Date: Thu, 08 Jun 95 10:34:50 EST Errors-To: Comp-privacy Error Handler From: Computer Privacy Digest Moderator To: Comp-privacy@uwm.edu Subject: Computer Privacy Digest V6#052 Computer Privacy Digest Thu, 08 Jun 95 Volume 6 : Issue: 052 Today's Topics: Moderator: Leonard P. Levine What's Going on in Industry Re: Text Filter for the Very Good Protecting kids from porn on Web -- html enhancement ATM/Debit Machine Privacy New Book on Privacy and Encryption Policy Re: Credit Cards in Grocery Stores A Seduction In Cyberspace Info on CPD [unchanged since 12/29/94] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Benton Foundation Date: 06 Jun 1995 18:39:23 -0400 (EDT) Subject: What's Going on in Industry June 6, 1995 Washington DC --- We believe you will be interested in "What's Going on in Industry," the latest report from the Benton Foundation's Communications Policy Project. "Promise and Performance: Industry's Vision for the Information Superhighway" looks at what leaders in the telecommunications industry are saying about the National Information Infrastructure, and how their plans and claims will affect key public interest values. Benton commissioned this report to serve as a starting point for discussion, and welcomes your comments in our online forum. Also new is a side-by-side analysis of pending telecommunications legislation in Congress. Benton compares key provisions that may have significant implications for noncommercial users and those interested in the passage of policy that is truly in the public interest. Both documents are in the "What's Going on" section of our World Wide Web and Gopher servers (http://cdinet.com/benton/goingon) To receive regular updates about new alerts, briefings, or other news from the Communications Policy Project, sign up for our new Internet mailing list by sending email to benton-request. In the body of the message, write "subscribe benton-compolicy." Those of you who have not visited the site in the last few weeks may notice some other recent additions and changes: Our new "Cyber pages" are an annotated guide of pointers to a variety of useful resources on the Net. Our forum has been expanded so that you can post comments in our ongoing conversation about policy issues and developments related to the NII. The state of the information infrastructure and industry action is the new topic of discussion. An expanded home page for the Benton Foundation contains links to its media and children's projects. Getting around, How to use this Site, and About this Site have been added to make it easier for our visitors to navigate, see what's new on the site, and learn more about Benton Foundation and its other projects. Recently released publications include Briefing 4: Telecommuni- cations and Democracy;Working Paper 4: Recovering Network Subsidies Without Distortion; and Working Paper 8: Issues in Telecommunications and Democracy. We hope these changes will make it easier to exchange information about communications policy as it develops. We look forward to hearing from you in our ongoing dialogue about the nation's emerging information infrastructure. Regards, -- Andrew Blau Director Communications Policy Project Benton Foundation 1634 Eye Street, NW Washington, DC 20006 Tel 202 638 5770 Fax 202 638 5771 Email: benton@benton.org ------------------------------ From: pbrennan@world.std.com (Patrick M Brennan) Date: 06 Jun 1995 23:09:30 GMT Subject: Re: Text Filter for the Very Good Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA Dick Mills (rj.mills@pti-us.com) wrote: The net is more anarchistic than a newspaper. I presume you've heard of anonymous cancelbots. If the filter you propose was available, nearly everybody would be able to censor everyone else. Conservatives would filter liberals and visa versa until we were left with thundering silence. Dick, I think you clearly missed the point of the idea. The idea was to have software which could filter *incoming* text at the display terminal of the weak-hearted (and -minded) person reading the words; placing the filter at the tap, so to speak, instead of at the central pump, as you seem to think it was suggested. This places control in the hands of the end-user, where it belongs. I don't mind if some dunderhead wants to filter out words from her local version of the newsgroup posting (the one on her screen) -- its full unexpurgated text is still available to anyone who can stand the sight of the "F-word". Hey, maybe she thinks she's protecting her children. -- Patrick ------------------------------ From: "Prof. L. P. Levine" Date: 07 Jun 1995 10:31:41 -0500 (CDT) Subject: Protecting kids from porn on Web -- html enhancement Organization: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Taken from Computer underground Digest Tue Jun 6, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 45 ISSN 1004-042X (Tue, Jun 6, 1995) Date: 22 May 1995 15:53:32 GMT From: subhas@CS.WM.EDU Subject: Re: Protecting kids from porn on Web -- html enhancement Source: comp-academic-freedom-talk@EFF.ORG Can the parents prevent their children from viewing -------------------------------------------------- unwanted Web pages? ------------------- Yes. There is a simple solution. The senate's Communication Decency Bill is ultimately harmful and moreover it won't work because Internet does not know any country boundaries. Nevertheless, the politicians are making impassioned arguments that the children must be protected from the pornographic materials and other unwanted materials (like how to make a bomb). Do they have a valid point? Well, let me rephrase the question : If you have a simple way to prevent your kids from viewing some adult materials or other unwanted stuff available on the Web, would you use it to control their access? Particularly if that objective can be accomplished without any censorship laws or any inconvenience? Also free of cost too? I suppose most parents probably would. Below the proposed solution is introduced in a question answer form. Q1. Why is this fuss? I don't see any problem. Therefore no solution is necessary. A. Actually, there is a problem. Do you want your 10-year old kid to read Hustler magazine? There are actually lots of adult materials on the Web (and there are going to be more in the future) which are even more unsuitable for young children. Concerned parents want to protect their kids from viewing such materials available on the Web. Also, adult page authors don't want any kids to view their stuff. Its apparent that the Internet is going to be so useful that kids should be encouraged to surf the Net. Currently there is no good solution to this dilemma. If something is not done by the net-citizens themselves, the politicians can generate enough public support to curtail freedom of expression on the Net. Despite all the hype, only a small percentage of the general population are on the Net and thus netters are powerless to the law-makers majority of whom are not friends of the Net. Q2. Can anything be done? How? A. Yes. Concerned parents and educators can control access on Web. All it needs is a little cooperation from the Web browser designers (like people at Netscape and NCSA Mosaic) and also from the adult Web page authors. In the next version of the Web navigators, just introduce a new HTML tag . If a WWW browser encounters this tag enclosed inside the part of a HTML document, then the browser will simply refuse to load or render the document. The author of a Web page should put that tag in all of his pages containing materials that he does not want to be seen by young children. At the time of installing the browser, a password will be asked from the person (who is assumed to be an adult) installing the program. This password is for identification of the installer. As a default, the checking is enabled. To allow a parent (the adult installer) the freedom to view adult-only stuff, the browser can have a command line option "-unrestricted". If that option is used, the program will ask for a password for identification (only at the beginning of the session). This way, a parent protects the kids from unwanted stuff on the Net. Also, the adult page authors are protected from unwanted attention from kids. It involves no cost, no laws or hassles. Q3. What about gopher and FTP sites? A. This solution works for any HTML page which many come via HTTP, gopher or FTP protocols. Besides, now the Web is the most popular part of the Net. However, external gif/jpeg files cannot be prevented because they are not in HTML. So, by this tag trick, all the unwanted stuff that is not in HTML cannot be barred. Q4. Why would the purveyors of net pornography comply to use the HTML tag in their pages? A. It seems that the people who are posting adult materials on their Web pages would like to prevent the young children from accessing the pages. That's why they build such lame "adult access shield" which asks "don't click here if you are under eighteen". So, we can hope that an author of a Web page containing adult stuff will be glad to put this HTML tag at the beginning of the all Web pages containing adult materials. One can send an e-mail to remind the author in case such a page is not properly tagged. Q5. Why should Netscape people or Mosaic people support the tag? A. Because implementing the tag is very easy and all protective parents and educators would be glad to have the support for such a tag. Such a tag should become a part of the standard HTML. Q6. But browsers are freely available and a kid can download his own copy of a browser himself. Also, a smart kid can hack something to get around the efforts of access control. What about that? A. Yes, this could be a problem. But automated software techniques (using some operating system support) can be used to ensure that no secretly installed browser exists in the system. A determined smart kid cannot not prevented from accessing anything he wants. He can possibly write his own browser and other tools. Heck, he can buy his own PC, have his own Internet connection and set up a Web server with his own home page containing adult materials! So, let us be concerned about the no-so-determined kids. Q7. Can't we use SurfWatch software or other such tools? A. SurfWatch (http://www.surfwatch.com) is a newly announced tool that seem to allow the concerned parents to prepare a list of offending sites. Any site in the list will be denied access to the browsers used by the children of the customer of SurfWatch. However there are serious problems. - Nobody can maintain an up-to-date and exhaustive list of sites. There are many obscure sites all over the world. New Web pages are appearing and disappearing dynamically everyday. You may block the Penthouse site, but your kid may possibly be viewing far more unwanted stuff from some obscure site in Netherlands if that site is not included in your list. - SurfWatch will maintain a list of unwanted sites for you (if you pay extra monthly fee). Then you will need to trust SurfWatch to decide what is good or bad for your kids. - You will have to pay for the blocking software as well as a optional list of sites maintained by SurfWatch company. - The browser will need to check a list of possibly thousand sites for every single Web access just to make sure it is not one of those. Won't it be slow? - A WWW site can host thousands of separate Web pages only a few of which probably contain adult materials and the rest are possibly harmless or useful. So blocking access to a site is not a good idea. If SurfWatch starts maintaining a list of offending Web pages, the list will be in very very long indeed. It is a hopeless idea to maintain a list of unwanted sites or unwanted URLs. Q8. The tag seems to be a good idea. Can it be used for other purposes? A. This tag idea can be generalized to classify Web documents in variety of ways and it will greatly facilitate cataloging the Web documents. Web desperately needs such categorization so that your browser can select and reject Web materials of all sorts based on your priorities. This will cut down noise as well as litigation. ------------------------------ From: bo774@freenet.carleton.ca (Kelly Bert Manning) Date: 08 Jun 1995 00:09:27 GMT Subject: ATM/Debit Machine Privacy Organization: The National Capital FreeNet, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Steve Arlow (yorick@msen.com) writes: PIN entry is one of the few cases where you *don't* want audible feedback, just tactile (and maybe visual if the display is private enough). But it seems that the companies who are building these systems haven't really given it much thought. As for teller machines, I was once stung by an ATMs which, without warning, displayed my full name and the current balance of my account on a large CRT. I'd like to get my hands around the neck of the fellow who programmed that one! I agree that they often havn't given these much thought. At least the Royal Bank passbook updating machines ask whether you want to display or print your balance when making a balance inquiry. They seem to have a way to go in making the service reliable though. At one point when it asked me what the last balance printed in my book was it told me that it was wrong and to ssee a bank employee. When I called in one told me that they'd had a hardware problem and lost part of their records. The recommended solution was to get a new bank book and start over. I said no thank you, went to one of the updaters that evening and worked my way backwards from the last balance printed till I found the one that it liked, then inserted my book on a blank page. I then sent them a fax about this and asked whether this was an example of the limited recoverability of a CICS TP system using VSAM as the data access method and not doing any journalling. They didn't reply. ------------------------------ From: "Lance J. Hoffman" Date: 08 Jun 1995 01:28:52 -0400 (EDT) Subject: New Book on Privacy and Encryption Policy BUILDING IN BIG BROTHER: The Cryptographic Policy Debate a collection of readings with commentary by Prof. Lance J. Hoffman of The George Washington University has now been published by Springer Verlag. >From a publisher's blurb: "...This book presents the best readings on cryptographic policy and current cryptography trends. ... Detailed technological descriptions of promising new software schemes are included as well as analysis of the constitutional issues by legal scholars. Important government cost analyses appear here for the first time in any book. Other highlights include the text of the new US digital telephony law and the pending encryption regulation bill and a list of hundreds of cryptographic products available around the world. There is even a paper on how to commit the perfect crime electronically, using public key encryption. Much more detailed information and a table of contents is available by pointing your Web browser to http://www.seas.gwu.edu/seas/instctsp/docs/book ******************* There you will also find endorsements by Marc Rotenberg, Electronic Privacy Information Center Stewart Baker, Steptoe & Johnson (former NSA general counsel) Phil Zimmermann, author of PGP Peter Neumann, moderator of RISKS Forum Michael Froomkin, law professor 560 pages, 19 illustrations, softcover $29.95 ISBN 0-387-94441-9 The book is available at Computer LIteracy bookstores and in at least some Borders stores as well as Barnes and Noble. One can also call 1-800-SPRINGER to order, email orders to orders@springer-ny.com -- Professor Lance J. Hoffman Dept of Elec Eng and Comp Sci, The Geo Washington U, 801 22nd St NW Wash DC 20052 (202) 994-4955 Fax: (202) 994-0227 hoffman@seas.gwu.edu See also: http://www.seas.gwu.edu/seas/instctsp/ictsp.html ------------------------------ From: Christian.Reiser@aut.alcatel.at (Christian Reiser) Date: 08 Jun 95 09:23:25 +0200 Subject: Re: Credit Cards in Grocery Stores Bill McClatchie (wmcclatc@internext.com) wrote: I have seen something new added to my credit cards slips when purching goods at a couple of Washington DC area grocers. They are adding the card holders name to the slips. Wouldn't this make it easier for someone to pick up one of these slips (which many peole just toss in the trash) and use them? You never seem to have used credit cards the old way, where the front side of the card is mechanically printed on some forms, which you sign. On these forms you can also find all data including name, cc-number and expiration date. Whenever you have all these data, which now also seem to appear on your computer printed slips, you can order per phone. The only mean of security is, that some companies only deliver to the cardholder's address. -- Christian Reiser e-mail: Christian.Reiser@aut.alcatel.at Ofc: +431 277 22 / 3657 priv: C.Reiser@ieee.org Fax: +431 277 22 / 3955 http://www.egi.co.at/egi/reiser.htm For PGP-Key (private purpose) send e-mail with Subject: Query PGP Key ------------------------------ From: "Prof. L. P. Levine" Date: 07 Jun 1995 10:33:27 -0500 (CDT) Subject: A Seduction In Cyberspace Organization: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Taken from Computer underground Digest Tue Jun 6, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 45 ISSN 1004-042X (Tue, Jun 6, 1995) Date: 03 Jun 95 04:03:33 EDT From: Walter Scott <74276.3616@compuserve.com> Subject: A Seduction In Cyberspace? On May 18th, Daniel Montgomery left Seattle for an as yet unknown location. His departure has caused, in its wake, a frenzy of media coverage. And that magic word -- "INTERNET" -- is attached to this story. Daniel Montgomery is 15 years-old and potentially gay. Until May of this year, he was what Tahoma High School Assistant Principal Rob Morrow would call a "nice young man." More than being a "nice young man," Daniel Montgomery was a teenager exploring cyberspace via America Online. Through a chat room on America Online, Daniel met someone calling himself "Damien Starr." Eventually, Starr may have enticed Daniel to leave his Maple Valley home. According to a published report in the 6-2-95 edition of the Seattle Post Intelligencer, Starr's user profile on America Online indicates Starr is 18 years-old, gay, and resides somewhere on Nob Hill in San Fransisco. Starr and Daniel Montgomery apparently communicated, for a period of time, on America Online and by way of a password-protected 1-800 phone number. According to the Seattle Post Intelligencer and Bill Montgomery -- Daniel's father -- Starr had suggested that, if Daniel was discovering he is gay, and revealed such to his parents, they probably would kick him out of his home. Bill Montgomery believes this may have played a role in why Daniel Montgomery left -- ostensibly because Daniel had not discussed his sexual orientation with his parents, and Daniel's mother had stated negative feelings about gays in the past. Thus, Bill Montgomery asserts Daniel may have been particularly open to another suggestion -- that Daniel come join Starr. When Daniel left, he apparently did so after receiving a bus ticket in the mail from Starr. Since then, Daniel has sent 2 E-Mail messages to his father stating that he's doing OK while making more money than his parents, according to reports from several broadcast news organizations here in Seattle. Bill Montgomery doesn't KNOW if this is true but states that, if what Daniel had claimed is true, at least part of it is temporary. Soundbites aired on TV news (KOMO-TV and KING-TV - 6-2-95) illustrate Bill Montgomery suspects his son is being groomed for sex. According to the Seattle Post Intelligencer, that assessment may, in part, be drawn from Daniel's sister. She lives in Southern California and has informed Bill Montgomery of reports she's seen on TV about groups that seduce young gay males by offering protection from parents who might not be supportive of a homosexual orientation in their children. The Seattle Post Intelligencer summarizes Montgomery's description of the "group's" method of operation as enticement to run away followed by provision of food and money for a short time, and then culminating in requests for sexual favors in return. The Seattle Post Intelligencer, and broadcast news organizations in Seattle, are not, however, reporting confirmation of this notion. Starr has contacted the Montgomery family four times, again, according to the Seattle Post Intelligencer, to assure them Daniel is not in any danger. As stated previously, Montgomery doesn't doubt this for the time being. But, Montgomery also told the Seattle Post Intelligencer that Starr is probably a recruiter who might have been recruited into the "group" not so long ago. Bill Montgomery is not saying whether he will ask America Online to provide Starr's real name and/or other information on Starr retained by America Online. The Seattle Post Intelligencer, though, reports that the FBI won't deny they are interested in asking America Online to reveal information on Starr. And "sources" are stated by the Seattle Post Intelligencer as indicating that the FBI continues to investigate the case. There are several interesting factors in this turn of events. Some of those factors can be appreciated more easily by people who live in Washington state and in the Puget Sound in particular. 1. Washington state's Legislature just finished a regular session and special session -- back-to-back. Those sessions provided high political drama -- even for the online community. Until late last month, we were faced with a "harmful to minors" bill addressing, among other things, availability of sexual material to minors via online services. The bill easily passed the Legislature but was vetoed by Governor Lowry. A veto-override attempt did not fall so short that people here -- who were and are opposed to the legislation -- can breathe a sigh of relief; the issue WILL come back another day -- possibly quite soon. 2. The Legislature also passed legislation which would change Washington state's laws dealing with run-aways. This legislation was partially vetoed. The result is a firestorm of resentment among a significant number of parents. They feel as though long-awaited relief has been stolen by a Governor who doesn't appreciate parenting issues in this state. For example: Laws existing through this Spring required that a child at the age of 13 could legally run away from home. Parents were powerless to do anything about such behavior unless the child was acting under the coercion of others in very strict circumstances. The new law is only slightly more restrictive on whether minors can run away -- certainly NOT restrictive enough to make Daniel Montgomery's act of running away an illegal act. Such laws, as those existing prior to the most recent regular session of the Washington state Legislature, have been in place for several years to provide abused children with the means to escape parental abuse if running away would accomplish that goal. 3. A local TV station (KIRO) recently ran a series of reports called "Net Sex." Those reports were sensationally promoted with language that implied children can and do access sexually explicit sections of the INTERNET -- something which might be a threat to children if unsuspecting parents aren't watching what their kids are doing online. The actual reports, however, were reasonably balanced. But, the reports left Seattle sensitized to the existence of sexually explicit materials on the INTERNET. 4. We have the copious and invalid use of the word "INTERNET" in broadcast reporting of the Montgomery run-away. We also have a case in which a 15-year-old ran away to circumstances the father of that 15-year-old asserts are probably sexual in nature. All four of the factors listed here may eventually come together as a dangerous brew is or will be created. In the current social and political climate, the Montgomery run-away; the Baker case; the incidents where children download instructions on how to make pipe bombs and then construct them; an incident where a young girl seduces an adult male into a sexual encounter after online meetings; incidents where online pedophiles do there thing, and so much more seem to draw us headlong toward events we may regret some years from now. I wonder if there is no other way to see what is out there to be seen. Politicians revel in such events as those referred to above. I believe it is no strange coincidence that Senator Exon's legislation (Communications Decency Act) moved into the fast lane of Congressional action at around the same time as news broke on the Baker case. It is not novel for politicians to orchestrate their policies and agendas around politically favorable current events. I expect more instances of perceived or actual online abuse, and for politicians to take advantage in the ways only politicians can. Whether it's Washington state, New York state, Alabama or Washington, DC, I'm finding it more and more difficult to believe there is any room left to assume reason will necessarily prevail over emotion built to a fever-pitch. I see emotion more places than I don't, and rancorous emotion at that. I also see associated and ever-growing polarization. It actually frightens me because I think I know what all that HIGH emotion will promulgate. =========== UPDATE ================== On Sunday [6-4-95] Seattle area teenager Daniel Montgomery -- who had run away from home in mid-May at the possible coaxing of an AOL subscriber -- met with his parents at a San Francisco airport. According to various Seattle news media reports, Montgomery told his parents, at that time, he was doing ok and had not been harmed. Subsequently, reports from local media have exhibited an amazing cacophony of inaccurate or incomplete information. For example: Even on the day that Daniel Montgomery met with his parents, the Seattle Post Intelligencer reported that Montgomery had been seen by a Seattle Metro bus driver. According the the Seattle Post Intelligencer, Montgomery had told the bus driver he was on his way out of town, and Montgomery had shown the bus driver what the bus driver thought to be a bus ticket to Florida. Once it was clear that Montgomery had met with his parents in San Francisco, local news media issued conflicting stories as to whether Montgomery would stay with his parents or grandparents. More than one news organization implied a strained relationship between Montgomery and his parents In the past two days, some news media organizations have stated AOL was under some pressure to reveal information on a subscriber using the alias "Damien Starr." However, other news media organizations were stating that AOL was resolute in its policy not to reveal information about subscribers. Even so, today, [6-6-95] several broadcast organizations (KING-TV, KIRO-TV, KIRO radio, and KOMO radio) now report that AOL has terminated the person who used the Damien Starr alias. KOMO radio broadcast the following in a news program this morning. America Online says it's complying with a subpoena and giving investigators information about the account of Damien Starr. That's the name used by a man suspected of luring a teenaged boy to San Francisco. The computer service has also terminated the man's account. The boy's now back with his family in Maple Valley. [Maple Valley is a small community in the Seattle area] KING-TV takes us a step further with a report that Damien Starr is under investigation by the FBI for a possible violation of the Man Act. KIRO-TV states that AOL terminated Damien Starr because Starr allegedly solicited a minor in violation of AOL's policies. It's rather difficult to know what is truth, what is perception, and what is true at one moment and not in the next moment, hour, or day in this case. What seems certain, though, is that events pertaining to the running away and/or seduction of Daniel Montgomery are not finished. ------------------------------ From: "Prof. L. P. Levine" Date: 29 Dec 1994 10:50:22 -0600 (CST) Subject: Info on CPD [unchanged since 12/29/94] Organization: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee The Computer Privacy Digest is a forum for discussion on the effect of technology on privacy or vice versa. The digest is moderated and gatewayed into the USENET newsgroup comp.society.privacy (Moderated). Submissions should be sent to comp-privacy@uwm.edu and administrative requests to comp-privacy-request@uwm.edu. This digest is a forum with information contributed via Internet eMail. Those who understand the technology also understand the ease of forgery in this very free medium. Statements, therefore, should be taken with a grain of salt and it should be clear that the actual contributor might not be the person whose email address is posted at the top. Any user who openly wishes to post anonymously should inform the moderator at the beginning of the posting. He will comply. If you read this from the comp.society.privacy newsgroup and wish to contribute a message, you should simply post your contribution. As a moderated newsgroup, attempts to post to the group are normally turned into eMail to the submission address below. On the other hand, if you read the digest eMailed to you, you generally need only use the Reply feature of your mailer to contribute. If you do so, it is best to modify the "Subject:" line of your mailing. Contributions to CPD should be submitted, with appropriate, substantive SUBJECT: line, otherwise they may be ignored. They must be relevant, sound, in good taste, objective, cogent, coherent, concise, and nonrepetitious. Diversity is welcome, but not personal attacks. Do not include entire previous messages in responses to them. Include your name & legitimate Internet FROM: address, especially from .UUCP and .BITNET folks. Anonymized mail is not accepted. All contributions considered as personal comments; usual disclaimers apply. All reuses of CPD material should respect stated copyright notices, and should cite the sources explicitly; as a courtesy; publications using CPD material should obtain permission from the contributors. Contributions generally are acknowledged within 24 hours of submission. If selected, they are printed within two or three days. The moderator reserves the right to delete extraneous quoted material. He may change the SUBJECT: line of an article in order to make it easier for the reader to follow a discussion. He will not, however, alter or edit or append to the text except for purely technical reasons. A library of back issues is available on ftp.cs.uwm.edu [129.89.9.18]. Login as "ftp" with password identifying yourid@yoursite. The archives are in the directory "pub/comp-privacy". People with gopher capability can most easily access the library at gopher.cs.uwm.edu. Mosaic users will find it at gopher://gopher.cs.uwm.edu. Older archives are also held at ftp.pica.army.mil [129.139.160.133]. ---------------------------------+----------------------------------------- Leonard P. Levine | Moderator of: Computer Privacy Digest Professor of Computer Science | and comp.society.privacy University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee | Post: comp-privacy@uwm.edu Box 784, Milwaukee WI 53201 | Information: comp-privacy-request@uwm.edu | Gopher: gopher.cs.uwm.edu levine@cs.uwm.edu | Mosaic: gopher://gopher.cs.uwm.edu ---------------------------------+----------------------------------------- ------------------------------ End of Computer Privacy Digest V6 #052 ****************************** .