politech 2002/04
By Subject
140 messages sorted by:
[ author ]
[ date ]
[ thread ]
Other mail archives
Starting: Mon Apr 01 2002 - 07:04:55 PST
Ending: Tue Apr 30 2002 - 15:43:29 PDT
- FC: "321 Studios" that filed anti-DMCA lawsuit is a spammer
- FC: "Controversy" surrounds Hamas website glorifying suicide attacks
- FC: "Golden Dot Awards" to be handed out at net-politics conf 5/20
- FC: "Revolution OS" movie tells open source vs. Microsoft tale
- FC: ACM letter to ICANN: Scale back, pare down, get real
- FC: ACM's Barbara Simons replies to Politech on DMCA-paper policy
- FC: ACT letter says Congress must not set digital rights standards
- FC: Ad-supported multimedia player deletes spyware monitor
- FC: Allow song-swapping, pay the RIAA a $1 million fine
- FC: Annoy.com's Clinton Fein on CDA, reporters, and poor news coverage
- FC: Annoy.com's Clinton Fein on Mary Landrieu's ".p0rn" bill
- FC: Another DMCA suit: DVD-copying firm sues for right to sell product
- FC: Anti-spammers now targeting "open proxies?"
- FC: AOL, News Corp. to testify Thurs at House "digital content" hearing
- FC: Authors urge Amazon to limit sales of used books
- FC: Ben Edelman: 4,525 different domains lead to one porn site
- FC: Bill Gates is scheduled to testify in antitrust case in DC
- FC: Bob Barr readies bill to disclose Feds' privacy practices
- FC: Bosnia backs down: Internet firms won't monitor, police users
- FC: Bush admin's noncommittal response to Congress on ICANN
- FC: Bush administration is cool to Sen. Hollings' copyright bill
- FC: Canada announces mandatory privacy assessments for gvt agencies
- FC: Canadian high court rules 4-3 to limit copyright's reach
- FC: CBDTPA update: Gateway, Libertarian Party slam copyright bill
- FC: CFP conference pre-report from San Francisco; Politech dinner
- FC: Chicago cops surf for child porn, lose Internet privileges
- FC: China condemns U.S. as a terrible example for human rights
- FC: Colorado high court won't order bookstore to turn over records
- FC: Congress lards up federal budget with technology pork spending
- FC: Congresscritters urge lower webcasting music rates
- FC: Cops don't need warrants to bug vehicles, Nevada high court says
- FC: Copy of Bill Gates' testimony in Microsoft antitrust case
- FC: Council of Europe and perils of "balancing" anonymity, free speech
- FC: Council of Europe on May 14 debates limiting media, speech
- FC: Dave Touretzky on consequences of "morphed" kiddie porn ruling
- FC: Dave Touretzky replies to direct marketing group over Godiva
- FC: Democratic tech CEO joins DNC, plans to catch up to Republicans
- FC: Did Florida's Jeb Bush spam voters by using Democratic mail list?
- FC: Did Microsoft foes bribe states to pursue antitrust suit?
- FC: Did Supreme Court really overturn "morphed" kiddie porn ban?
- FC: Direct marketing group replies: It's nutty to boycott Godiva
- FC: DMCA means sex sites must not mention celeb names, AdultCheck says
- FC: DOJ, ACLU relied on junk science: N.J. racial profiling a myth?
- FC: DOJ: States have right to pursue Microsoft, but it would be stupid
- FC: Domain heist: Hoopla.com reportedly stolen via fax to Verisign
- FC: EFF Pioneer 2002 winners: Dan Gillmor, Beth Givens, Jon Johansen
- FC: Elcomsoft asks judge to dismiss charges in San Jose hearing
- FC: Emory U. prof who wrote guns-were-rare book says email was forged
- FC: EPIC letter to Congress: Office of Homeland Security is stalling
- FC: Eric Flint on copyright, ePublishing, and the Baen Free Library
- FC: European Parliament votes 460-0 against mandatory censorware
- FC: FBI interrupts Chicago 2600 meeting, alleges link to cyanide-terror
- FC: FBI, DEA classified databases now open to local cops, Ashcroft says
- FC: Federal court rules ban on "junk faxes" violates First Amendment
- FC: Federal judge says videogames not speech, can be regulated
- FC: First-person account: Israeli army shutters Palestinian TV station
- FC: Fleishman-Hillard apologies to Politech, won't block mail
- FC: Fleishman-Hillard PR firm blocks all mail from well.com, Politech
- FC: GAO makes dubious claim: No privacy problems with SSNs & DMVs
- FC: German nat'l railroad readies linking-suit against Google, Yahoo
- FC: German railroad threatens Indymedia over links to "Radikal" site
- FC: Godiva responds to Politech subscriber over buy-chocolate spam
- FC: Gore Vidal on the new war on freedom: Give me liberty or...
- FC: Hawaii ditches "Talivan" van-mounted speeding cameras
- FC: House committee will vote on ".kids" bill on Wednesday
- FC: IEEE editor replies to Politech post on DMCA-free papers
- FC: IEEE says authors must certify papers to be DMCA-violation-free
- FC: International update: Cuba, Spain, Australia, Bahrain, India, Japan
- FC: Internet radio organizes "Day of Silence" on Wednesday
- FC: Is "321 Studios," challenging the DMCA, truly a spammer?
- FC: Israeli army denies pornocasts aimed at Palestinian TV viewers
- FC: Joichi Ito on privacy in Japan: National ID cards and legislation
- FC: Jose Guardia on Spain's website regulation plan: Not that bad
- FC: Judge orders XS4ALL to remove two pages, mirror sites sprout
- FC: Michigan cops get to search homes without revealing why
- FC: Microsoft pulls an Oracle: Passport to ID nearly all U.S. citizens?
- FC: Microsoft slashes witness list in half, but will call Ballmer
- FC: Microsoft's anti-Unix website runs, well, Unix
- FC: More on censorhappy Washington politicos ban publishing police info
- FC: More on did Supreme Court truly overturn "morphed" kiddie porn ban?
- FC: More on hoopla.com domain reportedly stolen via fax to Verisign
- FC: More on sex sites, DMCA, celebrity names, and AdultCheck
- FC: More on UK firms can't police personal email during office hours
- FC: More on webservers in Palestine reportedly disrupted by conflict
- FC: More on Yahoo, seeking revenue, defaults to marketing-email-OK
- FC: NASA's secret shuttle launch time -- exposed on website
- FC: Nasty new "W32/KLEZ.H" worm thrashes Microsoft Outlook users
- FC: Nat'l Research Council report on kids-porn-net to appear May 2
- FC: National Academy of Sciences on national IDs: "More study needed"
- FC: New sites protest march of European copyright directive
- FC: New York Times article on Fleishman-Hillard vs. Politech
- FC: News Corp: CBDTPA already is spurring anti-piracy standards
- FC: North Korea takes reassuringly hard line against... typewriters!
- FC: NPR debate on banning cloning next Monday at 2 pm ET
- FC: Ohio compiles personal data on all students, locals protest
- FC: Pedro de Alzaga: Spain's website regulations are worrying
- FC: Penn. AG threatens child porn charges against Internet providers
- FC: Petition: Therapeutic cloning should NOT be banned
- FC: Philly dispatch: Librarian says that filters are Stalinist
- FC: Politech members reply to Fleishman-Hillard PR firm's threats
- FC: Privacy villain of the week: It's -- surprise! -- the IRS
- FC: Privacy villain of the week: Sen. Dick Durbin, nat'l ID, and AAMVA
- FC: Privacy villain of week: HIPAA & Dept of Health and Human Services
- FC: Public Citizen defends embattled jerryfalwell.com humor site
- FC: Replies to cops don't need warrants to bug, track vehicles
- FC: RIAA responds to "hidden" privacy issue in Internet radio fees
- FC: Sen. Mary Landrieu wants to force ICANN to create ".p0rn"
- FC: Sen. Orrin Hatch vows a second try at "morphed" kiddie porn law
- FC: Senate confirms anti-porn crusader to top Justice Dept. post
- FC: Should video games be required to come with warning labels?
- FC: Singapore moves toward "broadband filtering service"
- FC: So much for the domain name gold rush: Verisign stock cut in half
- FC: Software group to Hollings: We don't want your CBDTPA bill!
- FC: Speaking at Stanford University on Saturday, April 20
- FC: Surprise! Supreme Court nixes "morphed" kiddie porn ban 6-3
- FC: Text of misleading anti-cloning ad by Bill Kristol's group
- FC: The "hidden" privacy issue in Internet radio fees
- FC: They Need A V-Chip: Palestinians reportedly hit with porn on TV
- FC: Thomas Jefferson Center muzzle awards go to DOD, NYPD...
- FC: Time to boycott Godiva for spamming customers? By D. Touretzky
- FC: U.S. Patent Office awards patent for swinging on swing sideways
- FC: U.S. senator plans to make secret videotaping a federal crime
- FC: UK firms can't police personal email at work during office hours
- FC: UK wiretapping "traffic" vs. "contents" a sham, by John Gilmore
- FC: Update on Univ of California free speech, thesis case
- FC: Valenti to Congress: "350,000 movies pirated online every day!"
- FC: Viacom loses bid for mtv.com.sg, Singapore says MTV is "generic"
- FC: Vietnam arrests man for posting "What is Democracy?" essay online
- FC: Virtual fantasy game kingdom may be richer than Bulgaria
- FC: Washington state wiretap bill dies in legislature
- FC: Watching the watchers: "Observing Surveillance" in Washington DC
- FC: Webservers in Palestine reportedly disrupted by conflict
- FC: Where to find archived video for Senate hearings on National IDs
- FC: Whit Diffie's new job as Sun Microsystems' chief security officer
- FC: Wired News summer 2002 internship opportunity
- FC: WSJ Opinion Journal pressures MSN to yank anti-Israel groups
- FC: XS4ALL sued over hosting "Radikal" radical-left magazine
- FC: Yahoo, seeking revenue, now defaults to marketing-email-OK
- USA PATRIOT Act not that bad!
Last message date: Tue Apr 30 2002 - 15:43:29 PDT
Archived on: Tue Apr 30 2002 - 15:43:35 PDT
140 messages sorted by:
[ author ]
[ date ]
[ thread ]
Other mail archives
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30
: Tue Apr 30 2002 - 15:43:35 PDT