[comp.org.eff.talk] Frequently asked questions 10sep90 - READ THIS BEFORE YOU POST.

comp-org-eff-news@well.sf.ca.us (09/15/90)

(excerpted from "About the EFF")
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The EFF (formally the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.)  has been
established to help civilize the electronic frontier; to make it truly useful
and beneficial not just to a technical elite, but to everyone; and to do this
in a way which is in keeping with our society's highest traditions of the free
and open flow of information and communication.

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The comp.org.eff.news and comp.org.eff.talk USENET newsgroups on the
INET distribution, and the EFF mailing list are the place to discuss
topics relating to the EFF and the missions of the EFF.  Discussion
topics are wide open, including first amendment issues, civil liberties
issues, access to technology, legal issues relating to
telecommunications and technology, etc.  Read the "Mission of the EFF"
below for other ideas.

The former newsgroup is moderated and will contain announcements,
responses to announcements; and selected discussion drawn from the
unmoderated "talk" newsgroup, from the mailing list, and from postings
made to the moderated newsgroup.  Everything that goes out over the EFF
mailing list will also be posted in comp.org.eff.news, so if you read
the newsgroup you don't need to subscribe to the mailing list.

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Send requests to be added to or dropped from the EFF mailing list or
other general correspondence to eff-request@well.sf.ca.us.

Postings submitted to the moderated newsgroup may be reprinted by the
EFF.  To submit a posting, you may send mail to
comp-org-eff-news@well.sf.ca.us.

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Besides discussing things online, what can you do?
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You can turn some of the immense processing horsepower of your
distributed Mind to the task of finding useful new metaphors for
community, expression, property, privacy and other realities of the
physical world which seem up for grabs in these less tangible regions.

And you can try to communicate to technically unsophisticated friends
the extent to which their future freedoms and well-being may depend on
understanding the broad forms of digital communication, if not
necessarily the technical details.

You can also contact Mitchell Kapor (mkapor@well.sf.ca.us) and 
John Perry Barlow (barlow@well.sf.ca.us) or you can just send
email to eff@well.sf.ca.us.

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Some questions people ask...
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Q: Mitch Kapor!  Isn't he with Lotus?
A: Mitch was one of the founders of Lotus, but is not with Lotus now.

Actually, there are more questions, but we wanted to get this out...
We'll fill in this space next month.

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Mission of the EFF
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1.      to engage in and support educational activities which increase
popular understanding of the opportunities and challenges posed by
developments in computing and telecommunications.

2.      to develop among policy-makers a better understanding of the
issues underlying free and open telecommunications, and support the
creation of legal and structural approaches which will ease the
assimilation of these new technologies by society.

3.      to raise public awareness about civil liberties issues arising
from the rapid advancement in the area of new computer-based
communications media and, where necessary, support litigation in the
public interest to preserve, protect, and extend First Amendment rights
within the realm of computing and telecommunications technology.

4.      to encourage and support the development of new tools which
will endow non-technical users with full and easy access to
computer-based telecommunications.