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1996-07-08
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From the Radio Free Michigan archives
ftp://141.209.3.26/pub/patriot
If you have any other files you'd like to contribute, e-mail them to
bj496@Cleveland.Freenet.Edu.
------------------------------------------------
EFF Quotes of the Week Collection 5.0
=====================================
Updated: Mar. 9, 1995
A collection of the wittiest and stupidest, most sublime and most inane
comments ever said or written about cryptography, civil liberties,
networking, government, privacy, and more.
For more information on the Electronic Fronter Foundation, Clipper, Digital
Telephony, and related civil liberties issues, contact EFF via the Internet,
phone, fax, or US Mail.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
----------------------------------
1667 K St. NW, Suite 801
Washington DC 20006-1605 USA
+1 202 861 7700 (voice)
+1 202 861 1258 (fax)
+1 202 861 1223 (BBS - 16.8k ZyXEL)
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Internet: ask@eff.org
Internet fax gate: remote-printer.EFF@8.5.2.1.1.6.8.2.0.2.1.tpc.int
basic info: info@eff.org
general queries: ask@eff.org
membership information: membership@eff.org
legal queries: mnemonic@eff.org
Latest issue of EFFector (EFF newsletter): effector-reflector@eff.org
ftp archives: ftp.eff.org
gopher archives: gopher.eff.org
WAIS archives: wais@eff.org
WWW archives: http://www.eff.org/
AOL: keyword EFF
CIS: GO EFFSIG
WELL: g eff
_____________________________________________________________________________
"Is this true or only clever?"
- Augustine Birrell
"...some starry eyed individuals who access the Net think of Cyberspace as
a community, with rules, regulations and codes of behaviour. Don't
you believe it! There is no community. Perhaps there was some truth in
that concept in the past, when the Internet was used exclusively by a small,
homogeneous group of academics and corporate technical researchers.
Today, with Internet access available to everyone, Iway travellers reflect
every heterogeneous nuance of the world population. Along your journey,
someone may try to tell you that in order to be a good Net "citizen", you
must follow the rules of the Cyberspace community. Don't listen. The only
laws and rules with which you should concern yourself are those passed by
the country, state and city in which you live. The only ethics you
should adopt as you pursue wealth on the Iway are those dictated by the
religious faith you have chosen to follow and your own good conscience."
- Laurence Canter & Martha Siegel ("the Green Card Lawyers"), from an early
review copy of their book, _How_To_Make_a_Fortune_on_the_Information_
_Superhighway_, 1994.
"Any time you throw information from the Internet at a student, you have
to filter it."
- Steve Shotwell, director of computer services for the Troy, Michigan
school district.
"Trying to control information in the network age is about as successful
as pissing into the wind."
- Keith Henson, in an article on the AABBS prosecution,
_Computer_underground_Digest_, Jan. 21, 1995.
"A means of control should exist whereby access operators and their
organizations are held responsible for what is posted on the Internet,"
- Church of Scientology lawyer Helena Kobrin
"If a Nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization,
it expects what never was and never will be...if we are to guard against
ignorance and remain free, it is the responsibility of every American to be
informed."
- Thomas Jefferson
"I don't understand why they call it public broadcasting. As far as I am
concerned, there's nothing public about it; it's an elitist enterprise.
`Rush Limbaugh' is public broadcasting."
- Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich on the
de-funding of the Public Broadcasting System, as quoted by
_Broadcasting_and_Cable_, Feb. 20, 1995, p. 8
"The Internet is a conduit of criminal activity."
- James P. Lennane, president of software company DeScribe Inc., who in
Oct. 1994 offered a $20,000 reward for the turning in of certain software
pirates, whom Microsoft also offered a $10,000 bounty on.
"First of all, you have to make the distinction between the Internet
and some commercial service like AOL or Prodigy. If you spend that
time and money building internets, you at the end of your labors
will own tangible assets: hardware, software, paid-for network
bandwidth, and human capital in the form of people who know how to
run same. Spending those dimes on Prodigy means that in the end you
will have rented someone else's assets and will have nothing
concrete in the end except for receipts for bills paid."
- Edward Vielmetti of MSEN
"That will change over time the entire flow of information and the entire
quality of knowledge in the country and it will change the way people will
try to play games in the legislative process."
- Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich, on
increasing public electronic access to Congressional Information
(as reported by _BNA_Daily_Report_for_Executives_, Nov. 22, 1994)
"John [Malone, of cable tv giant TCI] and I were just on a Networked
Economy Conference panel together, and we were standing at the urinals
talking about things, and Barry Diller comes in and stands between us. And
Barry says, `C'mon, you seem like such good friends. Just split the
difference.'"
- Bell Atlantic CEO Ray Smith, on the failed BA/TCI "NII" merger, reported
in _Wired_, Feb. 1995, p. 110
"...Don't mistake any of this for altruism...Fear and greed just doesn't
work. If you want to be successful, quality and service just works better."
- Larry Edison, CEO of Oracle, on the company's improved customer service;
reported in _Investor's_Business_Daily_, Feb. 22, 1995, p. A2
"Networks are based on choice. When they get uncomfortable, it's easy to
opt out of them. Communities teach tolerance, co-existence, and mutual
respect...I fear that calling a network a community leads people to
complacency and delusion, to accepting an inadequate substitute because
they've never experienced the real thing and they don't know what they're
missing."
- Eric Utne, publisher of _Utne_Reader_, from _Utne_Reader_, Mar.-Apr.
1995, p. 3
"If I knew what you've made during the year, if I know what your withholding
is, if I know what your spending pattern is, I should be able to generate
for you a tax return. I am an excellent advocate of return-free filing. We
know everything about you that we need to know. Your employer tells us
everything about you that we need to know. Your activity records on your
credit cards tell us everything about you that we need to know. Through
interface with Social Security, with the DMV, with your banking
institutions, we really have a lot of information ... We could literally
file a return for you. This is the future we'd like to go to."
- US Internal Revenue Service Document Processing System project manager,
as reported by _Wired_, Dec. 1994, p. 174.
"I think intellectual property is more like land, and copyright violation
is more like trespass. Even though you don't take anything away from the
landowner when you trespass, most people understand and respect the laws
that make it illegal. The real crime in copyright violation is not the
making of the copies, it's the expropriation of the creator's right to
control the creation."
- Founder of ClariNet Communications Corp., _Internet_World_,
Nov/Dec. 1994, p.64)
"E-mail someday will unite us all in a shared state of epistolary bliss.
E-mail is ethereal; it consumes no paper, no ink, and only a misting of
fossil fuels. E-mail is nearly instantaneous. Best of all, e-mail
combines the vacuity of phone talk with the potential permanence of
letters. A fledgling still, e-mail promises to burgeon beyond anyone's
calculation. Maybe the letter's golden age isn't dead after all; it may
be yet to come."
- an op-ed piece in the Nov. 9, 1994 _Wall_Street_Journal_
"Laws do not persuade just because they threaten."
- Seneca, 65 CE
"Nothing we do in this great capital can change the fact that
factories or information can flash across the world, that people
can move money around in the blink of an eye...Nothing can change the
fact that technology can be adopted, once created, by people all across the
world and then rapidly adapted in new and different ways by people who have
a little different take on the way that technology works."
- William Clinton, President of the United States, in a
_New_York_Times_ article by John Markoff, Sep. 21, 1993
[Note how inconsistent this statement is with the Clinton
Administration's policy efforts to stuff the encryption genie
back in the bottle.]
"The right to be heard does not include the right to be taken seriously."
- Hubert H. Humphrey
"Usenet is like a herd of performing elephants with diarrhea -- massive,
difficult to redirect, awe-inspiring, entertaining, and a source of
mind-boggling amounts of excrement when you least expect it."
- Gene Spafford, 1992, quoted in a Joel Snyder article in _Internet_World_,
Nov/Dec 1994, p.94
"They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety."
- Benjamin Franklin, _Historical_Review_of_Pennsylvania_, 1759.
"Ninety-eight percent of the adults in this country are decent, hardworking,
honest Americans. It's the other lousy two percent that get all the
publicity. But then, we elected them."
- Lily Tomlin
"Any vagabond babbler or unacknowledged genius, any enterprising tradesman,
with his own money or with the money of others, may found a newspaper,
even a great newspaper. He may attract a host of writers, ready to
deliver judgment on any subject at a moment's notice; he may hire
illiterate reporters to keep him supplied with rumors and scandals. His
staff is then complete. From that day he sits in judgement on all the
world, on ministers and administrators, on literature and art, on
finance and industry."
- K.P. Pobyedonostseff, _Reflections_of_a_Russian_Statesman_
(tr. Robert Long)
"I'd rather have 10% of the world than 100% of New England."
- President of Nynex, the New England local telephone monopoly, on
telecom deregulation, as reported in _Business_Week_, Feb. 20, 1995,
p. 92
"If you think the 13,000 guys at Microsoft who aren't millionaires yet are
going to show some restraint, you're in for a surprise."
- Andy Nicholson of Microsoft, in response to America On-Line CEO Steve
Case's comment that Microsoft should show some restraint in the online
market.
"If I have a market in the U.S., I have 200 to 250 million guys all
speaking the same language, all paying in dollars, and all reading the
same magazines. The natural hub of the industry is the United States.
Whether the Japanese or the Europeans like to hear this or not, it's the
truth."
- Expatriate Belgian CEO of TechGnosis, a software company now based in
the US.
"In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts: they
come back to us with a certain alienated majesty."
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
"There is a First Amendment right to speak in a encrypted way...The right
to speak P.G.P. is like the right to speak Navajo. The Government has no
particular right to prevent you from speaking in a technical manner even if
it is inconvenient for them to understand."
- Eben Moglen, Columbia U. professor of law and legal history, in a
_New_York_Times_ article by John Markoff, Sep. 21, 1993
"The soft-minded man always fears change. He feels security in the status
quo, and he has an almost morbid fear of the new. For him, the greatest
pain is the pain of a new idea."
- Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
"Cyberspace still exists at the pleasure of the real world."
- Esther Dyson, EFF Boardmember, from Jan. 14. 1994 _Economist_ article
"Grassroots can grow through concrete."
- Jim DePoe <aare@ph001193.uuhare6.rabbit.net>, as quoted in Jim Warren's
_GovAccess_ e-newsletter.
"Philosophical habits of mind do not come quicker through fiber optics.
Clear thinking is not aided by better dot resolution. Understanding
ourselves and feeling for others does not come with a software upgrade."
- Linda Ray Pratt
"When one door closes another door opens; but we often look so long and so
regretfully upon the closed door that we do not see the ones which open for
us."
- Alexander Graham Bell
"[R]espondents [to an Internet survey] reported a more active civic life in
cyberspace than is typically reported by respondents in the national
election studies (NES) of Center for Political Studies of the University
of Michigan. Even though the technology is new, close to one-third
had used e-mail to contact a public official. This compares to an
estimated 28 percent of the NES who reported ever having written a
letter to a public official during the 1960 and 70s...About 60 percent had
been asked to petition or otherwise contact a public official about an
issue or public policy."
- Bonnie Fisher, Michael Margolis, David Resnick, "Democracy on the
Internet" Survey Results, as presented at the Annual Meeting of the
American Political Science Association in New York City, Sept. 1-4, 1994
"Knowledge of history is the precondition of political intelligence.
Without history, a society shares no common memory of where it has been
[or] what it core values are."
- 'National Standards for United States History' as reprinted in _Time_,
Nov. 7, 1994
"Extremism in defense of liberty is no vice. Tolerance in the face of
tyranny is no virtue."
- Barry Goldwater
"When you are confronted by any complex social system, such as
an urban center or a hamster, with things about it that you're
dissatisfied with and anxious to fix, you cannot just step in and set
about fixing with much hope of helping...Jay Forrester has demonstrated
it mathematically, with his computer models of cities in which he makes
clear that whatever you propose to do, based on common sense, will almost
inevitably make matters worse rather than better. You cannot meddle with
one part of a complex system from the outside without the almost certain
risk of setting off disastrous events that you hadn't counted on in other,
remote parts. If you want to fix something you are first obliged to
understand, in detail, the whole system, and for very large systems you
can't do this without a very large computer. Even then, the safest course
seems to be to stand by and wring hands, but not to touch...Intervening is
a way of causing trouble."
- Lewis Thomas, from the essay "On Meddling", _The_Medusa_and_the_Snail_,
Viking Pr., New York, 1979
"I hate the idea of causes, and if I had to choose between betraying my
country and betraying my freind, I hope I should have the guts to betray
my country."
- E. M. Forster
"One practice which I believe should be eliminated is that of the so-called
'paper front'. A client is advised to finance an 'organization' to
promote or fight for its cause under the guise of an independent and
spontaneous movement. This is a plain public deceit and fraud...Attempts
to fool the public by making it believe an 'organization' existing only
on paper is really a vociferous group favoring this or that cause have
helped to cast a shadow upon the business of public relations counseling."
- John W. Hill, _The_Making_of_a_Public_Relations_Man_
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of
chains and slavery!?"
- Patrick Henry
"The most exciting breakthroughs of the 21st century will not occur because
of technology but because of an expanding concept of what it means to be
human."
- John Naisbitt & Patricia Aburdene, _Megatrends_2000_
"In a Time/CNN poll of 1,000 Americans conducted last week by Yankelovich
Partners, two-thirds said it was more important to protect the privacy of
phone calls than to preserve the ability of police to conduct wiretaps.
When informed about the Clipper Chip, 80% said they opposed it."
- Philip Elmer-Dewitt, "Who Should Keep the Keys", _TIME_, Mar. 14 1994
[note: these statistics have since been called into question. Even so,
they are unlikely to be off by very MUCH...]
"Many thanks to those of you who flamed the PC [Progressive Conservative
party] pranksters. I know when I went online that I would have to deal
with fake posts and related chaff. That's the price of being on the Net.
I'm not about to delete my account. I still want to hear from people with
*real* concerns and *real* suggestions".
- Robert Rae, Premier of Ontario, Canada, in a post to the Usenet newsgroup
ont.general, thanking supporters for verbally attacking PC party leader
Mike Harris, who referred to an obviously forged message from a fake Bob
Rae as an embarassing "security violation" and the forgers themselves.
From a K.K. Campbell article in _eye_Weekly_. [If major figures of
government are encouraging flaming, netiquette still has a long way to
go...]
"Time makes more converts than reason."
- Thomas Paine
"A Gallup poll reveals nearly 85% of Canadians worry the info-highway
will be a threat to their privacy, but 54.9% are still willing
to pay up to $15 monthly to be hooked into it. The info-highway
received a 54% recognition rating, a figure described as "astounding"
by Anderson Consulting, which sponsored the survey. 58.7% were
interested in educational services, but only 21.3% in home shopping
and 16.4% in calling up video games."
- _Toronto_Globe_&_Mail_, "Snoopophobia Haunts Info-Highway" May 3, 1994
"Maybe we need a tax credit for the poorest Americans to buy a laptop. Now,
maybe that's wrong, maybe that's expensive, maybe we can't do it, but I'll
tell you, any signal that we can send to the poorest Americans that says,
'We're going into a 21st century, third-wave information age, and so are
you, and we want to carry you with us.'"
- Rep. Newt Gingrich, Speaker of the House of Representatives addressing
the House Ways and Means Committee, Jan. 1995. [From _New_York_Times_,
Jan. 5, 1995, excerpted in _Edupage_, Jan. 8, 1995.]
"Relying on the government to protect your privacy is like asking a peeping
tom to install your window blinds."
- John Perry Barlow, EFF co-founder, _Decrypting_the_Puzzle_Palace_
"Only through intelligent utilization of interactive multimedia technology
can we make higher education simultaneously more productive and more
efficient."
- Bernard Gifford, software entrepreneur, quoted in _Educom_Review_, Nov./
Dec., 1994
"California legislators consider 10 to 15 letters and faxes to be a
*strong* showing of support for a bill (in a state of 31-million population!)"
- Jim Warren, _GovAccess_ Internet newsletter, 08/04/94
"It is almost impossible for anyone outside this damn beltway to really
understand how the Congress works. If you aren't here, walking the halls
of Congress, sitting at bars and attending parties where you get to knock
back some brews with Hill staffers, you don't have a handle on the
almost numbing amount of bullshit that goes on."
- _CWD_ and _Comm_Daily_ journalist Brock Meeks, post to com-priv mailing
list forum, 10/22/94
"'If you want me to tell you that our money buys us a vote on a particular
bill at a particular time, I say: `Fuck You,` it doesn't,' according to a
prominent lobbyist for one of the regional telephone companies.
"'However, if you ask me, `Do we get better access because of a couple of
$1,000 checks?` I'll guarantee you that two grand gets us in the door and
gets our telephone calls returned before Joe Blow from the home office,' he
said. 'And it sure as hell gets our calls returned before yours.'"
- Brock Meeks, _CyberWire_Dispatch_, 2nd issue of 11/08/94
"There are at least four big barriers to the NII. One is outdated and
compartmentalized regulations governing telecommunication, cable
broadcasting, and information industries. Another is legal issues
concerning copyright, intellectual property, and security. The third is
standards and the interoperability of the various NII technologies. And the
last is the development of new structures for commerce and business
activities on the NII, including billing and payment for services
rendered,"
- president of WilTel, Inc., as reported in _Telecommunications_, Nov.
1994, p. 29
"It's amazing where capitalism has boomed in the last couple of years.
First the Eastern Bloc, and now the last bastion of socialism -- the
Internet itself."
- the Chairman of Delphi Internet Services Corp., as reported by
_Information_Week_, 10/24/94
"E-mail is reincarnating the age of letter writing. We're keeping in touch
the way the Victorians did, building a personal community connected by a
constant stream of letters sharing news and gossip. E-mail is reviving the
'letter' as a forum for wit, style, and personality, as well as serving as
an invaluable business tool."
- Leslie Schroeder, Silicon Valley PR consultant to high-tech companies,
from _Computer_underground_Digest interview by David Batterson, Oct.
1994
"Every advance in civilization has been denounced while it was still recent."
- Bertrand Russell
"[If] America's tv and movie producers are unwilling to clean up their
act... when it comes to sex, bloodshed and violence in their programming...
the government stands ready to step in."
- Attorney-General Janet Reno at a 1993 Senate hearing on tv violence,
as reported by a UPI radio report. [One is tempted to ask what the
difference between 'bloodshed' and 'violence' is...]
"Not all dinosaurs roll over and die. Some of 'em can run real fast and
bite the hell out of you."
- a Meridian Bancorp senior vice president on banking industry's plans to
prevent Microsoft's online services from cutting into their industry.
From _Business_Week_, 10/31/94.
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic."
- Arthur C. Clarke
"If five years from now we [the FBI] solve the access problem, but
what we're hearing is all encrypted, I'll probably, if I'm still here, be
talking about that in a very different way: the objective is the same.
The objective is for us to get those conversations whether they're by an
alligator clip or ones and zeros. Whoever they are, whatever they are, I
need them."
- FBI Director Louis Freeh, clarifying statements that the FBI may seek
legislation to ban strong encryption, in an Sept. 1994 Q&A session,
from a WELL article by Steven Levy.
"A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any invention in
human history--with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila."
- Mitch Ratcliffe, _Technology Review_, April, 1992
"People need to buy and want to. The selling itself becomes the
entertainment, the sought-after good... In the Internet world there won't
be any other way to peddle. To be successful advertising itself will have
to supply real value to the consumer."
- Peter Huber, telecommunication attorney, quoted in _Forbes_, 12/19/94
"It's kind of the digital equivalent of a drive-by shooting."
- a Texas A&M U. professor whose email account was abused by crackers
who publicly posted racist remarks from the account, resulting in
hatemail (including death threats) being sent to the professor.
(Reported by _Atlanta_Journal_Constitution_, 10/19/94)
"The hottest news in computing today is online communications, and there's
no end in sight to the impact this will have on virtually every segment of the
American public."
- Practical Peripherals president Jack Murphy, from _Computer_underground_
_Digest_ interview by David Batterson, Oct. 1994. Batterson comments:
"Irontically, Murphy's remarks were faxed to me, not e-mailed."
"The net poses a fundamental threat not only to the authority of the
government, but to all authority, because it permits people to organize,
think, and influence one another without any institutional supervision
whatsoever. The government is responding to this threat with the Clipper
Chip...The obvious danger in supplying people with encryption is that
encryption makes it easier to keep secrets, which makes it easier for
people to commit crimes. With powerful encryption, the net would become an
ideal place for criminals to organize conspiracies."
- John Seabrook, "My First Flame", _New_Yorker_ 06/06/94
"It [the 'set-top box'] will allow us to control all the communication
needs of a household with one device."
- John Mallone, Tele-Communications Inc. (TCI) C.E.O.
"Taxpayers have spent more than $200 billion in the last decade on
computer systems that are antiquated, incompatible, and not doing the job."
- Sen. William Cohen (R-Maine), on misappropriations for, and misuse of
obsolete computer systems by government agencies (from _Information_
_Week_, 10/24/94). Ever get the feeling the govt. is differently clued?
"I doubt that Congress would pass on the opportunity to make sure that our
children were safe from terrorists."
- FBI Director Louis Freeh using one of the main propaganda buggaboos of
law enforcement attempts to weaken US privacy rights ("drug dealers",
"child pornographers/molestors" and "organized crime" being the other 3
Horsemen of the Big Brother Apocalypse); from House testimony at a
hearing on the FBI's Digital Telephony bill, 09/13/94.
"The underground press serves as the only effective counter to a growing
power, and more sophisticated techniques used by establishment mass media
to falsify, misrepresent, misquote, rule out of consideration as a priori
ridiculous, or simply ignore and blot out of existence: data, books,
discoveries that they consider prejudicial to establishment interest..."
- William S. Burroughs, author (censored by the U.S. government; his
comments apply now to the underground e-press as well)
"What I believe we lack, as a nation, is something which describes our
rights in an information age. I believe that the principles are all
there, in our constitution. But I shudder to think what the courts will
do to massacre these unless the legislature re-articulates these
principles in terms more appropriate to contemporary technology."
- Sean McLinden <sean@dsl.pitt.edu>, post to Com-Priv mailing list forum
"To some, this is outrageous. To some, this is free speech in action."
- Cliff Figallo (former EFF Online Coordinator, and former WELL Director)
on the advent of anonymous remailers on the Internet
"If the future navigation system [for interactive networked services on
the NII] looks like something from Microsoft, it will never work."
- the chairman of Walt Disney Television & Telecommunications, at Broadcas-
ting & Cable magazine's Superhighway Superpanel (reported by B&C,
10/10/94)
"Ask the American public if they want an FBI Wiretax and they'll say 'no.'
If you ask them do they want a feature on their phone that helps the FBI find
their missing child they'll say, 'Yes.'"
- FBI Directory Louis Freeh, on Digital Telephony, US House (Subcmte. on
Telecommunications & Finance) hearing on the Digital Telephony bill,
09/13/94). [Considering that the first question is fairly accurate,
and the second is a wildly misleading attempt to convert real issues
into emotionally charged buzzphrases and grossly inaccurate depictions
of how this technology works, Freeh's estimation of the answers is
probably correct.]
"Describing the Internet as the Network of Networks is like calling
the Space Shuttle, a thing that flies"
- John Lester of Mass. General Hospital (from his email signature file).
"In 1991, the latest year figures are available, most Americans, across all
age groups, disapproved when asked the question: 'Everything considered,
would you say that you approve or disapprove of wiretapping?' Some 67% of
all 18-20 year olds gave the thumbs down, as did 68% of the Gen[eration]-X
crowd...Boomers disapproved of wiretapping almost 3-to-1 while 67% of
those 50 and over disapproved."
- Brock Meeks, "Riding A Straw Horse", _CyberWire_Dispatch_, reporting
on innacurate FBI figures presented at House Telecom. & Finance Subcmte.
Hearing on Digital Telephony legislation, 09/13/94.
"Finally, sometime in the near future--thanks to massive computerization of
automobile traffic control--safety on the roads will match the airline
safety of today, with relatively few car accidents and deaths per year.
It's going to be very exciting..."
- David Batterson, "The Online Future", _Computer_underground_Digest_,
Oct. 24, 1994
"I believe in markets doing what they do well, which is to develop technology,
and letting citizens do what they ideally do well, which is to set policy."
- Esther Dyson, opening statements from NII Advisory Council session, 1994.
"Frankly, the people probably most interested in having computer lists on disk
are junk mail vendors and solicitors."
- Karen Hughes, spokesperson for George Bush Jr. (R) Texas gubernatorial
campaign, on why Bush refused to follow other candidates in providing
online copies of files documenting campaign contributions and
expenditures (as reported by _Houston_Chronicle_, 07/21/94).
"The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion"
- Edmund Burke
"The advancement and diffusion of knowledge is the only guardian of
true liberty."
- James Madison, 4th US President
"We were extremely conscious of free speech rights. But they are not
absolute."
- John E. Palomino, Santa Rosa CA Regional Director, Dept. of Education
Office for Civil Rights, on Branham, Arata & Humphrey v. Santa Rosa
Junior College case. From "College Settles Harassment Charges
Stemming from Computer Conferences", Tamar Lewin, _New_York_Times_,
09/22/94
"Thoughtcrime was not a thing that could be concealed forever. You might
dodge successfully for a while, even for years, but sooner or later they
were bound to get you."
- George Orwell, _1984_
"My definition of a free society is a society where it is safe
to be unpopular."
- Adlai Stevenson
"When cryptography is outlawed, bayl bhgynjf jvyy unir cevinpl!"
[When cryptography is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy!", ROT-13
encrypted]
- Brad Templeton of ClariNet
"Wherever the Net arises, there arises also a rebel to resist human
control...A network nurtures small failures in order that large failures
don't happen as often. It is...fertile ground for learning, adaptation,
and evolution...The only organization capable of unprejudiced growth, or
unguided learning, is a network. All other topologies limit what
can happen."
- Kevin Kelly, _Out_of_Control_
"In order to keep up with the criminals and to protect our national
security, the solution is clear: we need legislation to ensure that
telephone companies and other carriers provide law enforcement with access
to this new technology."
- FBI Dir. Louis Freeh, 12/8/93, on hampering new telecom technology
to make it easily wiretappable. [Full text of this Dec. 1993 DC Press
Club speech available for anonymous ftp as wiretap.speech from
ftp.eff.org in /pub/EFF/Privacy/Surveillance/Old/digtel93_freeh.speech]
"[Digital Telephony] compared to the Clipper Chip, is relatively benign,
but that's like saying cholera is better than the plague."
- Carl Rudijerian
"The Film, Video, and Publications Act also breached the Bill of Rights and
it became law. Parliament is bigger than the Bill of Rights".
- New Zealand (Howick) Member of Parliament Trevor Rogers, on Minister
of Justice's comments that Rogers' anti-computer-communications bill
is unconstitutional.
"It's time for a reality check. These products are a little more difficult
to develop than people thought."
- a Bell Atlantic management official, on NII technology (quoted in
_New_York_Times_, 09/09/94).
"The real danger is the gradual erosion of individual liberties
through the automation, integration, and interconnection of many
small, separate record-keeping systems, each of which alone may
seem innocuous, even benevolent, and wholly justifiable."
- U.S. Privacy Protection Study Commission, 1977
"A government that is big enough to give you all you want is big enough
to take it all away."
- Barry Goldwater
"There is no reason for any individual to have a computer in their home."
- Ken Olsen, then president of Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC), 1977.
"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers,
and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be
violated, and no warrants shall issue but upon probable cause, support
by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be
searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
- Amendment VI, United States Constitution
"I used to feel like I was a flea on the back of a Tyrannosaurus Rex. Now I
feel I might be a small yapping poodle on the back of a Tyrannosaurus Rex."
- Phil Zimmerman, on releasing "Pretty Good Privacy" (PGP)
"Information wants to be free."
- Stewart Brand, EFF boardmember, founder of Whole Earth Catalog and the
WELL. (Among others. No telling who really said this first.)
"Information wants to be free. Believe it."
- Bruce Sterling, author and EFF-Austin boardmember
"But programmers and authors want to get paid."
- source unknown
"Recently, we have witnessed an alarming number of young people
who, for a variety of sociological and psychological reasons, have
become attached to their computers and are exploiting their potential
in a criminal manner. Often, a progression of criminal activity occurs
which involves telecommunications fraud (free long distance phone
calls), unauthorized access to other computers (whether for profit,
fascination, ego, or the intellectual challenge), credit card fraud (cash
advances and unauthorized purchases of goods), and then move on to
other destructive activities like computer viruses...Our experience shows
that many computer hacker suspects are no longer misguided teenagers
mischievously playing games with their computers in their bedrooms. Some
are now high tech computer operators using computers to engage in unlawful
conduct."
- Garry M. Jenkins, Asst. Director, U. S. Secret Service
"We empower eachother by sharing information...We can create here,
together, a society in which everyone has a voice, and everybody's ideas
are heard."
- Sheila Lennon, "The Global Village is Finally Wired",
_Providence_[RI]_Sunday_Journal_, 08/07/94
"Privacy in one's associations ... may in many circumstances be
indispensable to freedom of association, particularly where a group
espouses dissident beliefs."
- John M. Harlan, Supreme Court justice, 1958
"Civilization is the progress toward a society of privacy. The savage's
whole existence is public, ruled by the laws of his tribe. Civilization is
the process of setting man free from men."
- Ayn Rand, _The_Fountainhead_, 1943
"Earlier this month...America Online..shut several feminist discussion
forums, saying it was concerned that the subject matter might be
inappropriate for young girls who would see the world 'girl' in the
forum's headline and 'go in there looking for information about their
Barbies,' a spokeswoman said."
- Peter H. Lewis, "Censors Become a Force on Cyberspace Frontier",
_New_York_Times_, 06/07/94
"It seems to me the book has not just aesthetic values -- the charming little
clothy box of the thing, the smell of the glue, even the print, which has its
own beauty. But there's something about the sensation of ink on paper that is
in some sense a thing, a phenomenon rather than an epiphenomenon. I can't
break the association of electric trash with the computer screen. Words on
the screen give the sense of being just another passing electronic wriggle."
- John Updike. _Atlantic_Monthly_, 09/94
"While we bemoan the decline of literacy, computers discount words in favor
of pictures and pictures in favor of video. While we fret about the
decreasing cogency of public debate, computers dismiss linear argument and
promote fast, shallow romps across the information landscape. While we
worry about basic skills, we allow into the classroom software that will do
a student's arithmetic or correct his spelling."
- David Gelerntner, Yale U., _New_Republic_, 09/26/94
"Cryptography is an enormously powerful tool that needs to be controlled,
just as we control bombs and rockets."
- David A. Lytel, President's Office of Science and Technology Policy
"Society has recognized over time that certain kinds of scientific inquiry
can endanger society as a whole and has applied either directly, or through
scientific/ethical constraints, restrictions on the kind and amount of
research that can be done in those areas."
- Adm. Bobby R. Inman (then CIA Dep. Dir.) in a February, 1982 article for
_Aviation_Week_and_Space_Technology_ on why cryptographic research should
be limited to government scientists.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation believes that individuals have the right
to protect their private communications by any method they choose - without
government interference.
"You know your country is dying when you have to make a distinction between
what is moral and ethical, and what is legal."
- John De Armond <jgd@dixie.com>, _Performance_Engineering_Magazine_, 1994
"This is the snobbery of the people on the Mayflower looking down
their noses at the people who came over ON THE SECOND BOAT!"
- EFF co-founder Mitch Kapor, on Internet-user elitism v. BBS users
"Within a cell site, LE officers ... use triangulation equipment to zero in
on a particular caller['s physical location]...cellular tracking is
extremely beneficial, it's an investigative tool of the future."
- Michael Guidry, of the Guidry Group, Houston, TX, security consultants;
from "Fugitive relied on and was undone by cellular phone", _LA_Times_,
06/19/94
"There is a very real and critical danger that unrestrained public
discussion of cryptologic matters will seriously damage the ability of this
government to conduct signals intelligence and the ability of this
government to carry out its mission of protecting national security
information from hostile exploitation."
- Admiral Bobby Ray Inman (then Director of the NSA) in a public speech in
March 1979.
"It is as useless to argue with those who have renounced the use
and authority of reason as to administer medication to the dead."
- Thomas Jefferson
"Inman seemed to regard real, virile encryption to be something rather
like a Saturday Night Special. 'My answer,' he said, 'would be
legislation which would make it a criminal offense to use encrypted
communication to conceal criminal activity.'
"Wouldn't that render all encrypted traffic automatically suspect? I
asked.
"'Well,' he said, 'you could have a registry of institutions which can
legally use ciphers. If you get somebody using one who isn't registered,
then you go after him.'"
- from John Perry Barlow's "Decrypting the Puzzle Palace",1992 [available
online as ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/decrypting_puzzle.palace].
"The more people use computers, the more they find ways to abuse things."
- Rick Sigurdson, IRS investigator & chairman of Federal Computer
Investigations Committee (from AP Wire story "Policing Cyberspace", by
Ted Anthony)
"Secrecy and a free, democratic government don't mix."
- Harry S. Truman on clandestine government From "Plain Speaking: An Oral
Biography of Harry S Truman," Merle Miller, 1974, ch. 23
"The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man
living with power to endanger the public liberty."
- John Adams, "Notes for an Oration at Braintree", 1772
"Let us contemplate out forefathers, and posterity, and resolve to
maintain the rights bequeathed to us from the former, for the sake of
the latter. The necessity of the times, more than ever, calls for our
utmost circumspection, deliberation, fortitude, and perseverance. Let
us remember that 'if we suffer tamely a lawless attack upon our
liberty, we encourage it, and involve others in our doom.' It is a
very serious consideration that millions yet unborn may be the
miserable sharers of the event."
- Samuel Adams ("patriot, statesman, brewer"), speech, 1771
"Good laws lead to the making of better ones; bad ones bring about worse."
- Rousseau, "The Social Contract," 1762
"There are no necessary evils in government. Its evils exist only in
its abuses."
- Andrew Jackson, Veto of the Bank Bill, 1832
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the
people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise
that control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from
them, but to inform their discretion."
- Thomas Jefferson, 1820
"I still believe, in spite of the level of public inanity in this country,
that people are going to look very unkindly on a scheme to put a government-
mandated flap into the seats of their longjohns."
- Matthew Mckenzie <mmckenzi@uga.cc.uga.edu>, alt.privacy post about Clipper
"Only in a police state is the job of a policeman easy."
- Orson Welles
"The defendant's objections to the evidence obtained by wire-tapping must,
in my opinion, be sustained. It is, of course, immaterial where the
physical connection with the telephone wires leading into the defendant's
premises was made. And it is also immaterial that the intrusion was in aid
of law enforcement. Experience should teach us to be most on our guard to
protect liberty when the Government's purposes are beneficent. Men born to
freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by
evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious
encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding."
- Justice Louis D. Brandeis, dissenting, Olmstead v. United States,
277 U.S. 479 (1928)
"Some folks have been saying recently, the real message is not so
much content at this point but: 'What do we want? BANDWIDTH! When do we
want it? NOW!!' 500,000 people on the Capitol steps should do it."
- Richard Civille (DC Dir., Center for Civic Networking), nii_agenda
mailing list post, 02/23/94
"Don't hate the media. Become the media."
- Jello Biafra (formerly of the band Dead Kennedys. Successfully fought
an attempt to prosecute him, the group, and various record distributors
over the inclusion of an allegedly obscene miniposter by Austrian master
surrealist painter, H. R. Giger, in one of their albums.)
[The Clipper Chip scheme] "is a focal point for the distrust of goverment."
- Clinton Brooks, NSA scientist who led the Clipper Chip project,
_Wall_Street_Journal_ interview, 02/22/94
[No kidding, Clint.]
"I've been asked to explain why I don't worry much about the topics of
privacy threat...One reason is that these scenarios seem to assume that
there will be large, monolithic bureaucracies...that are capable of
harnessing computers for one-way surveillance of an unsuspecting
populace. I've come to feel that computation just doesn't work that
way. Being afraid of monolithic organizations especially when they have
computers, is like being afraid of really big gorillas especially when
they are on fire."
- Bruce Sterling, remarks on commercial use of private information,
at Computers, Freedom and Privacy Conference IV, Chicago IL, Mar. 26,
1994. [full transcript available at ftp.eff.org,
/pub/Publications/Bruce_Sterling/cfp94_sterling.speech]
"Behind all the hype shaping the electronic highway are corporate
interests. These huge companies are doing the most natural thing
in the world to them; following their own corporate interest."
- Herber Schiller, "Information Superhighway: Paving Over the Public",
Z Magazine, March 1994
"A trickle-up model for the new information economy could be effective with
the proper filters (our own). Ideas bubbling up instead of homogenizing
memes raining down."
- Scott Marshall, from FringeWare mailing list commentary, March 14, 1994
"The FBI wanted us to introduce the [1994 Digital Telephony] bill today and I
said absolutely not. They have to understand they have a Vermonter as the
Chairman Of the [Technology and Law] committee and that we Vermonters
respect our privacy."
- Sen. Patrick Leahy, from James Bandler, "Eavesdropping Measure is
Troubling to Leahy", _Rutland_Herald_, Mar. 27, 1994
"Clipper is like a requirement that house keys be 'escrowed' with the
local police, or that all photos processed at the local drugstore be
double-printed, with copies sent to the local 'Photo Escrow Center.'
After all, how else can we catch child pornographers and other 'bad
guys'?...And what about those curtains that 'encrypt' the visible contents of
houses under surveillance?...Perhaps we need 'approved curtains'...And
what about the many crimes people confess in their diaries?...Surely many
crimes could be stopped if diaries, journals, and personal letters could be
'escrowed'--with suitable safeguards, of course, to ensure that only
legitimate inspections were done (for example, J. Edgar Hoover's need
to inspect diaries to find salacious sexual material).
"Some may call me 'shrill' for citing the above points. I don't think
so. We are at a kind of cusp in history, where privacy can either be
secured through strong crypto--despite the crimes that may go
undetected or unpunished because of this--or privacy can be handed
over to others to protect or not protect as they see fit."
- Timothy C. May <tcmay@netcom.com>, Usenet post to talk.politics.crypto,
Apr. 13, 1994
"If you say to people that they, as a matter of fact, can't protect their
conversations, in particular their political conversations, I think you
take a long step toward making a transition from a free society to a
totalitarian society."
- Whitfield Diffie of Sun Microsystems, world renowned cryptographer,
MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour, Thursday, 4/7/94
"There are no bad haircuts in cyberspace."
- Dave Barry
"Speaking or writing in forms not readily understandable to
your enemies, your neighbors, your spouse, the cops, or your local
eavesdropper is as old as humanity."
- Timothy C. May <tcmay@netcom.com>, Usenet post to talk.politics.misc,
Apr. 12, 1994
"How do we reconcile the promise of a new high-speed national medium with
the threat of a far-reaching, nationwide surveillance network, as
foreshadowed by the Clipper chip scheme and the draft Digital Telephony
bill? Isn't sacrificing privacy to make policework easier a threat to the
principles this nation was founded upon?"
- Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>, EFF Online Activist, question posed to
panellists at NII Public Interest Summit, Washington DC, Mar. 29, 1994
"Activism is the killer app for the net."
- Steven Cherry <stc@panix.com>, .signature file (email footer).
"The part that frightens the hell out of me is the goverment deciding where
technology goes."
- Senator Patrick Leahy, on the FBI's proposed Digital Telephony
surveillance legislation, in "Proposed wiretap law set off debate over
Justice role", Kevin Power, _Government_Computer_News, Apr. 10, 1994
"Everybody has a different Internet."
- Bruce Sterling, from EFF-Austin BoD minutes, Apr. 12, 1994
"But groundless hope, like unconditional love, is the only kind worth having."
- EFF co-founder John Perry Barlow, "Cynthia Horner's Eulogy", Apr. 1994
"Our fear of technology is really a fear of empowerment. We now have the
ability to design the reality we live in, and we have to step up to the
occasion."
- Douglas Rushkoff, author of _CYBERIA_, 1994
"Europe is opposed to the Clipper chip because it fears that the FBI or
CIA could target European businesses... The global censorship plan has run
up against opposition from European and American businesses that use
encryption to send sensitive information. In a position paper to a
consulate of European Union intelligence experts...the European organisation
representing users of computer security has rejected the Clinton initiative
as 'totally unacceptable'...the Information Security Business Advisory Group
(Ibag), warns European governments to ignore overtures from the US government
aimed at restricting access to the information superhighway to users who
use encryption that the government agencies can decode."
- UK _Independent_ article, "Spooks all set to hack it on the
superhighway", Mar. 5 1994
"There happened in the Middle Ages what has happened so often
since then. Those who were the beneficiaries of the established
order were bent on defending it, not so much, perhaps, because
it guaranteed their interests, as because it seemed to them
indispensable to the preservation of society."
- Henri Pirenne, _Medieval_Cities,_Their_Origins_and_the_Revival_of_Trade_,
1925
"I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes
me to tremble for the safety of my country. . . . Corporations have been
enthroned, an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the
money-power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working
upon the prejudices of the people until the wealth is aggregated in a few
hands and the Republic is destroyed."
- Abraham Lincoln (quoted in Jack London's "The Iron Heel").
"Whenever you have an efficient government, you have a dictatorship."
- Harry S. Truman
"1. Freedom of assembly and association as well as speech, press and all other
forms of expression are guaranteed. 2. No censorship shall be maintained,
nor shall the secrecy of any means of communication be violated."
- Article 21, Constitution of Japan
"All people are by nature free and independent and have inalienable rights.
Among these are enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring,
possessing, and protecting property, and pursuing and obtaining safety,
happiness, and privacy."
- Article 1, Section 1, Constitution of the State of California, USA
"Did you learn how to think or how to believe?"
- father of consumer advocate Ralph Nader, who asked the young Nader
this while questioning him on what he had learned in school one day.
Nader describes this as a seminal event in leading him to become a
critic of corporate and government policies. (from an interview with
Ralph Nader by David Barsamian)
"Democracy is not a spectator sport."
- Craig Wilson
"There are a lot of dumb people with powerful tools."
- Jonah Seiger, former EFF Program Coordinator, 1994
------------------------------------------------
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