*** PLEASE REDISTRIBUTE FREELY *** Hello CyberFolks, Wednesday, August 16th BayFF (Bay Area Chapter of EFF) held a meeting in San Francisco with speakers Mike Godwin and Cliff Stoll. Attached are a few notes for those of you who missed the opportunity to attend. See you in the future, Andre Bacard ====================================================================== abacard@well.com Bacard wrote "The Computer Privacy Stanford, California Handbook" [Intro by Mitchell Kapor]. http://www.well.com/user/abacard Published by Peachpit Press, (800) Enjoy your privacy... 283-9444, ISBN # 1-56609-171-3. ======================================================================= Notes from the BayFF Semi-Underground Authorized by Andre Bacard <abacard@well.com> Wednesday, August 16, 1995, I found myself cruising through Golden Gate Park. Suddenly I swerved into the right lane and shouted "Eureka." For those who don't know, Eureka is the California state motto which, in the tradition of the Gold Rush, means "I found it!" In San Francisco IT means a parking place. Feeling euphoric about my good fortune, I started the short walk long on memories towards the Haight-Ashbury district. It was delightful and fogless. The salty air was cool. The smell of grass (the type that city gardener's mow) was fresh. Passing a guitarist, I thought of the Grateful Dead's Jerry Garcia, recently deceased. My mind flashed back twenty-five years ago when I first visited Haight-Ashbury. Twenty- five years ago at the dawn of the Computer Age... So many silicon chips under the bridge... I thought of all the people in the Haight mourning Garcia and donating to the Haight-Ashbury Free Clinic in Garcia's memory. I flashed back upon my first meeting with John Perry Barlow, lyricist for the Grateful Dead and co-founder of EFF. That meeting helped inspire me to write COMPUTER PRIVACY HANDBOOK. Such were a few of the images that danced through my mind as I entered the Cole & Page Street Public Library... It was appropriate to be attending an EFF meeting. John Gilmore, EFF Board Member, was the first person I saw. Gilmore reminds me of a lean Chesire cat. He has a mischievous smile as if to say, "You won't believe what just happened." Maybe we'll never discover what just happened with John, since he's so much into crypto. In any case, Gilmore introduced Mike Godwin as "The first lawyer in Cyberspace and EFF's first employee." Mike Godwin ("a cool guy who survived law school with his personality intact" according to an anonymous EFF publicist) spoke for 90 minutes about how to deal with reporters and, more specifically, about his role in trying to correct the damage done to cyberspace by TIME's infamous "CyberPorn" cover story. Godwin detailed many flaws in Carnegie Mellon University undergraduate Mr. Rimm's study of cyberporn that led to the "CyberPorn" piece. Godwin said of Rimm's paper: "It's as if you surveyed the bookstores in Times Square in Manhattan and generalized to all bookstores in America." Cliff Stoll ("a wild and crazy guy with interesting hair" according to the same anonymous EFF publicist) is the author of the best-selling book SILICON SNAKE OIL. Stoll personifies the eccentric heritage of the San Francisco counter-culture. With lots of humor and drama, Stoll presented a critical view of the Internet. "The Internet is a perfect diversion from learning" and "The Internet opens many doors that lead to empty rooms" were two of his many memorable lines. Stoll noted that wisdom and experience play little role in the Computer Cult (i.e., all the Hype surrounding the Information Superhighway). The EFF events that I've attended at WIRED's office in the San Francisco Mission District and last night are well worth the hassle of hunting down a parking place. To learn more about future monthly BayFF meetings, send this e-mail: To: listserv@eff.org Subject: [ignore] subscribe BayFF See you at future events, Andre Bacard P.S. I'm the guy with the fedora hat who people mistake for Indiana Jones.