Edited Edupage, 11 Aug 1996

E. ALLEN SMITH EALLENSMITH at ocelot.Rutgers.EDU
Sun Aug 11 23:03:52 PDT 1996


>From:	IN%"educom at educom.unc.edu" 11-AUG-1996 20:55:02.08
>To:	IN%"edupage at elanor.oit.unc.edu"  "EDUCOM Edupage Mailing List"
>Subj:	Edupage, 11 August 1996

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>Edupage, 11 August 1996.  Edupage, a summary of news about information
>technology, is provided three times a week as a service by Educom,
>a Washington, D.C.-based consortium of leading colleges and universities
>seeking to transform education through the use of information technology.
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>U.K. INTERNET PROVIDERS PLAN TO RESTRICT CYBERPORN
>Reacting to pressure from Scotland Yard, the Internet Service Providers
>Association, representing 60 of an estimated 140 providers in the United
>Kingdom, will be asking its members to voluntarily block access to sites
>and services featuring hard-core pornography.  An executive of Demon
>Internet, which has the largest subscriber base in the U.K., dismisses the
>proposed action as ineffective:  "This is not a solution, it is just hiding
>the problem."  (Financial Times 10 Aug 96)

	I suspect that the largest subscriber base is about to get larger...

>PRIVACY VS. FREEDOM-OF-INFORMATION ON THE WEB
>A computer consultant in Oregon paid the state $222 for its complete motor
>vehicles data base, which he then posted to a Web site, prompting charges
>of privacy violations from people who complained that he had invaded their
>privacy.  The database allows anyone with an Oregon license plate number to
>look up the vehicle owner's name, address, birthdate, driver's license
>number, and title information.  The consultant's motive in posting the
>information, which anyone can obtain for a fee by going to a state office,
>was to improve public safety by allowing identification of reckless
>drivers.  Oregon Governor John Kitzhaver says that instant access to motor
>vehicle records over the Internet is different from information access
>obtained by physically going to state offices and making a formal request
>for information:  ``I am concerned that this ease of access to people's
>addresses could be abused and present a threat to an individual's safety.''
>(Associated Press 8 Aug 96)

	At least they mentioned that it was publically available... but I don't
see any difference between net.availability and physical.availability.
	-Allen

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