mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
210 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
210 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 19, 1 Reply
|
||
|
To: all Date: 31-Jan-92 11:44:04
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following is an article I published in the Summer 1991
|
||
|
issue of the WHOLE EARTH REVIEW. It's divided into bite-sized
|
||
|
chunks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Electronic Frontier Foundation and Virtual Communities
|
||
|
By Mike Godwin
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Introduction by Howard Rheingold:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mike Godwin is the staff counsel for The Electronic Frontier Foundation
|
||
|
(EFF). EFF has been established to help civilize the electronic frontier;
|
||
|
to make it truly useful and beneficial to everyone, not just an elite; and
|
||
|
to do this in a way that is in keeping with our society's highest
|
||
|
traditions of the free and open flow of information and communication. For
|
||
|
information about the EFF, email mnemonic@eff.org, write EFF, 155 Second
|
||
|
Street, Cambridge, MA 02141, or call 617 864 1550.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Electronic Frontier Foundation is living proof of the
|
||
|
existence and effectiveness of virtual digital communities. Not only did
|
||
|
EFF arise from the interactions of citizens who were, and are, "neighbors"
|
||
|
in electronic communities, but the EFF has also gone on to establish its
|
||
|
own communities, not the least of which is the EFF conference on the WELL
|
||
|
(Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link).
|
||
|
The WELL was a key community from the beginning. The way
|
||
|
communities normally shape their responses to outside events is for
|
||
|
neighbors to chat - perhaps even gossip Q over the fence. It was this kind
|
||
|
of informal exchange of information that led to two crystallizing events
|
||
|
behind EFF's formation. The first was an online WELL conference on
|
||
|
"hacking" sponsored by Harper's magazine. One result of that conference
|
||
|
was that WELL user and Grateful Dead lyricist John Perry Barlow met and
|
||
|
befriended a couple of hackers who went by the cyberpunkish noms-de-hack
|
||
|
"Acid Phreak" and "Phiber Optik." Although they "knew" each other
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued next posting>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 26, 1 Reply
|
||
|
To: Mike Godwin 76711,317 Date: 31-Jan-92 12:21:24
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued from previous posting>
|
||
|
|
||
|
electronically, Barlow's face-to-face meeting with Acid and Optik was a
|
||
|
revelation: "Acid and Optik, as material beings, were well-scrubbed and
|
||
|
fashionably clad," Barlow later wrote. "They looked to be as dangerous as
|
||
|
ducks." Barlow soon concluded that law enforcement's characterization of
|
||
|
these hackers as major computer criminals was disproportionate to their
|
||
|
actions, which had more to do with intellectual curiosity and youthful
|
||
|
exploration than with genuine criminal intent.
|
||
|
The second crystallizing event occurred when Barlow and another
|
||
|
WELL user, Mitch Kapor (a founder of Lotus Development Corp. and On
|
||
|
Technology) compared notes about their respective visits by FBI agents.
|
||
|
The agents were investigating the unauthorized copying and distribution of
|
||
|
Apple's proprietary source code for the ROMs in Apple's Macintosh
|
||
|
computer, and both Kapor and Barlow were startled by how little the FBI
|
||
|
seemed to know about the nature of the alleged crimes they were
|
||
|
investigating, and Barlow later published an account of the visit on the
|
||
|
WELL (and print-published as "Crime and Puzzlement" in WER #68).
|
||
|
As Barlow later writes in the March issue of the Foundation's
|
||
|
print newsletter, the EFFector: "Mitch's experience had been as dreamlike
|
||
|
as mine. He had, in fact, filed the whole thing under General
|
||
|
Inexplicability until he read my tale on the WELL.... Several days later,
|
||
|
he found his bizjet about to fly over Wyoming on its way to San Francisco.
|
||
|
He called me from somewhere over South Dakota and asked if he might
|
||
|
literally drop in for a chat about [the agents' visits] and related
|
||
|
matters. So, while a late spring snow storm swirled outside my office, we
|
||
|
spent several hours hatching what became the Electronic Frontier
|
||
|
Foundation."
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 27, 1 Reply
|
||
|
To: Mike Godwin 76711,317 Date: 31-Jan-92 12:25:14
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued from previous message>
|
||
|
|
||
|
Having met in person when Barlow interviewed Kapor for Microtimes,
|
||
|
the two future EFF co-founders had used the WELL to build on their
|
||
|
face-to-face contact. In effect, they had become next-door neighbors,
|
||
|
although Barlow lived in Pinedale, Wyoming, while Kapor lived in
|
||
|
Brookline, Massachusetts. Says Barlow: "There was a sense that what was
|
||
|
going on was a threat to our community." So Barlow and Kapor did what
|
||
|
neighbors often do in response to a neighborhood problem - they formed a
|
||
|
citizens' group. In this case, the citizens' group was the EFF.
|
||
|
I had a chance to play my own role in another example of such
|
||
|
concerned citizen action in my then-hometown, Austin, Texas, which has
|
||
|
more than its share of computer bulletin-board systems (BBSs). On March 1,
|
||
|
1990, one of those BBSs was seized by the United States Secret Service,
|
||
|
which claimed at the time that the system, run by the Austin-based
|
||
|
role-playing game company Steve Jackson Games. Although neither Jackson
|
||
|
nor his company turned out to be the targets of the Secret Service's
|
||
|
criminal investigation, Jackson was told that the manual for a
|
||
|
role-playing game they were about to publish (called GURPS Cyberpunk and
|
||
|
stored on the hard disk of the company's BBS computer) was a "handbook for
|
||
|
computer crime."
|
||
|
Austin's BBS community was startled, then outraged, by the
|
||
|
seizure, which had the potential of putting Jackson, an innocent third
|
||
|
party, out of business. On a BBS called "Flight" there was a hot debate
|
||
|
about the media's failure to pick up on Jackson's story. A third-year law
|
||
|
student and former journalist and Flight user, I theorized on Flight that
|
||
|
the media hadn't covered the story because they didn't know about it. Or,
|
||
|
at least, they didn't understand the issues.
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 28, 1 Reply
|
||
|
To: Mike Godwin 76711,317 Date: 31-Jan-92 12:27:23
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued from previous message>
|
||
|
|
||
|
So, to test my theory, I gathered together several postings from
|
||
|
local BBSs and from Usenet, the distributed BBS that runs on the Internet
|
||
|
and connected computers, and trekked down to the Austin American-Statesman
|
||
|
office to talk to a friend of mine, Kyle Pope, who covered
|
||
|
computer-related stories. I also took him photocopies of the statutes that
|
||
|
give the Secret Service jurisdiction over computer crime and lots of phone
|
||
|
numbers of potential sources. At the same time, I called and modemed
|
||
|
materials to John Schwartz, a friend and former colleague who was now an
|
||
|
editor at Newsweek.
|
||
|
Pope's lengthy, copyrighted story on the Secret Service seizure
|
||
|
appeared in the American-Statesman the following weekend. John Schwartz's
|
||
|
story, which covered the Steve Jackson Games incident as well as the
|
||
|
Secret Service's involvement in a nationwide computer-crime "dragnet,"
|
||
|
appeared in Newsweek's April 30 issue. The heavy-handed tactics and
|
||
|
overbroad seizure at Steve Jackson Games became a symbol of the
|
||
|
law-enforcement community's misconceptions and fears about young computer
|
||
|
hackers, and provided a context for Barlow's and Kapor's discussions about
|
||
|
creating the EFF.
|
||
|
Once they agreed on what needed to be done, Kapor and Barlow went
|
||
|
back to the WELL and drew upon the collective wisdom of that community for
|
||
|
input into the tactics and strategy of the newly formed foundation. The
|
||
|
same week they announced the EFF's formation in Washington, D.C., they
|
||
|
started the EFF conference on the WELL - sort of a community within a
|
||
|
community which quickly became one of the system's most active
|
||
|
conferences.
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 29, 1 Reply
|
||
|
To: Mike Godwin 76711,317 Date: 31-Jan-92 12:33:10
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued from previous message>
|
||
|
|
||
|
Soon afterward, they created two new newsgroups on Usenet
|
||
|
Qcomp.org.eff.news and comp.org.eff.talk. The latter newsgroup, like all
|
||
|
active newsgroups, has become a community of sorts itself, with a diverse
|
||
|
collection of voices addressing - sometimes heatedly Q the issues that
|
||
|
arise as we proceed to explore and civilize the electronic frontier.
|
||
|
Almost immediately after the foundation was officially launched,
|
||
|
EFF's efforts to assist in the defense of electronic publisher Craig
|
||
|
Neidorf had tangible results. Neidorf had been prosecuted for publishing a
|
||
|
BellSouth text file relating to the E-911 system (see "Attacks on the Bill
|
||
|
of Rights," WER #70). EFF's law firm, Rabinowitz, Boudin, Standard,
|
||
|
Krinsky, Lieberman, submitted an amicus curiae brief defending Neidorf's
|
||
|
First Amendment rights as a publisher. We also helped Neidorf's defense
|
||
|
counsel assemble experts to testify on his client's behalf. And a member
|
||
|
of the WELL's EFF conference came up with the information that was
|
||
|
critical in persuading the prosecutors to drop their case.
|
||
|
It's clear that EFF is not only the product of electronic
|
||
|
communities, but has also produced some new communities while continuing
|
||
|
to contribute to old ones. It's also clear that the sense of community was
|
||
|
seeded by face-to-face contact at key points: when Barlow met Acid and
|
||
|
Optik, for example, and when he interviewed Kapor. The need for at least
|
||
|
occasional face-to-face contact, Kapor still stresses, means that current
|
||
|
networks and BBSs don't simply create community; instead, they amplify it.
|
||
|
Or, to be even more accurate, the two phenomena exist in a complex state
|
||
|
of coevolution, with face-to-face contacts fueling the electronic
|
||
|
relationships (and vice versa).
|
||
|
|
||
|
<concluded in the next message>
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Subj: Electronic Communities Section: Networlds
|
||
|
From: Mike Godwin 76711,317 # 30, * No Replies *
|
||
|
To: Mike Godwin 76711,317 Date: 31-Jan-92 12:34:23
|
||
|
|
||
|
<continued from previous message>
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the things you often see when you read discussions about
|
||
|
EFF on the WELL or on Usenet is a sense that the EFF has become a
|
||
|
representative body. While this is misleading - EFF is not yet a
|
||
|
membership organization - it's still the case that EFF is regarded as an
|
||
|
advocacy group for electronic communities generally. You'll often read
|
||
|
comments from Usenet folks who think the most appropriate pronouns when
|
||
|
talking about the EFF are "we," "us," and "our."
|
||
|
And if that neighborly sense of belonging doesn't prove the
|
||
|
existence of a community, I don't know what does.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
--Mike Godwin
|
||
|
|
||
|
|