and related newsgroups, but mailing me is the most
- certain way to get info to me.
-
- 6.3 How do I get the latest version of the faq?
-
- This faq is posted approximately once a month to alt.censorship,
- alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk, alt.internet.services, news.misc,
- alt.answers, and news.answers. It is available through ftp from
- rtfm.mit.edu, in /pub/usenet/news.answers/usenet/banned-groups-faq. You
- can retreive this by mail by using the ftp-by-mail service mentioned
- above, or by mailing me (banned-faq@uiuc.edu).
- The newest version is available by ftp from my machine
- (isr0906.urh.uiuc.edu) when it's up, in /pub/docs.
-
- 6.4 What other information do you need?
-
- Well, anything you have is useful. Send me comments, opinions, and
- especially, legal info. Also, this information can get out of date; if
- you notice anything that is, mail me.
- This document is always growing. Always feel free to post or send
- me information.
-
- 6.5 Is there an html version on this faq?
-
- Not yet. Any volunteers? If not, I'll do it eventually. It's
- available plaintext now on the web at
- http://www.cen.uiuc.edu/~jg11772/banned.faq.html, but I would like to
- get a real html version sooner or later.
-
- 6.6 Who are all the wonderful people that added information to the
- faq?
-
- < Your name here! :) >
- C. Baden (hazel@netcom.com)
- Esther Filderman (moose+@CMU.EDU)
- Seth Finkelstein (sethf@athena.mit.edu)
- Matthew J Ghio (mg5n+@andrew.cmu.edu)
- John M. Higgins (higgins@dorsai.dorsai.org)
- David Jones (djones@insight.dcss.McMaster.CA)
- David J. Loundy (David@InterAccess.com)
- David Milun (milun@cs.Buffalo.EDU)
- Christopher K. Neitzert (nertzert@astro.ocis.temple.edu)
- Doug Sewell (doug@cc.ysu.edu)
- Aaron Weiss (mw12@crux2.cit.cornell.edu)
-
- 6.7 Who else needs to be thanked?
-
- Ted Faber (faber@cs.wisc.edu), for telling me the John Gilmore
- quote.
- Matthew Ghio (Ghio@andrew.cmu.edu), for maintaining the anon
- remailer information sheet.
- J.S. Greenfield (Greeny@eff.org), for maintaining the EFF archives.
- Carl M. Kadie (kadie@eff.org), for providing the Computers and
- Academic Freedom archive. Much of the information in this document was
- submitted by Carl or derived from some of Carl's work; this document
- would probably not have been possible without him.
- Louis Raphael (raphael@orion.login.qa.ca), for maintaining FSLIST.
- -=Xenon=- (qwerty@netcom.com), for posting information on how where
- to find out about anon remailers.
- Scott A. Yanoff (yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu), for maintaining the
- internet services list.
-
- 6.8 References
-
- 1: The Internet Services List, by Scott A. Yanoff
- (yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu). This file is available by fingering
- yanoff@csd4.csd.uwm.edu.
- 2: FSLIST, by Louis Raphael (raphael@orion.login.qa.ca). This file
- is available by anonymous ftp from login.qc.ca in /pub/fslist/FSLISTXX.
- 3: Admin/Access List, by Carl M. Kadie (kadie@eff.org). This file
- is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in /pub/CAF/admin/access.
- 4: Info On Anonymous Remailers, by Matthew Ghio
- (mg5n+@andrew.cmu.edu). This file is available by mailing
- mg5n+remailers@andrew.cmu.edu, or by fingering
- remailer@chaos.berkeley.edu.
- 5: REGULATIONS, POLICIES, AND PROCEDURES AFFECTING ACCESS TO LIBRARY
- RESOURCES AND SERVICES: An Interpretation of the LIBRARY BILL OF RIGHTS,
- by the American Library Association. This file is available by
- anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in /pub/CAF/library/access.policies.ala.
- 6: The Library Bill of Rights, by the American Library Association.
- This file is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in
- /pub/CAF/library/bill-of-.ala.
- 7: The Librarian Code of Ethics, from Intellectual Freedom Manual,
- by the American Library Association. This file is available by
- anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in /pub/CAF/library/ethics.ala.
- 8: A Code of Ethics for Information Scientists, from Bulletin of the
- American Society for Information Science (August/September 1990). This
- file is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in
- /pub/CAF/library/ethics.asis.
- 9: What is a libary?, by Carl M. Kadie (kadie@eff.org). This file
- is available by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in
- /pub/CAF/library/library-netnews-analogy.
- 10: "Sex and the Single Sysadmin", by Mike Godwin
- (mnemonic@eff.org). This file is available by anonymous ftp from
- ftp.eff.org in /pub/Publications/Mike_Godwin/obscene.IW.
- 11: CAF Access Info. This file is available by anonymous ftp from
- ftp.eff.org in /pub/CAF/README.
- 12: The Legal List, by Erik J. Heels
- (legal-list@justice.eliot.me.us). This file is available by anonymous
- ftp from ftp.midnight.com in /pub/LegalList/legallist.txt.
- 13: Freenet Information, by Thomas M. Grundner.
- 14: Library Policy Archive Access Information. This file is
- available by anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in /pub/CAF/library/README.
- 15: EFF Introductory Information. This file is available by
- anonymous ftp from ftp.eff.org in /pub/about.eff.
-
- 6.9 Disclaimer
-
- This article is Copyright 1994 by Joseph Gebis. It may be
- freely redistributed in its entirety provided that this notice, and the
- author's name, is not removed. It may not be sold for profit or
- incorporated in commercial documents without the written permission of
- the copyright holder. Permission is expressly granted for this document
- to be made available for file transfer from installations offering
- unrestricted anonymous file transfer on the Internet. This document is
- provided as is without any express or implied warranty. Nothing in this
- article represents the views of the Univeristy of Illinois or any other
- organization.
-
- ----
- Joseph Gebis j-gebis@uiuc.edu http://www.cen.uiuc.edu/~jg11772/home.html
-