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- EFFector Online Volume 5 No. 10 6/11/1993 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
- In this issue:
- Accessing the Federal Government
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- ************************************************************************
- Over the past two weeks, the White House and the U.S. House of
- Representatives each announced that they had set up systems for receiving
- electronic mail through the Internet. These official announcements, as
- well as other reference materials for accessing federal government
- information online, are included in this issue of EFFector Online.
-
- ************************************************
- ***E-MAIL TO THE PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT***
- ************************************************
-
- THE WHITE HOUSE
- Office of Presidential Correspondence
- __________________________________________
-
- For Immediate Release
- June 1, 1993
-
- LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT AND VICE PRESIDENT
- IN ANNOUNCEMENT OF WHITE HOUSE ELECTRONIC MAIL ACCESS
-
- Dear Friends:
-
- Part of our commitment to change is to keep the White House in step with
- today's changing technology. As we move ahead into the twenty-first
- century, we must have a government that can show the way and lead by
- example. Today, we are pleased to announce that for the first time in
- history, the White House will be connected to you via electronic mail.
- Electronic mail will bring the Presidency and this Administration closer
- and make it more accessible to the people.
-
- The White House will be connected to the Internet as well as several
- on-line commercial vendors, thus making us more accessible and more in
- touch with people across this country. We will not be alone in this
- venture. Congress is also getting involved, and an exciting announcement
- regarding electronic mail is expected to come from the House of
- Representatives tomorrow.
-
- Various government agencies also will be taking part in the near future.
- Americans Communicating Electronically is a project developed by several
- government agencies to coordinate and improve access to the nation's
- educational and information assets and resources. This will be done
- through interactive communications such as electronic mail, and brought to
- people who do not have ready access to a computer.
-
- However, we must be realistic about the limitations and expectations of the
- White House electronic mail system. This experiment is the first-ever
- e-mail project done on such a large scale. As we work to reinvent
- government and streamline our processes, the e-mail project can help to put
- us on the leading edge of progress.
-
- Initially, your e-mail message will be read and receipt immediately
- acknowledged. A careful count will be taken on the number received as well
- as the subject of each message. However, the White House is not yet
- capable of sending back a tailored response via electronic mail. We are
- hoping this will happen by the end of the year.
-
- A number of response-based programs which allow technology to help us read
- your message more effectively, and, eventually respond to you
- electronically in a timely fashion will be tried out as well. These
- programs will change periodically as we experiment with the best way to
- handle electronic mail from the public. Since this has never been tried
- before, it is important to allow for some flexibility in the system in
- these first stages. We welcome your suggestions.
-
- This is an historic moment in the White House and we look forward to your
- participation and enthusiasm for this milestone event. We eagerly
- anticipate the day when electronic mail from the public is an integral and
- normal part of the White House communications system.
-
- President Clinton Vice President Gore
-
- PRESIDENT@WHITEHOUSE.GOV VICE.PRESIDENT@WHITEHOUSE.GOV
-
- *************************************************
- ***E-MAIL TO THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES***
- *************************************************
-
- ANNOUNCEMENT OF ELECTRONIC MAIL SYSTEM
- BY HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
-
- Chairman Charlie Rose and Ranking Minority Member Bill Thomas of the
- Committee on House Administration announced today the pilot program of the
- Constituent Electronic Mail System.
-
- This groundbreaking new service will allow citizens to communicate directly
- with their Member of Congress by electronic mail. The House of
- Representatives has established an electronic gateway to the Internet, the
- vast computer network that is used currently by over 12 million people
- worldwide. Participating Members of the House have been assigned public
- mailboxes which may be accessed by their constituents from their home
- computers. In addition, many libraries, schools and other public
- institutions now provide, or soon will provide, public access to the
- Internet.
-
- The Members of the House of Representatives who have agreed to participate
- in this pilot program are: Rep. Jay Dickey (AR-07), Rep. Sam Gejdenson
- (CT-02), Rep. Newt Gingrich (GA-06), Rep. George Miller (CA-07), Rep.
- Charlie Rose (NC-07), Rep. Fortney Pete Stark (CA-13), and Rep. Melvin Watt
- (NC-12). These Members will be making announcements in their congressional
- districts within the next few weeks to make their constituents aware of the
- new service.
-
- The Constituent Electronic Mail System represents a significant effort by
- the House of Representatives to expand communication with constituents.
- With the tremendous growth of electronic mail over the past several years,
- and the increasingly inter-connected nature of computer networks, the new
- service is a natural addition to the current methods of communication
- available to constituents. At the present time, House Members involved in
- the pilot program will largely respond to electronic mail messages from
- their constituents by postal mail, to ensure confidentiality.
-
- Constituents of House Members participating in the pilot program who wish
- to communicate with those Members will be asked to send a letter or
- postcard stating their interest to the Member's office. The request will
- include the constituent's Internet ``address,'' as well as that
- constituent's name and postal address. This process will allow Members to
- identify an electronic mail user as his or her constituent.
-
- The pilot e-mail program will continue until sufficient feedback from
- participating offices has been collected to allow improvements and
- modifications to the system. When House Information Systems and the
- Committee on House Administration are satisfied that the system is
- sufficiently error-free, other Members of the House will be allowed to add
- this new service as technical, budgetary and staffing concerns allow.
-
- For more information, Internet users are encouraged to contact the House of
- Representative's new on-line information service. Please send a request
- for information to CONGRESS@HR.HOUSE.GOV.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
- CONSTITUENT ELECTRONIC MAIL SYSTEM
-
- We welcome your inquiry to the House of Representatives Constituent
- Electronic Mail System. Currently, seven Members of the U.S. House of
- Representatives have been assigned public electronic mailboxes that may be
- accessed by their constituents. This effort represents a pilot program
- that will be used to assess the impact of electronic mail on Congressional
- offices and their mission of serving the residents of a Congressional
- District. This initial project will be expanded to other Members of
- Congress, as technical, budgetary and staffing constraints allow.
-
- Please review the list of participating Representatives below, and if the
- Congressional District in which you reside is listed, follow the
- instructions below to begin communicating by electronic mail with your
- Representative. If your Representative is not yet on-line, please be
- patient.
-
- U.S. REPRESENTATIVES PARTICIPATING IN THE CONSTITUENT ELECTRONIC MAIL SYSTEM
-
- Hon. Jay Dickey
- 4th Congressional District, Arkansas
- Rm. 1338, Longworth House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. Sam Gejdenson
- 2nd Congressional District, Connecticut
- Rm. 2416, Rayburn House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. Newton Gingrich
- 6th Congressional District, Georgia
- Rm. 2428, Rayburn House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. George Miller
- 7th Congressional District, California
- Rm. 2205, Rayburn House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. Charlie Rose
- 7th Congressional District, North Carolina
- Rm. 2230, Rayburn House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. 'Pete' Stark
- 13th Congressional District, California
- Rm. 239, Cannon House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- Hon. Mel Watt
- 12th Congressional District, North Carolina
- Rm. 1232, Longworth House Office Building
- Washington, DC 20515
-
- INSTRUCTIONS FOR CONSTITUENTS
-
- If your Representative is taking part in the pilot project, we encourage
- you to send a letter or postcard by U.S.Mail to that Representative at the
- address listed above requesting electronic mail access. In your
- correspondence, please print your name and INTERNET ADDRESS, followed by
- your postal (geographical) address. When your Representative receives the
- letter or postcard, you will receive a reply by electronic mail that will
- include the Representative's Internet address. After you receive this
- initial message, you will be able to write your Member of Congress at any
- time, provided you follow certain guidelines that will be included in that
- initial message.
-
- We are aware that it is an inconvenience for electronic mail users to be
- required to send a post card in order to begin communicating with their
- Representative. However, the primary goal of this pilot program is to
- allow Members to better serve their CONSTITUENTS, and this initial postal
- request is the only sure method currently available of verifying that a
- user is a resident of a particular congressional district.
-
- In addition, constituents who communicate with their Representative by
- electronic mail should be aware that Members will respond to their messages
- in the same manner that they respond to most communications from
- constituents. That is, Members will generally respond to messages by way
- of the U.S. Postal Service. This method of reply will help to ensure
- confidentiality, a concern that is of utmost importance to the House of
- Representatives.
-
- COMMENTS AND SUGGESTIONS
-
- Please feel free to send electronic mail comments about our new service to
- the Congressional Comment Desk, at
-
- COMMENTS@HR.HOUSE.GOV
-
- We will make every effort to integrate suggestions into forthcoming updates
- of our system.
-
- Thank you again for contacting the House of Representatives' Constituent
- Electronic Mail System. We are excited about the possibilities that e-mail
- has to offer, and will be working hard to bring more Members on-line and to
- expand our services. We feel that this pilot program is an important first
- step, and we urge your cooperation and continued interest to make the
- program a success.
-
- This message will be updated as necessary.
-
- Honorable Charlie Rose (D-NC)
- Chairman
- Committee on House Administration
-
- **************************************
- ***FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ)***
- **************************************
-
- WHITE HOUSE ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS AND PUBLIC ACCESS EMAIL -- FREQUENTLY
- ASKED QUESTIONS
-
- Updated April 7, 1993
-
- Table Of Contents
-
- I. Signing up for Daily Electronic Publications.
- A. Widely Available Sources.
- B. Notes on Widely Available Sources.
- C. Direct Email Distribution
-
- II. Searching and Retrieving White House documents.
- - WAIS
- - GOPHER
- - FedWorld BBS
-
- III. Sending email to the White House.
- - CompuServe
- - America OnLine
- - MCI
- - Fidonet
- - Internet
-
- I. HOW DO I SIGN UP FOR ELECTRONIC PUBLICATIONS BY THE WHITE HOUSE?
-
- The White House Communications office is distributing press releases over
- an experimental system developed during the campaign at the MIT Artificial
- Intelligence Laboratory.
-
- You can obtain copies of all the press releases from a wide variety of
- on-line services or discussion groups devoted to either national politics
- in general or President Clinton in particular. These are listed in
- sections I and II.
-
- Section I.C. explains how you can sign up to receive press releases
- directly from the experimental MIT system by using an automated email
- server. The present system was not designed to handle high levels of
- message traffic. A more powerful system will become available in due
- course, and in the meantime, it would be appreciated if you used this
- service sparingly. One appropriate current use is secondary redistribution
- and archiving. If you use it, you will be carried forward when the more
- powerful system that replaces it.
-
- A. WIDELY AVAILABLE SOURCES
-
- 1. On USENET/NETNEWS, electronic publications are found on a variety of groups:
-
- Direct Distribution
-
- alt.politics.clinton
- alt.politics.org.misc
- alt.politics.reform
- alt.politics.usa.misc
- alt.news-media
- alt.activism
- talk.politics.misc
-
- Indirect Distribution
-
- misc.activism.progressive
- cmu.soc.politics
- assocs.clinton-gore-92
-
- 2. On CompuServe: GO WHITEHOUSE
-
- 3. On America Online: keyword WHITEHOUSE or THE WHITEHOUSE or CLINTON
-
- 4. On The WELL: type whitehouse
-
- 5. On MCI: type VIEW WHITE HOUSE
-
- 6. On Fidonet: See Echomail WHITEHOUSE
-
- 7. On Peacenet or Econet: See pol.govinfo.usa.
-
-
- B. NOTES ON WIDELY AVAILABLE SOURCES
-
- [Editor's note: #1 seems to be missing from the original file]
-
- 2. CompuServe's White House Forum (GO WHITEHOUSE) is devoted to discussion
- of the Clinton administration's policies and activities. The forum's
- library consists of news releases and twice daily media briefings from the
- White House Office of Media Affairs. CompuServe members can exchange
- information and opinions with each other in the 17 sections in the forum's
- message area. The message board spans a broad range of topics, including
- international and United Nations activities, defense, health care, the
- economy and the deficit, housing and urban development, the environment,
- and education and national service.
-
- 3. On America Online the posts are sent to the White House Forum, located
- in the News & Finance department of the service and accessible via keywords
- "white house" and "clinton." The White House Forum on America Online
- contains the press releases from the White House, divided into the
- categories "Press Briefings," "Meetings & Speeches," "Foreign Policy," "The
- Economy," "Technology," "Health Care," and "Appointments." The area
- features a message board so you can discuss the releases with other AOL
- members, and a searchable database for easy retrieval of releases in the
- topic that interests you.
-
- 4. MCI Mail users can access daily information on the administration's
- programs provided by the White House through MCI Mail bulletin boards. The
- available boards are: WHITE HOUSE ECONOMIC, WHITE HOUSE FOREIGN, WHITE
- HOUSE SOCIAL, WHITE HOUSE SPEECHES and WHITE HOUSE NEWS. A listing of
- these boards can also be obtained by simply typing VIEW WHITE HOUSE at the
- COMMAND prompt.
-
-
- C. DIRECT EMAIL DISTRIBUTION
-
- If you don't have access to the these accounts or if you would prefer to
- receive the releases via email, then the next section details how to sign
- up for this service. The server is not set up to answer email letters,
- comments or requests for specific information. To reach this MIT server,
- send email:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: Help
-
- The server works by reading the subject line of the incoming message and
- taking whatever action that line calls for. If you want to sign up to
- automatically receive press releases, then your subject line would begin
- with the word RECEIVE. You can then specify what kind of information you
- are interested in receiving. The categories of information are:
-
- ECONOMIC POLICY -- Get releases related to the economy such as budget news,
- technology policy review, etc.
-
- FOREIGN POLICY -- Get releases related to foreign policy such as statements
- on Bosnian airdrop, Haitian refugee status, etc.
-
- SOCIAL POLICY -- Get releases related to social issues like National
- Service (Student Loan) program, abortion, welfare reform, etc.
-
- SPEECHES -- All speeches made by the President and important speeches made
- by other Administration officials.
-
- NEWS -- Transcripts of press conferences released by the White House
- Communications office, as well as the President's remarks in photo ops and
- other Q&A sessions.
-
- ALL -- All of the above.
-
- So, if you wanted to sign up to get releases related to the economy your
- email message would look like this:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: RECEIVE ECONOMY
-
- When you send a signup message to the clinton-info server, it sends you
- back a status message letting you know what distribution streams you are
- signed up for. If you ever want to check on what groups you are signed up
- for send the following message:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: STATUS
-
- You can stop receiving email releases by sending a REMOVE message to the
- clinton-info server. The word REMOVE would be followed by whatever
- distribution stream you wanted to drop. If you wanted to stop receiving
- message about the ECONOMY then your mail would look like this:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: REMOVE ECONOMY
-
- You could substitute SOCIAL, FOREIGN, SPEECHES, NEWS or ALL for ECONOMY in
- the above message and you would be dropped from that distribution list. If
- you send the subject line REMOVE ALL, then you will be taken off the email
- distribution system all together and will not receive further releases of
- any kind.
-
- You can also ask for help from the automated server. Send an email query
- as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: HELP
-
- The server will respond by sending you a detailed form that will guide you
- through the process of signing up for the various distribution streams. As
- you will quickly discover, there is a automatic form processing interface
- that parallels the quick and easy subject line commands discussed here.
- More detailed help is available by sending an email query as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: Please Help!
-
- Finally, if you want to search and retrieve documents, but you do not have
- access to the retrieval methods discussed in section II, you can do this
- via email through the MIT server. You can obtain the WAIS query form by
- sending an email query as follows:
-
- To: Clinton-Info@Campaign92.Org Subject: WAIS
-
- Once you have identified the documents that you want, be careful not to
- request them all at once, because you may be sent a message containing all
- the documents and this message may be too big for some mail delivery
- systems between the email server and you.
-
-
- II. HOW DO I RETRIEVE WHITE HOUSE PUBLICATIONS FROM INTERNET ARCHIVES?
-
- Various sites are archiving the press releases distributed . What follows
- is an incomplete list of some of the sites containing the documents that
- have been released to date. This FAQ will be updated to reflect new sites
- as they become known.
-
- SITE DIRECTORY
-
- 1. SUNSITE.UNC.EDU /HOME3/WAIS/WHITE-HOUSE-PAPERS
- 2. FTP CCO.CALTECH.EDU /PUB/BJMCCALL
- 3. FTP MARISTB.MARIST.EDU
- 4. CPSR.ORG /CPSR/CLINTON
- 5. FedWorld BBS 703-321-8020 8-N-1
-
- Notes: The following are notes on how to log in and get information from
- the above sites.
-
- 1. Office for Information Technology at University of North Carolina
- maintains the full collection of White House electronic releases available
- for search with WAIS and also accessible via Gopher.
-
- 1.a WAIS (:source :version 3 :database-name
- "/home3/wais/White-House-Papers" :ip-address "152.2.22.81" :ip-name
- "sunsite.unc.edu" :tcp-port 210 :cost 0.00 :cost-unit :free :maintainer
- "pjones@sunsite.unc.edu" :description "Server created with WAIS release 8
- b5 on Feb 27 15:16:16 1993 by pjones@sunsite.unc.edu These are the White
- House Press Briefings and other postings dealing with William Jefferson
- Clinton and Albert Gore as well as members of the President's Cabinet and
- the first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, Chelsea, Socks and others in
- Washington DC. Dee Dee Meyers and George Stephanopoulos. Other good
- words: United States of America, Bill Al Tipper Democrats USA US These
- files are also available via anonymous ftp from sunsite.unc.edu The files
- of type filename used in the index were:
- /home3/ftp/pub/academic/political-science/whitehouse-papers/1993 ")
-
- Folks without WAIS clients or gophers that act as WAIS clients may telnet
- to sunsite.unc.edu and login as swais to access this information via WAIS.
-
- 1.b GOPHER is a distributed menuing system for information access on the
- Internet developed at the University of Minnesota. Gophers are
- client-server implementations and various gopher clients are available for
- nearly any computing platform. You may now use gopher clients to assess
- the White House Papers and other political information on SunSITE.unc.edu's
- new gopher server. You may also add links from your local gopher server to
- SunSITE for access to the White House Papers.
-
- For gopher server keepers and adventurous clients to access SunSITE you
- need only know that we use the standard gopher port 70 and that our
- internet address is SunSITE.unc.edu (152.2.22.81). Point there and you'll
- see the references to the Politics areas.
-
- For folks without gopher clients but with access to telnet: telnet
- sunsite.unc.edu login: gopher The rest is very straightforward. Browsing
- options end with a directory mark (/), searching options end with an
- question mark (?). There's plenty of on-line help available.
-
- 2. No special instructions.
-
- 3. The CLINTON@MARIST log files which contain all the official
- administration releases distributed through the MIT servers are available
- via anonymous FTP. These logs contain in addition to the official
- releases, the posts that comprise the ongoing discussion conducted by the
- list subscribers. To obtain the logs: FTP MARISTB.MARIST.EDU - the logs
- are in the CLINTON directory and are named CLINTON LOG9208 thru CLINTON
- LOGyymm where yymm stands for the current year and month. Problems should
- be directed to my attention: URLS@MARISTC.BITNET or URLS@VM.MARIST.EDU.
- Posted by Lee Sakkas - owner, CLINTON@MARIST
-
- 4. Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility is providing all
- Clinton documents on technology and privacy at the CPSR Internet Library,
- available via FTP/WAIS/Gopher at cpsr.org /cpsr/clinton (and in other
- folders as relevant). For email access, send a message with the word
- "help" at the 1st line of text to listserv@cpsr.org.
-
- 5. The FedWorld Computer System, operated by the National Technical
- Information Service, archives White House papers in a traditional BBS type
- file library. Connect to FedWorld by calling (703) 321- 8020. No parity,
- eight data bits and one stop bit (N-8-1). FedWorld accommodates baud
- speeds of up to 9,600. White House papers are located in the W-House
- library of files. To access this library from the main FedWorld menu,
- enter <f s w-house. Files are named with the first four digits being the
- release month and day (e.g. 0323XXX.txt). Some standard abbreviations
- after the date include: rem - Remarks by the President; pc - Press
- Conference transcript; pr - Press Release; AM - AM Press Briefing; PM -
- PM Press Briefing; sch - The President's public schedule; spch - Text of
- major speeches. These files are saved in ASCII format. Files can be
- viewed online by requesting to download a file and then selecting (L)ist as
- the download protocol. This will display the file a screen at a time.
- White House papers are kept in the above format for up to two months.
- Papers more than two months old are compressed using Pkzip into a single
- file that contains all of the files for that month (e.g., 0193.zip contains
- all papers released during January 1993). In addition to White Documents,
- FedWorld also provides a gateway to more than 100 government funded BBSs
- and computer systems.
-
-
- III. HOW DO I SEND EMAIL TO THE WHITE HOUSE?
-
- The White House email system is under construction. This is a new project
- and suffers from all of the problems common to a startup operation. The
- Communications office is currently working on defining what this system
- will do, as well as trying to come up with equipment and staffing to make
- sure that it works. Email messages are currently being printed out and
- responses are being sent out via US Mail.
-
- Nobody wants this new venture to work more than the staff that has devoted
- so many hours to getting it up and running. But much time and effort will
- be required before the system is truly interactive. In the mean time, they
- will need a little patience from the electronic community. If you send a
- message to the White House, please include a US Post office address for
- replies.
-
- You can send email to the following accounts:
-
- CompuServe: 75300,3115; GO: WHITE HOUSE finds White House forum
-
- America OnLine: clinton pz; KEYWORD: WHITEHOUSE finds White House area
-
- MCI: TO: WHITE HOUSE; VIEW WHITE HOUSE views bulletin boards
-
- Fidonet: TO: WHITEHOUSE@1:2613/333; Echomail: WHITEHOUSE views echomail
- conference
-
- Internet: Clinton-HQ@Campaign92.Org 75300.3115@CompuServe.Com
- clintonpz@AOL.Com
-
- Please send corrections, deletion and additions to this FAQ to:
-
- Updates@Clinton92.Org
-
- **************************
- ***THE FEDERAL REGISTER***
- **************************
-
- Good news everyone! The Federal Register is now on the Net! For those who
- want more info, you should be reading your May 1993 Boardwatch Magazine.
-
- To summarize, for $10 an hour, you can access a gopher client that will
- give you access to the full text of the register.
-
- telnet or gopher to netsys1.netsys.com and logon as FEDREG with password
- REGISTER. This will allow you to browse about the system and check out how
- it looks and works.
-
- Contact the publisher for more info:
-
- Counterpoint Publishing
- 84 Sherman St.
- Cambridge, MA 02140
- (800) 998-4515
- Email: fedreg@internet.com
-
- *************************
- ***LIBRARY OF CONGRESS***
- *************************
-
- The Library of Congress Information System (LOCIS) is now available over
- the Internet. The telnet address is:
-
- locis.loc.gov 140.147.254.3 (no login or password)
-
- LOCIS accepts both telnet 3270 and line mode.
-
- LOCIS includes over 15 million catalog records and over 10 million records
- for other types of information: federal legislation, copyright
- registrations, Braille and audio, organizations, and selected foreign legal
- materials.
-
- Searching hours are (all times USA eastern; closed national holidays):
-
- Monday - Friday: 6:30am - 9:30pm
- Saturday: 8:00am - 5:00pm
- Sunday: 1:00pm - 5:00pm
-
- Printed manuals will be available for sale later this summer and very soon
- via FTP (ftp seq1.loc.gov /pub/LC.Online). There will be a LOCIS Quick
- Search Guide and a LOCIS Reference Manual.
-
- LC Online Internet: lconline@seq1.loc.gov
- Library of Congress
-
- **********************************
- ***U.S. SUPREME COURT DECISIONS***
- **********************************
-
- PROJECT HERMES
- Electronic Dissemination of U.S. Supreme Court Decisions
-
- Project Hermes was started in May 1990 by the U.S. Supreme Court as an
- experiment in disseminating its opinions electronically. Case Western
- Reserve University was one of the participants in the pilot project. In
- the Fall of 1992, the Court decided that the experiment in electronic
- dissemination of its opinions was successful. Starting with the 1993
- calendar year, the U.S. Supreme Court began disseminating opinions
- electronically on an official basis. CWRU will continue to electronically
- receive and distribute the opinions of the Court.
-
- * * *
-
- The file names are as they are received from the Supreme Court. The
- extentions are .O for the Opinion, .S for the Syllabus, .C for Concurring
- opinions, and .D for Dissenting opinions. The ascii files also have a
- .filt extention.
-
- You can contact Project Hermes via e.mail on the Cleveland Free-Net at:
- aa584, via the Internet at: aa584@cleveland.freenet.edu, by writing:
- PROJECT HERMES, CWRU, 319 WICKENDEN BUILDING, CLEVELAND, OHIO, 66106, or by
- calling: (216) 368-2733
-
- =============================================================
-
- EFFector Online is published biweekly by:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave., S.E., Suite 303
- Washington, DC 20003 USA
- Phone: +1 202 544 9237 FAX: +1 202 547 5481
- Internet Address: eff@eff.org
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- Coordination, production and shipping by Shari Steele,
- EFF Legal Services Coordinator (ssteele@eff.org)
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- Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. Signed
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- signed articles individually, please contact the authors for their express
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- *This newsletter is printed on 100% recycled electrons.*
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- MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
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- In order to continue the work already begun and to expand our efforts and
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- Our memberships are $20.00 per year for students and $40.00 per year for
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- Mail to:
- Membership Coordinator
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 666 Pennsylvania Ave., SE
- Suite 303
- Washington, DC 20003 USA
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- Membership rates:
- $20.00 (student or low income membership)
- $40.00 (regular membership)
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