1996-09-17 - Edited Edupage, 15 Sept 1996

Header Data

From: “E. Allen Smith” <EALLENSMITH@ocelot.Rutgers.EDU>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 06bb6c9b77fe8102d30bf1570cb75e40cf1bec7778267958c468113b7025a233
Message ID: <01I9JSD6BN2K8Y4X3Y@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-09-17 02:29:52 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 17 Sep 1996 10:29:52 +0800

Raw message

From: "E. Allen Smith" <EALLENSMITH@ocelot.Rutgers.EDU>
Date: Tue, 17 Sep 1996 10:29:52 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Edited Edupage, 15 Sept 1996
Message-ID: <01I9JSD6BN2K8Y4X3Y@mbcl.rutgers.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


From:	IN%"educom@educom.unc.edu" 16-SEP-1996 10:15:59.50
>To:	IN%"edupage@elanor.oit.unc.edu"  "EDUCOM Edupage Mailing List"

>************************************************************
>Edupage, 15 September 1996.  Edupage, a summary of news about information
>technology, is provided three times a week as a service by Educom,
>a Washington, D.C.-based consortium of leading colleges and universities
>seeking to transform education through the use of information technology.
>************************************************************

>SATELLITE BROADCASTERS MUST PROVIDE EDUCATION, TOO
>A federal appeals court in Washington has ruled that any company providing
>direct broadcast satellite (DBS) services must "reserve a portion of its
>channel capacity, equal to not less than 4 percent nor more than 7 percent,
>exclusively for noncommercial programming of an educational or information
>nature," in compliance with regulations drafted by the FCC to enforce laws
>enacted in 1984 and 1992.  The unanimous decision rejected arguments by Time
>Warner and other broadcasters that the law interfered with their First
>Amendment rights.  "It is the right of the viewers and listeners, not the
>right of the broadcasters, which is paramount," said the court, quoting a
>1969 Supreme Court ruling.  (Chronicle of Higher Education 13 Sep 96 A29)

	Bloody socialist Supreme Court... sell the _full_ rights, then use
the money to reduce taxes.

>SYSTEM CRACKER GOT RECIPE FROM HACKER MAGAZINE
>The person who disabled New York's Panix Internet service probably followed
>the line-by-line instructions for doing so that appeared in the latest issue
>of 2600 magazine, the Hacker's Quarterly.  "We need to educate the community
>that it's very, very simple to cause massive mayhem," says 2600's editor,
>who defended his editorial judgment.  "A lot of companies subscribe to us so
>they can learn before they're victimized."  Panix's co-owner says he
>supports 2600's right to publish such information:  "As a matter of
>principle I don't think they should have been stopped," but adds that unlike
>most other recipes for breaching security published in the magazine, this
>one has no known technical defense.  (Wall Street Journal 13 Sep 96 B5)

	Helpful to quote Panix on it.

>Edupage is written by John Gehl <gehl@educom.edu> & Suzanne Douglas
><douglas@educom.edu>.  Voice:  404-371-1853, Fax: 404-371-8057.

>Technical support is provided by Information Technology Services at the
>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

>***********************************************************
>Edupage ... is what you've just finished reading.  To subscribe to Edupage:
>send mail to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with the message:  subscribe edupage
>Henry R. Luce (if your name is Henry R. Luce;  otherwise, substitute your
>own name).  ...  To cancel, send a message to: listproc@educom.unc.edu with
>the message: unsubscribe edupage.   (If you have subscription problems, send
>mail to manager@educom.unc.edu.)





Thread