Anti-terrorism v. free speech

Published on Friday, 16 August 1996 09:57PM CST by Michael Fraase in Censorship

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In late July 1996 the G7 nations announced plans to monitor online communications as part of a concerted attempt to curtail international terrorism. A little-known provision of the Antiterrorism Bill (H.R. 2703; S.735) that became law in April 1996 requires the United States Justice Department to conduct a 180-day study of bomb information available on the Internet.

At the same time, new legislation was introduced in the United States by Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) that would criminalize publication of bomb-making information in both electronic and print media. Companion legislation was introduced in the United States House of Representatives by Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY). Although Feinstein’s bill doesn’t draw a distinction between various media, the California senator has consistently drawn attention to what she describes as the easy availability of such information in cyberspace. In a Cable News Network (CNN) interview, Feinstein made specific reference to Internet sites that provide instructions for making pipe bombs. Some observers feel that this is an attempt to restrict certain types of speech in electronic media that are protected in print media.

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Electronic commerce on the net

Published on Thursday, 25 July 1996 05:20PM CST by Michael Fraase in Internet

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Hold on to your virtual wallets, secure electronic commerce on the Internet—long promised but never quite delivered—is suddenly a lot closer to being real. IBM, MasterCard, Microsoft, and Visa have formed an alliance to support a new standard for providing secure transactions over the Internet. The new standard, Secure Electronic Transactions (SET), is based on public-key cryptography and digitally signed electronic certificates issued by credit card companies and banks. Customers will send these certificates to merchants who will use them to authorize the transaction with the credit card company or bank. Microsoft, lately quick on the trigger, has announced that it will build digital signature technology into its MS-Windows operating system.

Most of us think nothing of handing a credit card over to a merchant in the physical world, but hesitate to do the same in the virtual world. This is something I’ve never quite understood, and I’ve chalked it up mostly to the resistance of commercialization inherent in the Internet culture. Another part of the problem is related to the difficulty Net-based businesses experience in dealing with credit card companies and banks to obtain a merchant account. Add to the mix the historical lack of support for new electronic commerce technology by merchants, credit card companies, and the banks and it’s no surprise why Internet-based commerce has been mostly ignored.

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Wiretapping increases

Published on Monday, 22 July 1996 03:07PM CST by Michael Fraase in Privacy

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In a front page article on July 7, 1996, the Washington Post reported that the use of federal electronic surveillance in general, and telephone wiretaps in particular has nearly doubled during the Clinton administration. In the past, the high cost of wiretaps—more than US$70,000 per month for a federal wiretap—has deterred their use, but in recent years, spending levels on federal law enforcement has risen to levels that remove the cost concerns.

Jim McGee, the Washington Post staff writer who authored the article, quotes the person responsible for approving wiretap applications for the Justice Department as saying that wiretaps rose 32 percent in 1993 and between 30 percent to 40 percent in 1996. By way of contrast, there were 340 federal court orders issued allowing electronic surveillance in 1992—the last year of the Bush administration—and 672 in 1995. Estimates for 1996 are above 700 and the Justice Department has been on something of a shopping spree, adding more electronic equipment (including a US$33 million program to replace single-line wiretapping equipment with new devices that can monitor up to 40 lines at once), surveillance techniques, and personnel.

Alarmingly, these figures do not include any electronic surveillance court orders with regard to “national security” that have also risen at a sharp rate. According to a 1995 report by the administrative office of the U.S. Courts, governmental requests for electronic surveillance have become so commonplace that it’s been years since a prosecutor’s application for a wiretap order has been denied.

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Profit by 2000

Published on Wednesday, 17 July 1996 05:02PM CST by Michael Fraase in Internet

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According to a Forrester Research study of Web site economics released in mid-June 1996, Web-based content publishers shouldn’t expect to turn a profit until 2000. Content publishers are restricted to three basic revenue streams: advertising, subscriptions, and transactions, which so far have proved to be more of a trickle than a stream. Don’t expect for that to change in the near future, Forrester warns.

Forrester’s research indicates that an “average” Web site generates 1996 revenues of about US$170,000 but must meet expenses of US$1.37 million for the year. The costs associated with providing content on the Web will account for more than 75 percent of operating costs through 2000, according to the Forrester report.

The report maintains that over the next three years, content publishers can expect to see subscription revenue grow from US$60,000 in 1996 to US$210,000 in 2000. Similarly, transaction-based revenue will likely grow from US$10,000 in 1996 to US$60,000 in 2000. Unfortunately, costs will also continue to escalate, reaching US$1.88 million in 2000.

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E-Data wants to own electronic commerce

Published on Wednesday, 12 June 1996 11:47PM CST by Michael Fraase in Intellectual property

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E-Data press kitAs a writer, I get lots of press kits. Most of them are pretty boring; some of them are pretty creative. Before they caught the suspected Unabomber, some of them were even pretty scary. When a press-kit-like package from E-Data arrived this month, I figured it was one of the more boring ones. When I opened it up, I found an offer of “amnesty” for alleged patent infringement by ARTS & FARCES. All I had to do was sign a license agreement and pony up cash. Potentially lots of cash. As you can see below, E-Data’s amnesty offer also carried a threat.

E-Data, a Utah Corporation located in Secaucus, NJ. that runs a gift shop on the Web, claims it owns a patent on electronic transactions. Well, technically, the patent E-Data holds, U.S. Patent No. 4,528,643, relates to a “system for reproducing information in material objects at a point of sale location.” E-Data’s position seems to be that this 1985 patent, which it acquired about two years ago, grants it ownership over the means of electronically distributing digital data to a purchaser either online or on encrypted electronic media like CD-ROMs.

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