Date:       Mon, 12 Sep 94 11:07:48 EST
Errors-To:  Comp-privacy Error Handler <owner-comp-privacy@uwm.edu>
From:       Computer Privacy Digest Moderator  <comp-privacy@uwm.edu>
To:         Comp-privacy@uwm.edu
Subject:    Computer Privacy Digest V5#033

Computer Privacy Digest Mon, 12 Sep 94              Volume 5 : Issue: 033

Today's Topics:			       Moderator: Leonard P. Levine

                        Re: Internet White Pages
                          Big Brother is Dead
                        Re: Bank Account Numbers
               Action: Fight US bills: SB 2375 & HR 4922
                             Polygraph Info
              Inviting Respondents to Ethics Assn. Survey
                   Free Speech and Privacy Symposium
                  Conferences That May be of Interest

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------

   Housekeeping information is located at the end of this Digest.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

From: hedlund@teleport.com (M. Hedlund)
Date: 09 Sep 1994 09:19:01 -0700
Subject: Re: Internet White Pages
Organization: Teleport - Portland's Public Access (503) 220-1016

    <parris@sbt.tec.sc.us> wrote: Regarding getting into or out of the
    Internet White Pages, how (without risking including myself) might
    I discover whether or not I am already listed?  Would a message to
    "delete" produce a reply telling me I was not there?

A message to "delete" produces a reply that simply says they will honor
your request.  It does not say whether your request was necessary.  I
know of no way to determine whether you are listed.

If you do want want to be listed and if you have posted any news
messages at all, it would be safest to assume that you are listed.
If you are concerned that they will collect your address from your
message to 'delete@whitepages.com', I would suggest:

	*Copying their statement about 'delete' from your local
	library's copy of their book;

	*Sending a message to 'delete'; and

	*Saving their reply plus their printed statement.

Ask your system administrator (if you do not already know) how to print
out a copy of their email reply that includes as much information from
the message header as possible (not just 'to:', 'from:', 're:', if
possible).  Save a copy online as well (preferably in your mail
system's files, not "exported").

All of that said, I think whitepages.com would be doing themselves a
disservice by collecting addresses from the 'delete@whitepages.com'
address.  That address is only used by people who actively assert their
desire to have no listing.  It would seem foolish for the whitepages
people to deliberately provoke such a group, and I think such action
unlikely.

But it never hurts to keep records.

--
<hedlund@teleport.com>


------------------------------

From: William Hugh Murray <75126.1722@compuserve.com>
Date: 10 Sep 94 13:52:01 EDT
Subject: Big Brother is Dead

"I am teaching at a university in the United States in the political
science and legal studies areas.  I would like to discuss specific
areas of privacy rights (credit records, medical records, government
documents, etc.) as well as looking at privacy as a value competing
with other values in our society."

The magazine section of last Sunday's New York Times carried an article
suggesting that technology had killed "Big Brother."  The thesis was
that cheap technology has so empowered the individual that the major
threat to privacy was the "ten thousand little brothers."

That phrase rang a bell.  I recalled that the first time that I heard
that phrase it was in the mouth of the an official of the US Postal
Service.  The first time that I saw it in print, it was attributed to
the dhief counsel of the NSA.

It is true that the TRW's and Equifaxes of the world represent a threat
to privacy.  So do the banks, insurance companies, communications
carriers, and the media.  However, none of them threatens tyranny.
Government can protect us from them but they cannot protect us from
government.

Threats to our privacy from "little brother" or ten thousand little
brothers or ten thousand thousand are not of a magnitude with that of
one big brother; they do not threaten all and they do not threaten
tyranny.

As we fight to protect our privacy, let us keep our priorities in
order.  While the very existence of records invites abuse, it is not
records, per se, that threaten us, it is record keepers.  Among record
keepers, none is so zealous, jealous, or persistent as governments.
Among institutions, none is so persistent as tyranny.

--
William Hugh Murray
New Canaan, Connecticut


------------------------------

From: wayne@arrow.HIP.berkeley.edu (Wayne Christian)
Date: 10 Sep 1994 23:49:57 GMT
Subject: Re: Bank Account Numbers
Organization: University of California, Berkeley

    skypatrl@crl.com (Albert Zhou) says: If the bank decides not to
    give you money back, then you have to try to collect it, possibly
    taking them to court. If it's a small amount, you probably don't
    want to spend a lot of legal fees to pursue it. So you lose money.

    If you it's  a charge on the credit card, you can simply refuse to
    pay.  To get money from you, the credit card company has to
    initiate legal actions against you. If it's small amount, or if
    they don't think they can won, they'll just forget about it. So you
    DON'T lose money.

    See the difference?

Actually, there is no difference although I do understand the point you
are trying to make.  Reversal of charges by the Credit Card company is
subject to the discression their customer service office, just like the
bank.  My experience with Credit Cards is that they vary quite a bit in
how willing they are to believe the customer, and my experience with
EFT reversals is that these are processed immediately without first
contacting the merchant who submitted the bill.  You may seem to be
getting an immediate refund from the Credit Card but all they are doing
is suspending collection while they investigate with the billing
merchant.  They very definitely do have the right to reimpose the
charge and report you as delinquient if you do not pay.


------------------------------

From: "Shabbir J. Safdar" <shabbir@panix.com>
Date: 11 Sep 1994 23:24:19 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: Action: Fight US bills: SB 2375 & HR 4922
Organization: Voters Telecomm Watch (vtw@vtw.org)

************************************************************
 
     DISTRIBUTE WIDELY (though no later than October 1, 1994)
 
*************************************************************
[If you've only got 2 minutes, skip down to the "What You Can Do"
 section.]

The FBI's Wiretap bills (also known as the DT - Digital Telephony
bills) mandate that *all* communications carriers must provide
wiretap-ready equipment so that the FBI can more easily implement their
court-ordered wiretaps more easily.  The costs of re-engineering all
communications equipment will be borne by the government, industry and
consumers.

The bill is vague and the standards defining "wiretap ready" do not
exist.  Furthermore, the FBI has yet to make a case which demonstrates
that they have been unable to implement a wiretap.

There are fewer than 1,000 court ordered surveillances per year.  Even
if all of them are wiretaps, and even if all of them require the
changes mandated by this legisation, are we as a nation prepared to
build eavesdropping features into the phones of 250 million people, in
order to justify these wiretaps?  None of these wiretaps has been
demonstrated to be unimplementable, nor has it been proven that the
cases could not be made with other methods of electronic surveillance.

The Voters Telecomm Watch (VTW) does not believe the FBI has made a
compelling case to justify that all Americans give up their privacy.
Furthermore, the VTW does not believe the case has been made to justify
spending 500 million Federal dollars over the next 4 years to
re-engineer equipment to compromise privacy, interfere with
telecommunications privacy, and fulfill an unproven government need.

WHAT YOU CAN DO
===============
You can help stop this legislation before it is too late!
Phone/Fax/Write to each of the people below.  It should take
about two minutes a piece.

	. Rep. Jack Brooks (his Judiciary Committee must approve the bill
			    before it can be voted upon by the full House)
	  DC Phone: (202) 225-6565, TX Phone: (409) 839-2508
	  DC Fax: (202) 225-1584
	  Also try Judiciary Comm. fax at (202) 225-3951
	  US Mail: RHOB 2449, Washington DC 20515

	. Senator Patrick Leahy (the Senate sponsor of the bill)
	  DC Phone: (202) 224-4242, VT Phone: (802) 863-2525
	  DC Fax: (202) 224-3595
	  US Mail: SR 433, Washington DC 20510
	  email: senator_leahy@leahy.senate.gov

	. Rep. Don Edwards (the House sponsor of the bill)
	  DC Phone: (202) 225-3072, CA Phone: (408) 345-1711
	  DC Fax: (202) 225-9460
	  US Mail: 2307 RHOB, Washington DC 20515

	. Your two Senators

	. Your Representative

Tell them you are opposed to the FBI's Wiretap legislation.  Feel
free to use the sample communique below:

SAMPLE COMMUNIQUE
=================

   Dear __________,

   The recent Digital Telephony bills (HR 4922 & SB 2375) disturb me
   greatly.  The FBI has not yet made their case to the public that we
   need to build wiretap functionality into the telephones of 250
   million people to justify wiretaps which have not yet been proven to
   be difficult to implement.

   The bills would clearly compromise the privacy of all Americans with
   no counterbalancing benefit to either law enforcement or the
   public.  The FBI has not demonstrated the need, and the cost is
   uncalculated, but is known to be at least 500 million tax dollars.

   Furthermore, the standards are undefined, as are the bodies that
   would enact these standards.

   For these reasons, I am opposed to the Digital Telephony bills (HR
   4922 & SB 2375).

   Sincerely,

   _______________________

If you get a response from your legislator, drop us a note at
vtw@vtw.org.  We track legislator positions on privacy-related issues
such as this one.

For more information about the Digital Telephony bills, check the
Voters Telecomm Watch gopher site (gopher.panix.com) or contact Steven
Cherry, VTW Press Contact at (718) 596-2851 or stc@vtw.org.

VTW posts a Digital Telephony FAQ monthly to several Usenet newsgroups
including comp.org.cpsr.talk and comp.org.eff.talk.  Look for it or
contact us at vtw@vtw.org for a copy.

Washington insiders say the phone calls and faxes (especially to Rep
Jack Brooks) are starting to attract significant attention, and many
people prophesize that the bill won't even have time to pass this
session.  Keep up your efforts!]

Please take a moment to act upon this alert. These alerts aren't
usually accompanied by erratas to my screwups.  Sorry about that.

--
Shabbir


------------------------------

From: marq@world.std.com (Mark A Lilly)
Date: 12 Sep 1994 14:37:54 GMT
Subject: Polygraph Info
Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA

My wife wishes to write about lie detection, and as i was thinking
there may be civil rights implications, i came here to see if anyone
has any information for us.

Thanks,

-- 
Mark
I hope you hear many blessed voices in the wilderness.


------------------------------

From: "Tim C. Mazur" <TMAZUR@SCUACC.SCU.EDU>
Date: 09 Sep 1994 00:44:58 -0700
Subject: Inviting Respondents to Ethics Assn. Survey

                   FORGIVE ANY CROSS POSTINGS!

California State University, Long Beach, has organized the National
Conference on Ethics in America for six years.  The conference brings
together a constructive mix of academicians and ethics practitioners.

Over the years there have been innumerable instances when, for example,
a bioethicist, a philosopher, a police ethicist, and a corporate ethics
officer realized for the first time they had much to learn from each
other.  And, too often, an ethics center director has proudly described
her new project, only to learn that another center is doing the same
thing.  There's nothing wrong with duplicated research, but both
directors unknowingly told their sponsors "no one else is doing this."

In response, the Conference's executive committee is considering the
creation of the American Association for Applied Ethics (AAAE).  Though
you may feel the LAST thing needed is ANOTHER association, we wonder if
there are unmet needs in the applied ethics community.  For example:

   * an applied ethics information clearinghouse, where one can call
     or e-mail and have any question researched/answered regarding an
     article, bibliography, etc. (most ethics centers have too few
     resources to effectively serve everyone's demands)

   * an applied ethics newsletter, which succinctly presents
     information about activities/trends/advances in one field or
     center of ethics/applied ethics that may benefit all others

   * legal/legisative updates; as more persons apply ethics (members
     of city ethics commissions, media ethicists, legal ethicists,
     ethics consultants, those responsible for preventing science
     misconduct, members of hospital ethics committees, people who
     deliver continuing education in professional ethics, etc.) there
     are more legal cases and issues that affect ALL who apply ethics

We envision AAAE serving all those whose jobs specifically focus on
ethics or ethical issues, philosophers and other academicians, and
ethics centers/institutes.  As applied ethics becomes more prominent in
our society (there are more centers and more people "working in ethics"
today than ever before), we feel that maybe AAAE can someday serve the
applied ethics community like the ABA and the AMA serve the legal and
medical communities.  If nothing else, we can assure that those who
apply ethics constantly benefit from academicians and others who
study/research ethics.

If you're interested in commenting on this idea, we have a survey that
can be mailed to you.  It is already being mailed to 1,700 members of
the applied ethics community, and we'd be happy to send you one if you
KNOW that you will complete and return it.  It is only two pages, so it
should take only 5-10 minutes to complete.  If you'd like to receive a
survey, send your regular mailing address to me via e-mail at
"tmazur@scuacc.scu.edu".

If your responses suggest we should go forward, we will seek the
support of significant leaders throughout the community and apply for a
funding grant to create the association.  Thank you!

--
Tim C. Mazur
Santa Clara University
tmazur@scuacc.scu.edu


------------------------------

From: "Prof. L. P. Levine" <levine@blatz.cs.uwm.edu>
Date: 09 Sep 1994 08:59:41 -0500 (CDT)
Subject: Free Speech and Privacy Symposium
Organization: University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

Taken from Computer underground Digest Wed Sep 8, 1994 Vol6:Issue79
ISSN 1004-042X


    From: shallit@GRACELAND.UWATERLOO.CA(Jeffrey Shallit)
    Date: 24 Aug 1994 18:12:38 GMT
    Subject: File 3--Symposium Announcement & Call for Papers

                Final Announcement and Call for Papers
                              Symposium

              "Free Speech and Privacy in the Information Age"

                             Davis Centre
                University of Waterloo
              200 University Avenue, West
                       Waterloo, Ontario  N2L 3G1
                               Canada

                      Saturday, November 26, 1994

RATIONALE:

The "information superhighway" will have a profound effect on our lives
and the way we communicate in the 21st century.  But how will it
transform and be transformed by our understanding of traditional
freedoms, such as free speech and privacy?

This one-day symposium is intended to address the ethical,
philosophical, and legal implications of the Internet and related
communications technologies.  Expert speakers from industry, academia,
government, and the legal profession will discuss free speech and
privacy in the information age.  A wide spectrum of opinion will be
represented.

The symposium will host a poster session for contributed papers; see
below for submission information.

During the symposium, there will also be demonstrations, conducted by
University library staff, of the Internet and its applications as a
research and communications tool.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND:

* University and public librarians;

* local, provincial, and federal government officials concerned
  with information and communication technology;

* Internet users and computer system administrators from industry
  and academia;

* feminists concerned with impact of the new technology;

* lawyers interested in information and communication technology;

* journalists from print, radio, television, and other media;

* professors and students of sociology, philosophy, law, ethics,
  computer science, and electrical engineering.

SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM:

8:00 - 9:00 AM Registration, coffee, and doughnuts
       Internet demonstration by library staff

9:00 AM  Opening and Official Welcome

9:10 AM  Professor JAY WESTON, Carleton University and the Ottawa
 Freenet:  "Old Freedoms and New Technologies:  The Evolution
 of Community Networking".

9:50 AM  Professor URSULA M. FRANKLIN, FRSC, Massey College, University
 of Toronto: "Global Gossip, Homeless Information, and the Notion of
 Public Health".

10:45 AM Break

11:00 AM HENRY SPENCER, SP Systems and University of Toronto:  "Computer
 System Administration in an Age of Uncontrolled Information Flow".

11:40 AM Professor GAILE POHLHAUS, Women's Studies and Theology and
 Religious Studies, Villanova University:  "The Use of the Internet
 as a Vehicle for Pornography - Do We Really Care?"

12:20 PM Lunch
 Internet demonstration by library staff

2:10 PM  (Keynote Address) The Honourable Mr. Justice JOHN SOPINKA,
 Canadian Supreme Court: "Freedom of Speech and the Protection of
 Privacy under the *Charter* in the Information Age".

3:05 PM  Professor MARGARET ANN WILKINSON, Faculty of Law and Graduate School
 of Library and Information Science, University of Western Ontario:
 "Perceptual Differences in Approaches to Censorship:  Information
 Intermediaries and the Implementation of Law".

3:45 PM  Break

4:00 PM  PARKER BARSS DONHAM, Political Columnist, Halifax Sunday Daily
 News and CBC Political Panellist, Nova Scotia:  "A Free and
 Unshackled Internet -- If Joseph Howe Were Designing Cyberspace".

4:40 PM  Professor Emeritus THELMA McCORMACK, Department of Sociology,
 York University:  "Must We Buy Into Technological Determinism?".

5:20 PM  Closing Remarks

CALL FOR PAPERS:

There will be a poster session for contributed papers.  Contributed
papers should be no more than 10 pages in length, and on a topic
relevant to the symposium's theme.  Submit contributed papers BEFORE
October 31, 1994 to:

Free Speech and Privacy Symposium
c/o Prof. Jeffrey Shallit
Department of Computer Science
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario  N2L 3G1 Canada

You will be notified of the decision by telephone, fax, or electronic
mail.

SPONSORSHIP:

The symposium is being sponsored by the Institute for Computer
Research, University of Waterloo; the Department of Computer Science,
University of Waterloo; the Dean of the Arts Faculty, University of
Waterloo; and Electronic Frontier Canada.

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:

Prof. Harriet Lyons, Women's Studies and Anthropology,
University of Waterloo

Prof. Jeffrey Shallit, Computer Science, University of
Waterloo

GETTING THERE:

The symposium will be held at the William G. Davis Computer
Research Centre at the University of Waterloo in Waterloo,
Ontario.

Waterloo is approximately 80 minutes west of Toronto, Ontario, and
is accessible from Toronto via car, airport limousine, bus, and rail.

By Air:  The nearest airport is Toronto.  Airways Transit limousine
 serves the Waterloo area from Toronto airport.  Reservations
 must be made at least 24 hours in advance by calling
 (519) 886-2121.  The regular one-way fare is $43.   There is
 a special symposium fare of $23 one-way; specify the "Free
 Speech Symposium" when making reservations, and be sure to
 have complete flight information ready when you call.

By Car:  From Detroit/Windsor/London:  take Highway 401 east.
 (*) Exit at Route 8 west.  Follow Route 8 to Route 7 east.
 Take Route 7 to 86 North, and exit at University Avenue West.
 Follow University Avenue approximately 3 km to the main
 entrance of the University (200 University Ave. West).

 From Toronto:  take Highway 401 west, and follow the
 directions beginning with (*) above.

 From Buffalo:  take the QEW to Highway 403 West.  Exit the
 403 at Highway 6 North.  Take Highway 6 North to the 401
 West, and follow the directions beginning with (*) above.

By Bus:  From Toronto:  Kitchener is served by Greyhound Bus Service;
 about 10 buses a day, each direction.  For schedule
 information, call (800) 661-8747.

 From London:  Kitchener is served by Cha-co Trails; about
 3 buses a day, each direction.    For schedule information,
 call (800) 265-9460.

 Once at the Kitchener bus terminal, Kitchener Transit runs
 buses every 10-30 minutes to the University of Waterloo.
 Take buses 7D or 8B from the terminal.  Travel time is
 approximately 25 minutes.

By Rail: VIA rail has infrequent service to Kitchener from
 Chicago/London and Toronto.  For schedule information, contact them at
 (800) 361-1235 (Ontario only).

ACCOMMODATIONS:

Symposium attendees should make their own hotel reservations.

The Waterloo Inn (475 King St. North, Waterloo) has reserved a block of
rooms for the symposium until October 26, at the special symposium rate
of $70 (CDN) for a single room and $76 for a double room.  Contact them
at (519) 884-0220, and specify the "block ID Free100".

Other hotels/motels reasonably near the Waterloo campus include:

* Destination Inn, 547 King St. North, Waterloo,
  (519) 884-0100.  Single $53, Double $63.

* Comfort Inn, 190 Weber St. North, Waterloo,
  (519) 747-9400.  Request the corporate rate of
  Single $60, Double $69.

* Best Western Walper Terrace Hotel, 1 King St. West,
  Kitchener, (519) 745-4321.  Near Kitchener Bus
  Terminal.  Request the corporate rate of Single
  $69, Double $69.

REGISTRATION:

Last Name:   ____________________   First Name: ___________________

Organization:  ____________________________________________________

Address:       ____________________________________________________

City:   ___________________    Province/State:   __________________

Postal Code: _______________   Country:   _________________________

Phone: _____________________   Fax:    ____________________________

E-mail: ___________________________________________________________

Registration fees:

Before October 31   After October 31
StudentCDN $20 / US $16        CDN $30 / US $24
GeneralCDN $75 / US $60        CDN $90 / US $72

Registration fee includes admission to all sessions, Internet
demonstration, lunch, two coffee breaks, copies of printed
material, and GST.  (GST No. = R119260685)

Registration payment:

If paying by cheque, please make cheque out to "University of
Waterloo", payable in either US or Canadian Funds, and mail to:

"Free Speech and Privacy Symposium"
c/o Wendy Rush
Department of Computer Science
University of Waterloo
Waterloo, Ontario  N2L 3G1
Canada

You can also use a credit card.  Please provide the following
information:

Card name (Visa, Mastercard, or American Express):
Card number:
Expiry date:
Amount (Specify in Canadian dollars ONLY):
Cardholder's Name (please print):

Cardholder's Signature: ___________________________________________

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:

Contact Wendy Rush at (519) 885-1211 ext. 3688, or Jeffrey
Shallit at (519) 888-4804.  Fax inquiries can be sent to
(519) 885-1208.  E-mail inquiries can be sent to:

sfsp@graceland.uwaterloo.ca

On the Internet, you can get a copy of this program by
typing "finger sfsp@graceland.uwaterloo.ca".


------------------------------

From: email list server <listserv@Sunnyside.COM>
Date: 09 Sep 1994 17:54:19 -0700
Subject: Conferences That May be of Interest

CPSR Members and Friends,

If you are planning to attend a conference, please contact CPSR at
cpsr@cpsr.org  or  (415) 322-3778  for easy ways for you to be a
presence for CPSR.

CONFERENCE /EVENT  SCHEDULE

Seybold San Francisco, Moscone Center, Sept. 13-16.  Contact: 800
488-2883

MHVR '94 (Multimedia, Hypermedia, and Virtual Reality), Moscow, RUSSIA,
Sept. 14-16.   Contact:  plb@plb.icsti.su

Networks for the People, Seattle Pacific University, Sept. 17.

Networks Expo / Communications '94 /Windows World '94, Dallas, TX Sept.
20-22.  Contact:  800 829-3976.

Executive Summit Meeting of the Central and East European Computer
Industry,  Bratislava, SLOVAKIA, Sept. 25-28.  Contact:
0005113705@mcimail.com, 212 924-8800 (phone)  212 924-0240 (fax)

Improving Health Through Advanced Computing & Communications:
Realities Beyond the Promise, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC,
Sept. 26.  Contact:  202 462-9600.

Information Superhighway Summit, San Jose, CA, Sept. 26-28.  A Comnet
Conference.   Contact:  800-225-4698 (US) or  505 879-6700

Technology on the Move, Anaheim, CA, Sept. 27-29.  Contact:  800
877-2668     310 641-5117 (fax)   73232.666@compuserve.com

Legal and Business Aspects of the Internet and Online Services, New
York City, Sept.  29-30.  Contact:  800 888-8300  ext. 6111    or 212
545-6111.

On the Threshold of a New Century, Palo Alto, CA, Oct. 1.  Contact:
415 326-8210

"Manging the Privacy Revolution," Washington, DC, Oct. 4-5  .
Contact:  201 996-1154     201 996-1883 (fax)

National Conference of Lawyers and Scientists "Legal, Ethical and
Technological Aspects of Computer and Network Use and Abuse"  Maryland,
October 7-9.  Contact:  202 326-6600     202 289-4950 (fax)
drunkle@aaas.org

"Organizing for Access:  A National Forum on Computer Networking,
Community Action, and Democracy, " CPSR Annual Meeting, Price Center,
University of California - San Diego, San Diego, CA, Oct. 8-9.
Contact: cpsr-annmtg@cpsr.org   415 322-3778 (ph)

People, Networks, and Communication '94, Honolulu, Hawaii, Oct. 11-14.
Contact:  Dr. Ernest Kho, Jr.   808 933-3383
ekho@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu

Messaging Leadership Conference, Washington, DC, Oct. 12-14.
Contact  info@ema.org

4th Beijing International Symposium on Computer-Based Information
Management (BISCIM '94), Beijing, CHINA, Oct. 14-18.  Contact:
tian@asiainfo.com    214 351-5008 (tel)  214 351-4861 (fax)

Symposium: An Arts and Humanities Policy for the National Information
Infrastructure. Boston, Mass. October 14-16, 1994.  Contact:
conf@nac.tiac.net    617 964-3424 (ph)     617 630-0081 (fax)

American Society for Information Science Annual Meeting, Alexandria, VA
Oct. 17-20.  Contact:  301 495-0900 (ph)   301 495-0810 (fax)
asis@cni.org

"Access 2001:  Sharing Strategies for an Evolving Community Media,"
Hyatt Ricky's, Palo Alto, CA, Oct. 20-22.  Contact:  415 949-7616.

"People & Technology in Harmony,"  Nashville, TN, Oct. 24-28.
Contact:  310 394-1811   310 394-2410(fax)

The International Developers Conference for Windows, Santa Clara, CA,
Oct. 24-28.  Contact:  800 218-4194   508 649-2162 (fax)

Third Biennial Conference on Participatory Design, Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, October 27-28, 1994. Sponsored by CPSR.  Contact
suchman@ncsu.edu   919 942-9773
http://cpsr.org/cpsr./conferences/pdc94/pdc94.html ftp.cpsr.org
/cpsr/conferences/pdc94 directory.

Information Systems Education Conference,  Sponsored by Education
Foundation of the DPMA, Louisville, Kentucky,   October 28-30 Contact:
cohene@email.enmu.edu

ALCTS Institute on the Electronic Library, San Antonio, TX  October
29-30.  Contact  513 873-2380   513 873-4109(fax)
ahirshon@desire.wright.edu

ACM/SIGCAPH Conference on Assistive Technologies, Marina del Rey, CA,
October 31-Nov.1        Contact: glinert@cs.washington.edu

2nd ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security, Fairfax,
VA, Nov. 2-4.  Contact:  gong@csl.sri.com

"A New Frontier:  The National Information Infrastructure," Washington,
DC, Nov. 3-4.  Contact:  202 234-4700 ext. 616

Ethics in the Computer Age, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, November 11-13.
Contact:  Dreese@cs.msstate.edu

21st Annual Computer Security Conference & Exhibition, Washington, DC,
Nov. 14-16.   Contact:  415 905-2626     415 905-2218 (fax)

Open Systems World, Washington Convention Center, DC, Nov. 28-Dec. 2.
Contact:  301 953-9600 (phone)  301 953-2213 (fax)

The Technology for Information Security Conference '94 (TISC '94),
Galveston, TX, Dec. 5-8.  Contact:  John D'Agostino
dagostin@killerbee.jsc.nasa.gov

North American Fuzzy Information Processing Society, San Antonio, TX,
Dec. 18-21.   Contact:  nafips94@cs.tamu.edu

Second International Conference on Information Warfare:  "Chaos on the
Electronic Superhighway," Montreal, CA,  Jan. 18-19.   .
Contact:  Mich Kabay,  75300.3232@compuserve.com 

New Technologies and the Democratisation of Audiovisual Communication, 
New Delhi, INDIA, Feb. 9-12.  
Contact:  514 982-6660 (ph)   514 982-6122 (fax)   videaz@web.apc.org

ETHICOMP95:  An international conference on the ethical issues of using
Information Technology, DeMontfort University, Leicester, ENGLAND,
March 28-30, 1995.  Contact: Simon Rogerson srog@dmu.ac.uk 44 533
577475 (phone)  44 533 541891 (Fax).

ACM Conference on Computer Human Interaction (CHI'95), Denver, CO, May
7-11.   Contact   410 263-5382    chi95@sigchi.acm.org
http://info.sigchi.acm.org/sigchi/chi95.html

ErgoCon '95 - Silicon Valley Ergonomics Conference & Exposition, San
Jose, CA, May 22-24.  Contact:  Abbas Moallem  408 924-4132 (ph)  408
924-4153 (fax).  Proposals for papers, posters, workshops, or panel
discussions:  Deadline Nov. 1

IDT 95  12th Congress - Information Markets and Industries, Paris,
FRANCE, June 13-15.  Organized by ADBS (Society of information
professionals), ANRT (National Association of Technological Research),
and GFII (French association of information industries).  Contact:  33
1 43 72 25 25 (ph)   33 1 43 72 30 41 (fax)

Key Players in the Introduction of Information Technology:  Their
Social Responsibility and Professional Training, BELGIUM, July 5-7,
1995.  Contact: nolod@ccr.jussieu.fr     clobet@info.fundp.ac.be Paper
submissions by Nov. 2, 1994

Computers in Context:  Joining Forces in Design, Aarhus, DENMARK, Aug.
14-18.  Contributions for papers, proposals for panels, workshops, and
tutorials (in 6 copies - not by facsimile or e-mail)):  Deadline for
receipt Jan 5.  Contact:   Computers in Context, Aarhus University,
Dept. of Computer Science, Bldg. 540, Ny Munkegade 116, DK-8000 Aarhus
C, DENMARK.

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End of Computer Privacy Digest V5 #033
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