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This article is from NameBase NewsLine, which is distributed to users of
NameBase, a microcomputer database with 170,000 citations and 78,000 names.
This 3-megabyte database is available on floppy disks and is used by over
700 journalists and researchers around the world. For a brochure write to:
Public Information Research, PO Box 680635, San Antonio TX 78268
Tel: 210-509-3160 Fax: 210-509-3161
From NameBase NewsLine, No. 2, July-August 1993:
Cyberspace Wars: Microprocessing vs. Big Brother
by Daniel Brandt
Just ten years ago the issues were so simple, the arguments so clean.
The concept of hackers was cute and quaint, best understood through
Hollywood thrillers like "War Games." The major media had yet to use
the word "cyberspace," a term just then created by William Gibson in
Neuromancer, his first masterpiece in a strange new genre of "cyberpunk"
fiction.
It was ten years ago that establishment liberal David Burnham wrote
"The Rise of the Computer State" with Ford, Rockefeller, and Aspen
Institute money. This book ignored microprocessing and limited its
nightmarish vision to the dangers posed by Big Brother's mainframes. One
chapter covered the threat posed by the National Security Agency (NSA),
the largest U.S. intelligence agency with the world's best computers, an
agency that is not subjected to any oversight. In the mid-1970s the Senate
Intelligence Committee headed by Frank Church warned that "if not properly
controlled," the NSA's technology "could be turned against the American
people at a great cost to liberty." For thirty years the NSA obtained
copies of most telex messages entering and leaving the U.S., and the CIA
illegally intercepted thousands of first-class letters as they left the
country. If the high-tech NSA were ever turned against us, Church said,
"no American would have any privacy left.... There would be no place to
hide."[1]
One word -- privacy -- summed up the debate nicely then, because Big
Brother had a monopoly on computing power. But some cracks were already
appearing in this pre-cyberspace version of the problem. In 1978 the
Carter administration admitted that the Soviets were tapping into
microwave links in New York, Washington, and San Francisco; microwave was
like a sieve compared to the old underground intercity telephone cables.
That was only a minor irritant compared to January 15, 1990, when half
of the entire AT&T network crashed due to a single software bug. The
technicians in the hardware lab where I worked used to kid the software
engineers, saying that if civilization had developed the way programmers
write programs, one woodpecker could come along and bring it all down.
Also in 1978 the NSA began harassing certain mathematicians in
the private sector, claiming "sole authority to fund research in
cryptography."[2] Then came the microprocessor. Within a few years every
mass-market magazine for microcomputer hobbyists was running an occasional
article on new encryption techniques, and the NSA couldn't keep the lid
on. Hackers were experimenting on their crude machines with a technique
called "public key cryptography."[3] A recent estimate has it that "a
buildingful of NSA's specially hot-rodded supercomputers might take a day
to crack a 140-digit code," but from NSA's point of view that's not good
enough. Today's micros are roughly 100 times faster with 100 times the
capacity of the machine I bought ten years ago; the price is lower and it
fits on your lap. They can easily encrypt and decrypt with keys this size.
While the world's most powerful supercomputer grinds all day to crack one
key, "what is it going to do when 100 million people each use 100
different keys per day?"[4] Big Brother has suddenly lost his monopoly on
encryption technology, and hackers everywhere could not be more delighted.
Yes, the rules of the game have changed, due primarily to the rapid
evolution of microprocessing power. The simple concept of "privacy" no
longer works as well as it did for Frank Church and David Burnham. The
little guy on his microcomputer bulletin board system (BBS) -- by one
estimate there are now 60,000 of these in the U.S.[5] -- wants privacy
from Big Brother, but corporations will also be screaming for privacy as
they adopt the new encryption technology. And then what about
transnational corporations seeking to avoid government intrusion? Or
organized crime and international drug cartels? One, two, many Big
Brothers? Privacy for whom?
William Gibson's vision in Neuromancer may read like heaven for
hackers, but for the rest of us the term "cyberpunk" seems about right. We
shudder at Gibson's future, where transnational corporations hold all the
wealth and all the information, and outcast data pirates must jack into
their cyberspace decks, maneuver around the "black ice" of corporate data
security systems, and forage for their livelihoods. It's rather like
children stealing food from garbage cans, but it all seems like ice cream
to the hackers who find this inspiring.
The hacker ethic is a laissez-faire vision of total freedom to
microcompute and telecommute, a world of unbreakable encryption, anonymous
E-Money transfers, and lately talk of a fiber-optic data superhighway,
leading to a place in cyberspace where everyone can connect with anyone.
They even have their own Washington lobby. Electronic Frontier Foundation
(EFF) started out with funding from Mitch Kapor and a few other computer
millionaires, but is now underwritten by IBM, Apple, Microsoft, AT&T, MCI,
Bell Atlantic, Adobe, the Newspaper Association of America, and the
National Cable Television Association.[6] And the word "cyberspace" is
trumpeted in Scientific American, Time, Washington Post, and The New
Republic. We can expect to see it soon in Webster's. This is bigger than
a handful of hackers, and it's time to become conversant with the issues.
There IS a new reality, and we needed a new word. But more than a
mere reality, it's a massive moving target careening blindly into the
future. No one has a handle on it. Cyberpunk novelist Bruce Sterling
worries about hacker ethics, one narrow slice of the big picture, but he
doesn't pretend to have many answers.[7] The Washington office of Computer
Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) is in the same building as
EFF, and both work against the NSA's efforts to mandate encryption
hardware that the government can break -- the so-called "Clipper Chip"
that was announced by the White House on April 16, 1993.[8] But on other
issues CPSR is suspicious of EFF's pro-corporate leanings. One imagines
CPSR arguing that our government, at least, can be petitioned and our
representatives are elected. Comparatively, how much input are we allowed
by major corporations? Given their priorities, how responsive will they
be to the information needs of the poor and underprivileged? What will
happen, for example, if public libraries and public schools get left
behind in the dust of the data superhighway?
In Washington DC, the information capital of the world, the newest
game in town is Cyberspace Wars. Unfortunately, it's also the latest
buzzword. Pack journalists in this town are seemingly required to log
in on these, which invariably generates more heat than light.
I don't have a graduate degree, but I spent three years in grad
school studying something they called "social ethics," which included much
philosophy. My undergraduate degree is in sociology. In high school I
had a ham radio license, and spent many evenings building equipment and
working traffic networks, a Morse Code version of "cyberspace." (These
days my transmitter is hooked to my computer.) After grad school I
retrained in electronics, and during the 1980s I held a variety of
hardware and software jobs in high-tech industries. The hardware ranged
from telephone interface circuits to digital switches at the senior tech
or junior engineer level. The software was generally written using
Assembly, dBase or BASIC to develop hardware control systems or database
programs.
In other words, my career is so checkered that no one will ever refer
to me as an "expert," which is also why you are reading this in an obscure
little publication. But I am familiar with the territory. And could it be
that too many of the experts are too narrow? Furthermore, I can recognize
high-tech hype when I see it and I can recognize sloppy ethics; there's
too much of both in cyberspace. I can forgive EFF guru and co-founder
John Barlow, a former Grateful Dead songwriter, for being an "acid-head
ex-Republican county chairman" (Mitch Kapor's description). But when
he invokes Pierre Teilhard de Chardin's "noosphere" as a model for
cyberspace, a "global brain that would seal humanity's spiritual
destiny,"[9] I have to draw the line. I studied enough of Teilhard to know
that his theology lacks any conception of evil. Where cyberspace and New
Age meet out in California's Silicon Valley somewhere, everything becomes
alarmingly mushy.
Another example of sloppy ethics is found in the way the word
"privacy" is babbled about without qualification. I have yet to see any
suggestion that the right to privacy ought to be inversely proportional to
social power, and should be balanced against the right to know. Joe
Sixpack deserves more privacy than David Rockefeller, because Joe's simple
livelihood may be affected by Rocky's wheeling and dealing. Joe has more
of a right to know what Rocky is up to than vice-versa. It does not
require a philosophy degree to grasp this; libel law in the U.S., for
example, makes a similar distinction between a public figure and a private
figure. Every journalist knows this, but when writing about privacy issues
the same concept never makes it into print. Then again, my definition of
privacy does not justify hacker ethics (microcomputer vs. mainframe,
little guy vs. Big Brother), because hackers are motivated more by
malicious amusement than by genuine self-defense.
More hype comes from a bizarre intersection of cyberspace with
conspiracy theory: the incredible PROMIS software by Inslaw, Inc. For
months I was reading accounts of how this software was revolutionary, and
could track everything about everyone. This is crazy, I thought, because
as a programmer I knew that software is painfully developmental, never
revolutionary. After ten years of inputting for NameBase I also knew that
until you key in good data, a mere database program is nothing at all.
Then it came out that there was a "back door" installed in PROMIS. This
made more sense, as a "back door" to get around password protection is
easy for any programmer, and it explained why the intelligence community
might be interested in peddling it to foreign governments.
Please note, however, that you still need physical access to the
computer, either through a direct-connect terminal or a remote terminal
through the phone lines, in order to utilize a back door. Ari Ben-Menashe
wants us to believe that foreigners (Britain, Australia, Iraq, South
Korea, Canada, and "many others") allow technicians from another country
to install new computer systems in the heart of their intelligence
establishments, and don't even think to secure physical access to the
system before they start entering their precious data.
Then he claims that PROMIS, "a sinister, Big Brother-like computer
program," can suck in every other database on earth, such as those used by
utility companies, and correlate everything automatically. The rest of his
book is frequently believable, but this example of hype is grating because
publisher Bill Schaap, who is not computer illiterate, should have done
Ben-Menashe a favor by deleting the chapter on PROMIS.[10] I generally
believe that "conspiracy is the normal continuation of normal politics by
normal means,"[11] so I don't like to see whistleblowers like Ben-Menashe
needlessly discredited by their own high-tech gullibility.
The last example of hype is from a 1988 article, which suggests that
the right also suffers from an overactive technical imagination:
Retired Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub, a member of the board, says
Western Goals wanted to build a computer data base containing the
leadership structure and membership of every left-wing group in the
country. The right, he says, needed to match the left's ability to
mobilize on short notice and track the activities of conservative
Americans. 'The radical left,' he claims, 'in this country has an
incredible, computer-connected network that has enormous files
connected with them.'[12]
Singlaub swallowed someone's line the same as Ben-Menashe did, and
just as journalists are inclined to do when it comes to high-tech issues.
It is no longer excusable for major players to remain ignorant of
important high-tech developments. The remainder of this article will
follow the battles and trends of the last few years -- the Cyberspace Wars
that unfolded as microprocessors robbed Big Brother of its monopoly on
data access and manipulation. Then I'll propose a somewhat expanded, more
useful definition of "cyberspace" to include all digitized information,
and consider the issues involved in the potential data networks that
worried Singlaub. His notion of the left was fantastic and his plans for
Western Goals never materialized. But the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith, which is beginning to use computers, was caught this year in a
massive spying scandal. Their defense of spying is my ultimate example of
sloppy ethics. In another ten years there might not be scandals, because
the files will have been sucked into cyberspace, complete with unbreakable
encryption and access by anonymous players. It may not be the NSA, or the
ADL, or any current entity. But we will all be at risk, and Ben-Menashe,
Singlaub, and the cyberpunk novelists will finally seem prophetic.
Privacy and domestic security are a zero-sum game. Society consists
of discrete individuals; if these individuals each have total privacy,
then society has zero security. Conversely, for the body politic to have
total security as an organism, the individuals within must have zero
privacy. Idealists may quibble with this scenario, but today we're
required to coexist with massive national security establishments, and
they tend to see things this way. Realistically, then, it's a useful
handle for understanding Cyberspace Wars.
A 1992 Harris poll showed that 78 percent of Americans now express
concern about their personal privacy, and 68 percent perceive a threat
from computers. These figures have roughly doubled over the last twenty
years.[13] One area of concern is in the workplace, where U.S. privacy
laws lag behind those in Europe and Japan. Although the 1986 Electronic
Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) prohibits phone and data-line tapping,
law enforcement and employers are exempted, so an E-Mail system that is
paid for or run by the employer might not be secure. Macworld asked 301
companies about snooping, and "about 22 percent of our sample have engaged
in searches of employee computer files, voice mail, E-Mail, or other
networking communications."[14] Job applicants sometimes find that the
company has a contract with a research service to scan credit reports,
workers' compensation claims, medical records, and criminal histories.
Access to some of this data for such a purpose has recently become
illegal, but employers say they need this data because of the rash of
"negligent hiring" lawsuits.
Personal privacy is a problem outside the workplace as well. Surveys
of the data available from the big three credit bureaus -- TRW, Equifax,
and Trans Union -- find error rates of up to 43 percent. Federal laws have
addressed this issue for years, and more may be on the way. Lately the
credit bureaus have seen their monopoly on personal information eroded
from a variety of commercial information brokers (over 1,253 are listed in
the Burwell Directory). Most of these collect information on companies,
but some specialize in records such as address, marital, salary, driving,
and employment history, as well as corporate affiliations, who your
neighbors are, vehicle and real estate holdings, and civil and criminal
court records. Lotus Development Corporation (where Mitch Kapor made his
millions) and Equifax recently proposed to compile some of this data for
120 million consumers on CD-ROM, and market it for $700 as "Marketplace:
Households." But 30,000 angry letters killed their proposal.[15]
If it's only name, address, and telephone number that interests
you, then check out ProPhone.[16] This is a set of seven CD-ROM disks
consisting of 70 million residential and 7 million business listings.
The software can access the listings through either the name, address,
or phone number, and the business listings are indexed by SIC code as
well. The listings tend to be at least several years old or otherwise
incomplete, but this will improve over the next few years. We bought it
because most NameBase users are investigative journalists. Zeroing in on a
neighborhood where you lived as a child in a little town in North Dakota,
and getting a printout of today's residents, feels something like what
hackers must feel when they break through password protection. It also
feels like an excellent reason to keep one's own number unlisted.
While cyberspace trends give privacy advocates plenty to worry about,
the situation is equally alarming from the perspective of the government.
If you live in an apartment building and have a scanner, your neighbors'
cordless telephone conversations are easily monitored. Cellular phone
monitoring became illegal in 1986 but not cordless, which is reasonable
because no one HAS to use a cordless phone. The law against cellular
monitoring was opposed by hams and shortwave listeners, who generally feel
that if the signal makes it into their living rooms, they have a right to
tune it in. Last year President Bush signed a second law, prohibiting the
manufacture or import of scanners that are capable of cellular monitoring.
But in a demonstration for a congressional subcommittee last April, a
technician took three minutes to reprogram a cellular phone's codes so
that it could be used for eavesdropping. It turns out that you don't have
to use a scanner at all: "Every cellular phone is a scanner, and they
are completely insecure," John Gage of Sun Microsystems told the
subcommittee.[17] Congress keeps slipping off the back end of the
cyberspace curve, simply because the curve is moving so fast.
Congress is caught in the middle, pulled in one direction by privacy
advocates and the other by our national security establishment. In March
1992 the FBI proposed legislation that would require private industry to
provide access ports in digital equipment for the purpose of tapping
specific conversations. Telephone carrier signals are increasingly
digitized and multiplexed, with specific channels interleaved among many
others in a continuous stream of ones and zeros. For decades, the FBI
needed only a pair of alligator clips to tap phones, and now they're
getting panicky. This particular proposal died, but the FBI is going to
try again. Several years ago I worked for a little company that made
analog long-distance equipment for export to Soviet bloc countries.
Frequently the specifications called for an access port for each channel,
which we dubbed the "KGB output." Now it turns out that the FBI wants the
same thing.
Not to be outdone, the NSA played the major role in the development
of the "Clipper Chip" recently approved by President Clinton, and soon the
government will start requiring industry to provide phones and computers
equipped with it. This chip contains encryption algorithms that can be
broken by two halves of a secret master key. The idea is that someone with
a warrant will then go to each of two agencies to get the portion of the
key in their custody, like two pieces of a treasure map torn in half. This
chip will be used to scramble phone lines used for voice, modems, and fax
machines. Presumably the NSA already has both halves of the key, and
their record for self-restraint is not reassuring. Private industry is
not enthusiastic. For one thing, U.S. products containing NSA-breakable
encryption will not compete well on the international market. One person
asked, "Do you think I'm dumb enough to buy something endorsed by the
NSA?"[18]
Some worry that the administration may try to ban encryption
altogether if this chip doesn't catch on. Ham radio operators, for
example, have for decades been prohibited from using encryption on the
air, and export of encryption software has been restricted for years
under COCOM regulations. Others are amused that the government is
even bothering along these lines, since encryption that is practically
unbreakable is already easily purchased, or even available as Shareware
by downloading it from a BBS.
The most dramatic conflict between privacy and security occurred in
1990. Big Brother was already edgy, as BellSouth in Florida had discovered
in mid-1989 that microcomputer intruders had been harmlessly reprogramming
their digital switches. It seems that callers to the Palm Beach County
Probation Department were reaching "Tina," a phone-sex worker in another
state. BellSouth was not amused, and worried that their 911 system was
vulnerable. Then when the AT&T system half-crashed the following January
-- even though this was NOT hacker-related -- the Secret Service, which
had nothing if not an active imagination, began working closely with telco
cops. The federal effort started years earlier after Congress passed the
1986 Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, but in May 1990 it culminated in
Operation Sundevil, by far the largest series of high-profile raids ever
conducted against hackers. About 42 computer systems were seized around
the country, along with 23,000 floppy disks.
Federal anti-hacker strategy involves a dramatic search and seizure.
Agents crash simultaneously through the front and back doors, everyone
is questioned, and then they carry off the evidence: computers, monitors,
keyboards, printers, modems, manuals, disks, notebooks, telephones,
answering machines, and even Sony Walkmans. There are no arrests and even
much later charges are rarely filed. In the meantime, however, the feds
study their "evidence" for months or even years. It's enough to bring many
hackers to their knees.
EFF began defending these hackers, and by 1991 the steam had gone out
of the crackdown. One document, a description of 911 system administration
called "E911," was found on a BBS and came to the attention of AT&T
security. They considered it hot property worth exactly $79,449. E911
later formed the basis of one of the hacker prosecutions, but the
government's case fell apart when the defense showed that more detailed
information about the 911 system was publicly available from AT&T for the
mere price of $13:
The right hand of Bellcore knew not what the left hand was doing. The
right hand was battering hackers without mercy, while the left hand
was distributing Bellcore's intellectual property to anybody who was
interested in telephone technical trivia.... The digital underground
was so amateurish and poorly organized that it had never discovered
this heap of unguarded riches.[19]
Another hacker legal victory resulted from a raid against Steve
Jackson Games of Austin, Texas. SJG published games that were played on
paper, with pencils, dice, and books. Jackson and his fifteen employees
used computers to run the business, not for hacking. One of the games he
developed was published as a book titled "GURPS Cyberpunk." Upon seeing
the word "cyberpunk," our fearless G-men assumed that the E911 document
was lurking on SJG's computers. The warrant was sealed, however, so for
months the SS led everyone to believe that they carted off SJG's computers
because SJG presumed to publish a science fiction book. This naturally
resulted in much sympathy for the defense. Without its computers the
company was crippled, and had to lay off half of its employees.
In 1991 the company sued the government, and on 12 March 1993 a
federal judge in Austin awarded the company $42,000 for lost profits in
1990, plus expenses. He also ruled that the Secret Service violated the
1986 ECPA because it had seized stored messages from many users of the BBS
who were not suspected of anything. Several hackers in other cases have
actually gone to prison over the last few years. But considering how
sociopolitically stunted many hackers were until EFF finally sent in some
lawyers, it's amazing how little the government has to show for all of its
dramatic efforts.
The term "cyberspace" is normally meant to convey that fuzzy area
between two digital devices, like the term "airwaves" that refers to a
thin slice of the spectrum most often used for communications. But only
a small portion of this accepted notion of cyberspace is in the form of
microwave links; the rest is plain old traces or wires, from inside the
microprocessor chip all the way to the telco office and beyond. Before
"cyberspace" finds its way into the dictionary, I propose an expanded
definition which will place the emphasis on the unique nature of digitized
information. Any digitized information is already in cyberspace, whether
it's in a file on a floppy, a CD-ROM at your local library, or a
minicomputer on an Internet node. Once digitized, information takes on an
entirely new quality; it is this quality that begs for a new word to
describe it.
First and foremost, digitized information can be copied locally or
remotely an infinite number of times without any degradation. Secondly,
the physical space required for storage is minuscule by previous
standards. And finally, the software required to translate digitized
information between two devices with different functions is usually
trivial. However, if the data is converted to analog form, as when a file
is sent to a printer, then its "cyberspace" quality is lost. Converting
from the printed page back into ones and zeros is not trivial, and
generally causes information to be lost or degraded.
NameBase resides in cyberspace, then, even though we send disks
through the mail. It's trivial to dump the results of searches into a new
file, and zap them by modem to another computer. Daisy-chain that file
between every computer in the world, and if the transfer software uses
error-correction protocol, at the end of the process you have exactly the
same file you started with. If it didn't infringe on our copyright, every
set of NameBase disks we've distributed could each generate an infinite
number of additional sets. Incidentally, another advantage to disk
distribution as opposed to on-line systems is its decentralized quality.
One of AT&T's computers in Dallas had so much extra capacity that they
generously allowed it to used as a BBS host. But as their paranoia
increased in 1990, AT&T considered it too risky and pulled the plug
without warning, leaving 1,500 little modems out there, searching and
chirping for their disconnected mother.[20]
Any public or private intelligence agency that uses computers is
potentially more ominous than one that doesn't, and the public has a right
to expect certain standards for collection and dissemination. An example
of an intelligence agency that fails this test is the Anti-Defamation
League, whose San Francisco and Los Angeles offices were caught in a
scandal earlier this year. The tax-exempt ADL has 30 regional offices in
the U.S. (and offices in Canada, Paris, Rome, and Jerusalem), a staff of
400, and an annual budget of $32 million. For many decades they have been
gathering information on U.S. citizens, using public sources as well as
paid infiltrators, informants, investigators, and liaison with local law
enforcement and the FBI. There is also evidence of connections with Mossad
and South African intelligence.
As a private agency the ADL enjoys no oversight, no requirements for
probable cause prior to political spying, and no Privacy Act or Freedom of
Information Act responsibilities to the public. By contrast, the FBI, CIA,
and some major police departments in the U.S. are held accountable by
various hard-won legal restrictions. Some observers feel that the ADL's
relationship with many local police, the FBI, and intelligence agencies
suggests that they are playing the role of a cutout. Government agencies
might be getting the information they want without incurring any legal
risk, simply by using the ADL. In exchange, the ADL apparently enjoys
privileged access to police and FBI files.
This is what happened in San Francisco, where a police intelligence
officer (and former CIA agent in El Salvador) named Tom Gerard has been
indicted for passing confidential police intelligence files to the local
ADL office. Another principal in this case is Roy Bullock, who was a
secret employee of the ADL for 40 years, a close associate of Gerard, and
also an FBI informant. After learning that Gerard was meeting with South
African intelligence, the FBI investigated. This encouraged the
involvement of San Francisco prosecutors. They served two ADL offices with
search warrants, and Bullock's computer was seized from his home.
Interviews with Bullock revealed that he had tapped into one group's phone
message system, and his computer contained data on 9,876 individuals and
1,359 political groups, distributed about evenly on both the left and
right.[21] While it's evident that ADL spying is centrally coordinated
from New York by ADL spymaster Irwin Suall, at this writing it's unclear
whether San Francisco authorities will try to prosecute anyone from this
powerful organization.
The ADL does not hail from any particular portion of the left-right
political spectrum. Such a classification is irrelevant once a group
becomes a private intelligence agency, as then they generally inbreed with
their adversaries and mutate into a peculiar political animal. John
Singlaub's Western Goals, and Political Research Associates (PRA) of
Cambridge, Massachusetts, both extremely tiny compared to the ADL, are two
additional examples of this phenomenon. All three groups identify with
certain constituencies as a flag of convenience: the ADL with the Jewish
community, Western Goals with the right, and PRA with the left. But by
using the same methods of collecting information -- garbage surveillance,
infiltration of target groups, and the use of guilt-by-association in
their propaganda -- each of these three groups has perverted itself with
clandestinism and denunciation for its own sake.
This opinion of mine is based on statements from John Rees (formerly
of Western Goals and a person with extensive computer files on the left),
Chip Berlet of PRA (formerly a BBS operator, with extensive files on the
right), and testimony from Mira Boland of the ADL (extensive files on
everyone). All admit to attending one or more secret meetings in 1983-1984
with U.S. intelligence operatives such as Roy Godson, representatives from
intelligence-linked funding sources, and journalists such as Patricia
Lynch from NBC. Besides Berlet, other leftists attending included Dennis
King and Russ Bellant. The purpose of these meetings was to plan a
campaign against Lyndon LaRouche. The LaRouche organization was another
private intelligence agency, but they had too many curious foreign
contacts and were getting too close to certain individuals at the National
Security Council. More importantly, LaRouche opposed U.S. intervention in
Nicaragua just as the NSC was planning an expanded role there.[22] In
another ten years, scenarios like this might be played out in cyberspace.
Instead of a fifteen-year prison sentence, a future incarnation of
LaRouche might jack into his cyberspace deck one day, and to his horror,
discover that his collection of hard-won access codes no longer works.
ADL national director Abraham Foxman defends his organization by
claiming that the ADL's sources "function in a manner directly analogous
to investigative journalists" and "the information ADL obtains is placed
in the public domain."[23] He adds that "the very people making these
charges [of ADL spying] themselves maintain and use such files whether
they be journalists, lawyers or academics."[24] But as we begin to enter
the cyberspace age, his excuses seem particularly inadequate.
We have only Foxman's dubious word that ADL's information is placed
in the public domain. Various investigative journalists, even those whose
interests parallel the ADL's, have told me that it's difficult to get
access to the ADL's main library in New York; you have to be connected
to their old-boy network before you can see their files. Secondly,
journalists seldom use the methods preferred by ADL's spies: going through
a target's garbage and using deception to infiltrate target groups. On
the rare occasions that a journalist does these things, it is implicitly
balanced against the public interest, and done only to develop a specific
story. Once published, the journalist's targets know what happened and
have recourse to civil litigation. Normally journalists are expected by
the standards of common decency to contact all parties criticized in
a story, and double source any dubious items. Journalists identify
themselves before soliciting any information, in order to provide the
choice of cooperating on the record, not for attribution, on background,
off the record, or refusing comment altogether. Finally, the public
reasonably expects that journalists are not secretly working with law
enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Foxman is simply blowing smoke on this issue. At Public Information
Research we resent any hint of a comparison between his activities and
ours. NameBase is basically a value-added public library; it has a
citation from the public record for every bit of information, and is
available to every member of the public. The extra value comes from
the enhanced access to the public record. We don't consort with law
enforcement or intelligence agencies, and we don't use deception to
collect information.
On one occasion in ten years, a person whose name we had indexed
complained to me that the source we cited misrepresented the facts. I
asked him for a copies of published material about him that he considered
more accurate, and cited these under his name along with the original
citation. (If he didn't have such sources, but could convince me that a
source we cited was mistaken, then I would I have deleted the citation.)
On another occasion a person with whom I had worked for two years was
upset to find her name in NameBase after I entered a book about the left
that was published by the right. Her name is still in NameBase because I
knew that the information about her in this book was true. I don't claim
to be objective; my subjectivity is seen in the annotations I write for
the sources, and in the selection of materials for inputting. This level
of subjectivity comes with the territory -- sometimes it's unavoidable,
and other times I like it, feeling that it's my only reason for
continuing. But at the same time I do try to use common sense.
It would be comforting to have a Cyberspace Bill of Rights and
Responsibilities, if the target wasn't moving so rapidly. Even an issue as
self-evident as "privacy" is tricky, as the transnational corporations
join the chorus in an effort to preclude government regulation. The
international elites who control these corporations are well on their way
toward installing the New World Order, and are no friends of the little
guy who really needs privacy. Then again, our national security apparatus
has an equally poor record. Everyone is waiting to see where the chips
fall before they declare themselves. In the meantime we find ourselves
peering over the edge into cyberspace, surrounded by high-tech hype and
journalistic buzzwords. We need a better-informed public with a keener
sense of their own interests, but there's no time to wait. For those of us
who work in this new cyberspace, our ethical thinking -- the ability to
consider interests beyond our own -- must be honed to a new level.
1. David Burnham, The Rise of the Computer State. Forward by Walter
Cronkite. (New York: Random House, 1983), pp. 124, 130, 206.
2. Ibid., p. 139.
3. John Smith, "Public Key Cryptography," Byte Magazine, January 1983,
pp. 198-218.
4. Kevin Kelly, "Cypherpunks, E-Money, and the Technologies of
Disconnection," Whole Earth Review, Summer 1993, pp. 46-47.
5. Washington Times, 10 May 1993, p. A3, citing a recent issue of
Boardwatch, "a leading BBS magazine."
6. Robert Wright, "The New Democrat from Cyberspace," The New Republic,
24 May 1993, p. 20.
7. Bruce Sterling, "A Statement of Principle," Science Fiction Eye, June
1992, pp. 14-18.
8. John Mintz and John Schwartz, "Chipping Away at Privacy? Encryption
Device Widens Debate Over Rights of U.S. to Eavesdrop," Washington
Post, 30 May 1993, pp. H1, H4.
9. Wright, p. 26.
10. Ari Ben-Menashe, Profits of War: Inside the Secret U.S.-Israeli Arms
Network (New York: Sheridan Square Press, 1992), pp. 127-141.
11. Carl Oglesby, The Yankee and Cowboy War (Berkley Publishing, 1977),
p. 25.
12. Doug Birch, "Master of the Politics of Paranoia," Baltimore Sun
Magazine, 5 June 1988, p. 26.
13. Charles Piller, "Privacy in Peril," Macworld, July 1993, p. 124.
14. Charles Piller, "Bosses With X-Ray Eyes," Macworld, July 1993,
p. 120.
15. Piller, "Privacy in Peril," p. 126-127.
16. Produced for IBM-compatibles with a CD-ROM drive by ProCD, 8 Doaks
Lane, Little Harbor, Marblehead MA 01945, Tel: 617-631-9200, Fax:
617-631-9299. Suggested list for ProPhone is $449, but several
mail-order firms offer it for $179 or less.
17. Cindy Skrzycki, "Dark Side of the Data Age," Washington Post,
Business Section, 3 May 1993, pp. 19, 28.
18. Mintz and Schwartz, p. H4.
19. Bruce Sterling, The Hacker Crackdown: Law and Disorder on the
Electronic Frontier (New York: Bantam books, 1992), p. 278.
20. Ibid., pp. 125-126, 141-142.
21. I obtained the 700 pages of documents which San Francisco prosecutors
released on 8 April 1993. For a summary of this case see Robert I.
Friedman, "The Enemy Within," Village Voice, 11 May 1993, pp. 27-32;
and Richard C. Paddock, "New Details of Extensive ADL Spy Operation
Emerge," Los Angeles Times, 13 April 1993, pp. A1, A16.
22. For an outline of the conspiracy against LaRouche by the ADL and U.S.
intelligence operatives, see U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Virginia, Alexandria Division, Petitioners' Rebuttal to
the Government's Response and Memorandum. In United States v. Lyndon
H. LaRouche, Jr., William F. Wertz, Jr. and Edward W. Spannaus, Case
No. 88-243-A. Submitted by Odin Anderson, Ramsey Clark, and Scott T.
Harper, attorneys for the defense, 1 May 1992, pp. 1-16. For a
description of the secret meetings at the residence of John Train,
see Herbert Quinde, Affidavit, Commonwealth of Virginia, County of
Loudoun, 20 January 1992, pp. 1-28. Quinde describes interviews with
Rees, Berlet, and several others. For confirmation of Chip Berlet's
role, see Doug Birch, "Master of the Politics of Paranoia," Baltimore
Sun Magazine, 5 June 1988, p. 27. Birch's description of John Rees'
career includes a quotation from Chip Berlet, a longtime Rees
watcher, that inadvertently confirms Berlet's collusion with Rees at
an anti-LaRouche meeting. Berlet's spying is confirmed by his
quotations in David Miller, "Letter from Boston," Forward, 22 January
1993, pp. 1, 14. This article also quotes ADL's Leonard Zakim: "The
information that Political Research Associates has shared with us has
been very useful."
23. Abraham H. Foxman, "Letter to the Editor," Village Voice, 18 May
1993, p. 5.
24. Abraham H. Foxman, "It's a Big Lie, Hailed by Anti-Semites," New York
Times, 28 May 1993, p. A29.