GILC Alert, Volume 4, Issue 4



GILC Alert
Volume 4, Issue 4
April 24, 2000

Welcome to the Global Internet Liberty Campaign Newsletter.

Welcome to GILC Alert, the newsletter of the Global Internet Liberty
Campaign. We are an international organization of groups working for
cyber-liberties, who are determined to preserve civil liberties and human
rights on the Internet.

We hope you find this newsletter interesting, and we very much hope that you
will avail yourselves of the action items in future issues.
If you are a part of an organization that would be interested in joining
GILC, please contact us at <gilc@gilc.org>.

If you are aware of threats to cyber-liberties that we may not know about,
please contact the GILC members in your country, or contact GILC as a whole.
Please feel free to redistribute this newsletter to appropriate forums.

===============================================
Free Expression
[1] UK lawsuits endanger Net free speech
[2] Cyberpatrol war threatens mirror sites
[3] Hollywood wants end to links
[4] French proposal: end web anonymity
[5] Japanese software ruling hurts free speech
[6] Possible Russian Internet restrictions
[7] Study: kids & parents upbeat about Net
[8] Bertelsmann censorship proposal attacked
[9] China bans MP3s, monitors dissidents on-line
[10] Saudi women's Net café shutdown
[11] New web forum for Chinese women
[12] New Report on Net Access in Central & Eastern Europe

Privacy and Encryption
[13] US gov't wants mini-ECHELON tracking systems
[14] Report: Microsoft and IBM helped US snoops
[15] Virgin net appliance has privacy flaws
[16] EU-US privacy pact stalls
[17] Ireland relaxes crypto rules
[18] Turkish gov't wants new Net taps
[19] New Dutch surveillance scheme
[20] Zimbabwe net tracking bill criticized
[21] Yahoo investigated over privacy abuses
[22] Canadian privacy conference held
[23] Internet privacy bunker built
[24] Russian Internet freedom conference held

===============================================
[1] UK lawsuits endanger Net free speech
===============================================
A heated debate has arisen over British libel laws that may endanger free
speech on the Internet.

The debate arose after Dr. Laurence Godfrey launched a defamation lawsuit
against Demon Internet, one of the biggest Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
in the UK. Godfrey charged that a particular website hosted by Demon
contained libelous statements about him. In March, Demon settled with
Godfrey and paid him an estimated £300,000 in damages and costs.

Since then, the doctor's latest complaints have forced at least one group to
move its website offshore. The Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet
in Britain (CACIB-a GILC member) had commented on the Demon-Godfrey dispute
in an article entitled "Web Site Suppressed: Godfrey's First Victim."
Subsequently, Godfrey complained to CACIB's ISP, Instant Web, that the
article was defamatory. Strangely enough, the doctor argued that CACIB's
comments were libelous because they seemed to suggest that he had personally
threatened the organization. Faced with the threat of a potentially ruinous
lawsuit, Instant Web shut down CACIB's website. Afterwards, CACIB moved its
homepage to an American server while warning that current British defamation
standards may seriously jeopardize free speech in cyberspace. The group
called Godfrey a "serial litigant" and noted that under British laws, "most
ISPs would quail before even a veiled insinuation for fear of facing legal
costs."

Indeed, a recent BBC investigation showed how easy can be to censor the
Internet using UK defamation standards. The investigation revealed the fact
that "for an ISP, having received a complaint about a site it is hosting, by
far the safest and easiest course of action is to pull the plug." The report
further noted that "[f]or those who still like to think of the internet as
the great extender of freedom of speech, it may come as a nasty shock."

Read CACIB's statement about its move offshore is located at
http://test.liberty.org.uk/cacib/artview.php3?currentgroup=0&pid=86&type=news

For more information, read Giles Wilson, "Gagging the net in 3 easy steps,"
BBC News Online, April 13, 2000, at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/uk/newsid_711000/711782.stm

===============================================
[2] Cyberpatrol war threatens mirror sites
===============================================
A ruling from a United States Federal Judge threatens to stamp out a
widespread Internet practice.

The case centers around Cyberpatrol, a popular program for blocking
controversial webpages. Cyberpatrol uses an encrypted catalog of Universal
Resource Locators (URLs) to screen out certain types of Internet content.
The roster, which includes the websites of several free expression groups,
is updated from time to time. Recently, a pair of computer cryptography
experts obtained a copy of the program and, with relative ease, discovered
the complete list. They later published their findings on the Internet and
included a program that they had written called "Cphack." The program allows
owners of Cyberpatrol to decrypt the list and read it for themselves. Other
groups, including Peacefire (a GILC member), mirrored the site, hoping to
increase public awareness of this issue.

Afterwards, Microsystems Software, Inc., which produces Cyberpatrol and is a
Mattel subsidiary, launched a federal lawsuit against the two scientists. In
the suit, the software manufacturer claimed its intellectual property rights
had been violated, and asked for a preliminary injunction. Furthermore,
Declan McCullagh, a reporter for Wired News who had written several articles
about this subject that have been posted on the Internet, received a
subpoena from the makers of Cyberpatrol. The subpoena ordered him to reveal
the name of "each and every person who produced, received, viewed,
downloaded or accessed" the decoding program from his site." The American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU-a GILC member), which represents Peacefire,
argued vehemently against Microsystems' actions. In its court papers, the
ACLU said that the case was "premised on a flawed reading of U.S. copyright
law" and was "a thinly-veiled attempt to stifle legitimate examination and
criticism of a controversial Internet filtering product."

Since then, the original two defendants settled with Microsystems by giving
Microsystems the rights to "cphack" and agreeing not to post the program on
the Internet. Afterwards, the judge who presided over the case issued an
injunction forbidding "all persons in active concert" with the original
defendants from posting "cphack" on the Internet. The apparently broad
wording of the injunction may prevent anyone on-line from mirroring the
original website with the "cphack" program, even if that person had no
contact with the original programmers and wanted to use "cphack" merely for
discussion purposes. An appeal is expected shortly.

The text of the injunction is available at
http://www.epic.org/free_speech/censorware/cp_injunction.html

See Declan McCullagh, "ACLU's Filter Appeal Rejected," Wired News, April 14,
2000, at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,35660,00.html

Also see "Settlement With a Twist", ABCNews.com (US), March. 28, 2000, at
http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/DailyNews/cphack_000328.html

===============================================
[3] Hollywood wants end to links
===============================================
The motion picture industry's attempts to stamp out a DVD-related computer
program may stifle Internet free expression through links.

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) has sued to prevent
Internet users from linking to websites that have DeCSS. DeCSS was a
primitive program to help users of the Linux operating system play DVDs on
their computers. A court in New York has decided to begin the trial in
December. Previously, the court had issued a preliminary injunction that
barred computer users from posting DeCSS on their websites. Many experts
have expressed concern, however, that a ban on links could stifle free
speech, because it would make Internet users liable for the content of other
people's websites.

See Andy Patrizio, "MPAA Sues to Stop DeCSS Linking," Wired News, April 5,
2000 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,35394,00.html

===============================================
[4] French proposal: end web anonymity
===============================================
Want to say something on the Internet? If the French government has its way,
you'll have to identify yourself first.

The French parliament is considering a bill that would force Internet users
to register their identity with their service providers before they place
any content on the Information Superhighway. Many members of the Internet
community companies are outraged because of the plan's intrusive nature.
EuroISPA, the European Internet Service Providers Association, warned that
the proposal's broad wording might chill numerous forms of Internet speech,
including chat rooms, discussion groups and webpages.

What is more, as a EuroISPA spokesperson noted that the proposal may start a
dangerous trend of international proportions, saying: "It's possible that if
and when the bill is introduced, the French may put pressure on counterparts
to implement similar legislation."

For press coverage of this proposal, see Claire Woffenden, "French to outlaw
anonymous web posting," Vnunet.com, March 27, 2000, at
http://www.vnunet.com/News/601295

See also Tim Richardson, "EuroISPA slams French Net privacy plans," The
Register (UK), March 28, 2000 at
http://www.theregister.co.uk/000328-000007.html

===============================================
[5] Japanese software ruling hurts free speech
===============================================
A recent Japanese court decision concerning a computer graphics program may
have severe free speech consequences.

The program, known as FLMASK, can be used to edit computerized JPEG image
files. The creator of FLMASK, Mr. Kiuchi, not only made the software
available on the Internet, but also included links to various websites with
photographic images. The idea was for interested FLMASK users to go to other
websites, download JPEG files, and the test the editing software for
themselves.

The legal battle arose when it was discovered that some of the websites
Kiuchi linked to happened to contain pornographic materials. Moreover,
FLMASK had the theoretical capability to remove photographic blurs and other
methods required by the Japanese government to block out sensitive portions
of such images. Subsequently, the Osaka District Court ruled that it was
against the law to link to websites containing illegal material. The
decision would hold Internet users liable even if they were unaware that the
linked webpage had questionable content. Under this theory, the court found
Kiuchi guilty of encouraging the spread of pornography, and even accused the
programmer of endangering public morality. Oddly enough, despite these
censorial overtones, Judge Masayuki Kawai held that his decision was not an
attack on free speech.

Read the Osaka District Court's decision (in Japanese) at
http://w3.scan.or.jp/sonoda/data/fl_link01.html

Technical information on FLMASK is available at
http://www.martec.net/isg/flmask/index2.htm

An editorial supporting the judge's decision is available (in English) under
http://www.nikkeibp.asiabiztech.com/wcs/leaf?CID=onair/asabt/news/99001

================================================
[6] Possible Russian Internet free speech curbs
================================================
A newly drafted Russian proposal may facilitate state censorship and
restrict the free flow of information on the Internet.

The Russian Duma has worked out a draft law to provide a general legal
framework for the regulation of Internet services. If passed, the draft will
require individuals along the Information Superhighway to register with the
authorities, thereby providing the government with a database of all
Internet users. Furthermore, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) will be held
responsible for the information they have disseminated if they have
initiated the transmission, have chosen the recipients or have selected or
changed the information. ISPs can also be held responsible for the storage
of this information that is later deemed unlawful if they have not removed
it or blocked the access to it. Experts believe that the term "storing
information" will include the hosting of web-sites.

The bill theoretically does provide special protections of personal data and
privacy on the Internet. Personal data may be used only with the agreement
of the person affected. The companies using the data are required to take
some technical measures to prevent access to it and to destroy it after the
time it has been gathered for expires. Nevertheless, a number of observers
fear that the bill's potentially damaging impact on free speech may outweigh
its supposed benefits in the area of data privacy.

In the latest development, an alternative draft, prepared by Mikhail
Yakushev, is being discussed within the Open Forum of Russian ISPs. Several
commentators have suggested that Yakushev's proposal may be more acceptable
to the Internet community than the Duma's version.

For further information (in Russian) see
http://www.lenta.ru/internet/2000/03/30/proekt

For an English translation, visit
http://www.hro.org/gilc/proj2000.htm

The original draft regulations (from the State Duma's Committee for
information policy) are available (in Russian) under
http://www.provider.net.ru/zakon.shtml

For an English translation of the original draft regulations, visit
http://www.hro.org/gilc/proj1.htm

For an English translation of the Yakushev proposal, click
http://www.hro.org/gilc/proj2.htm

===============================================
[7] Study: kids & parents upbeat about Net
===============================================
According to a recent study, "Despite recent negative headlines about online
violence, pornography, predators and commercialism, parents and children
generally are upbeat and favorable about their own Internet experiences."

The survey was commissioned by the National School Boards Foundation, with
the support from the Children's Television Workshop and Microsoft
Corporation. The Foundation asked school children (up to 17 years old) and
their parents about their feelings toward the Internet and how the digital
revolution had influenced their lives. The results of the study showed that
"[p]arents and children alike view the Internet as a positive new force in
children's lives." The report found that "[p]arents, in fact, are even more
positive than children-they believe the Internet is a powerful tool for
learning and communicating within families, and they want their children to
be on the Internet."

To read the report (along with a brief overview of its findings), click
http://www.nsbf.org/safe-smart/br-overview.htm

===============================================
[8] Bertelsmann censorship proposal attacked
===============================================
A proposal to rate and block controversial Internet content is drawing fire
from free expression advocates.

The plan, which is being spearheaded by the Bertelsmann Foundation, would
create a regime where websites would rate themselves based on content.
Blocking software would then be used to screen out certain webpages based on
their ratings. The scheme has provoked strong objections from several
experts, who fear that the Foundation's proposal would change "the
architecture of the Internet to make censorship possible," in the words of
Barry Steinhardt, associate director of the American Civil Liberties Union
(ACLU-a GILC member). Steinhardt's remarks came at the Computers, Freedom
and Privacy conference held in Toronto April 6, where others compared the
Foundation's system to medieval attempts by the Catholic Church to stop
printing presses, in order to prevent the publication of materials that
might be deemed immoral.

Moreover, a number of observers fear that these self-regulatory schemes may
be codified into law and used by government officials to stifle free
expression. Indeed, the Irish Minister of State for Children, Mary Hanafin,
recently chided Internet service providers (ISPs) for failing to promote
self-regulatory schemes. Hanafin went further and argued that the Government
should offer extra funding for various Internet blocking initiatives.

For more on this story, visit Doug Brown, "Privacy Activists Blast
Bertelsmann Proposal," Inter@ctive Week, April 6, 2000 at
http://www.zdnet.com/intweek/stories/news/0,4164,2522940,00.html

For more on Hanafin's remarks, read Padraig O'Morain, "Minister warns
Internet firms on child porn," Irish Times, March 15, 2000 at
http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/2000/0315/hom24.htm

=================================================
[9] China: ban MP3s, monitor dissidents on-line
=================================================
Think MP3 files are a problem? Communist Chinese authorities have a
solution: ban them outright, then track Internet users to make sure they
stay in line.

The Chinese Ministry of Culture has now made it illegal for MP3s to be
downloaded in China. In addition, the Ministry's new rules prevent imported
music, videos, and other similar forms of entertainment from being sold via
the Internet. The Communist Chinese government claims that these standards
will somehow "develop a healthy market."

These moves come after the release of a new study that documents the growing
activity of mainland Chinese Internet censors. The Committee to Protect
Journalists (CPJ), citing reports from various reliable sources, noted that
"China's secretive Ministry of State Security now has an entire department
devoted to tracking dissidents online." Furthermore, in the past few months,
Chinese authorities "installed monitoring devices on the computers used by
Internet service providers in Beijing to allow them to track individual
e-mail accounts." CPJ also mentioned the fact that new Chinese regulations
which "required Internet cafes to register with the police, while several
locally-based Internet bulletin boards were banned during the year for
posting oppositional content. Dissident use of the Internet has provoked
stern reactions from the state." In a recent move, Communist Chinese
authorities established a new "Internet Information Management Bureau" to
prevent the "infiltration of harmful information" from foreign news services
and other sources.

The CPJ's report on Chinese censorship can be seen at
http://www.cpj.org/attacks/99/asia99/China.html

See also "China Bans MP3s," Associated Press, March 25, 2000, at
http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/DailyNews/china_mp3ban000325.html

For more on China's Internet Information Management Bureau, see "China's
'Standardized' Web News," Wired News, April 21, 2000 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,35825,00.html

===============================================
[10] Saudi women's Net café shutdown
===============================================
A Saudi Arabian Internet café for women has been shutdown on morality
grounds.

Officials in Mecca claimed that the café had been used for "immoral
purposes." Brigadier Yousuf Matter of the civil police further alleged that
the establishment conducted activities that were "against both our religion
and our traditions." However, Matter failed to explain just what illegal or
immoral activities had happened inside. Indeed, the cyber-café's clientele
included many postgraduate students who needed some way to get on-line.
Nevertheless, Brigadier Matter asserted that he had the authority to close
other such shops throughout Mecca.

See "Internet clampdown in Mecca," BBC News Online, April 17, 2000 at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/middle_east/newsid_716000/716424.stm

===============================================
[11] New web forum for Chinese women
===============================================
Chinese women may have a new forum to voice their concerns.

Redskirt.com is a new venture founded by Blanca Li and Samuel Chen. The two
entrepreneurs are hoping their new website will foster online Chinese
language discussions that include women from Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, and
the United States. As Li pointed out, "Chinese women tend to be more
conservative and shy, so the internet really provides a good communication
channel for them." However, Li also voiced concerns over possible censorship
of mainland Chinese users, noting that on the Mainland, "[a] lot of things
are still censored and prohibited, so it's kind of risky to go in there
without knowing what will be censored first."

See Terence Chea, "A Community for Chinese Women," Wired News, April 3,
2000, at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,35296,00.html

Visit Redskirt.com's website at
http://www.redskirt.com

==========================================================
[12] New Report on Net Access in Central & Eastern Europe
==========================================================
A new survey documents the digital divide separating Central and Eastern
Europe from the rest of the on-line world.

The study, entitled "Bridging the Digital Divide: Internet Access in Central
& Eastern Europe," was principally written by the Center for Democracy and
Technology (CDT-a GILC member) in conjunction with the Global Internet
Liberty Campaign. This recently updated and expanded report included an
analysis of the telecommunications policies and systems of some 17
countries. Among other things, the investigation revealed that the poor
quality of phone connections and other elements of the telecommunications
infrastructure in the region were "[a] major barrier to Internet usage."
Furthermore, the study suggested that "privatization and competition" have
not been completely successful in fostering the growth of the Internet
throughout the area. According to the report, these and other difficulties
underlined the "urgent need for the EU and other international and regional
bodies to adopt more effective measures to bring affordable access to
non-commercial users."

To read the report, visit
http://www.cdt.org/international/ceeaccess/

==================================================
[13] US gov't wants mini-ECHELON tracking systems
==================================================
New proposals from the United States government may make it even easier for
authorities to monitor activity on-line.

One of these plans, known as "Digital Storm," comes from the US Federal
Bureau of Investigations (FBI). According to reports, Digital Storm would
expand the government's technical capabilities to allow greater interception
of telephone conversations. The FBI is also seeking "the foundation for an
up-to-date, flexible digital collection infrastructure," as well as an
"enterprise database" for agents to search through such data more easily.
Meanwhile, the US Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) wants to create
somewhat a similar automated search program, in the hopes of stemming
on-line fraud.

Privacy advocates have been skeptical of these proposals. James Dempsey from
the Center for Democracy and Technology (CDT-a GILC member) noted that
"Digital Storm" would essentially "reduce if not eliminate the practical
constraints that have up to now limited the volume of information that the
government can intercept," and that the plan highlighted the need for
greater privacy protections.

These schemes have reminded many observers of ECHELON, a highly classified
system designed to intercept communications from around the world. ECHELON
is reportedly operated by the US National Security Agency (NSA), in
conjunction with several other intelligence agencies, and is supposed to be
capable of intercepting e-mail messages, faxes, and telephone conversations.
Concerns about ECHELON's potentially invasive nature were heightened by a
recent Congressional hearing, where the directors of both the Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) and NSA refused to provide details on the legal
standards by which ECHELON operates.

For coverage of the FBI's proposals, read Robert O'Harrow Jr., "'Digital
Storm' Brews at FBI," Washington Post, April 6, 2000, page A1, at
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A20426-2000Apr5.html

To read Dempsey's comments on "Digital Storm", see
http://www.cdt.org/testimony/000406dempsey.shtml

Additional details on the SEC's plans can seen under March Gordon, "SEC
Creating System to Fight Online Fraud," Associated Press, March 28, 2000, at
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/DailyNews/sec000328.html

For more on the ECHELON hearing, visit
http://www.aclu.org/congress/congress.html

See also:
http://www.echelonwatch.org

================================================
[14] Report: Microsoft and IBM helped US snoops
================================================
According to a recent report, Microsoft and IBM helped American intelligence
agents by weakening privacy protections in their products.

The report, entitled "Cryptography & Liberty 2000," was written by the
Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC-a GILC member). In the report,
EPIC discussed an apparent agreement between the United States National
Security Agency (NSA) on one hand and IBM and Microsoft on the other. This
deal, which was disclosed by US Congressman Curt Weldon, allowed the NSA
"access to encrypted data." Experts had previously suggested that Microsoft
Windows contains built-in "backdoors" that might allow government
surveillance agents to get copies of private keys used to encrypt sensitive
computer files. Microsoft has already admitted that its employees had
included secret passwords into some of its programs to allow unauthorized
access of Internet sites.

For more information, visit Graham Lea, "Gates, Gerstner helped NSA snoop-US
Congressman," The Register, April 12, 2000, at
http://www.theregister.co.uk/000412-000020.html

Additional details on Microsoft security flaws is available from Ted Bridis,
"MS admits planting secret password," Wall Street Journal Interactive
Edition, April 14, 2000 at
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2543490,00.html

For more on obtaining EPIC's report, visit
http://www.epic.org/crypto&/

===============================================
[15] Virgin net appliance has privacy flaws
===============================================
Virgin is offering people a new way to get on the Internet, at the cost of
personal privacy.

Under the Virgin Connect program, users pay $50 per year for an appliance
that includes a web browser and e-mail program. However, to get these
services, applicants must first provide a wealth of personal information,
such as their income levels, mothers' maiden names, credit card information,
and ages as well as their own names, phone numbers, and e-mail addresses.
Virgin even requires users to provide elaborate details about their hobbies
and areas of interest. Furthermore, Virgin monitors Internet users while
they use their appliances through cookies and other software mechanisms. In
addition, users are not permitted to see and correct the files that have
been compiled about them.

The firm's Privacy Policy also allows third parties to track Virgin Connect
members and send advertisements, although these materials must be sent
through Virgin first.

Virgin Connect's Privacy Policy can be seen at
http://www.virginconnect.com

See also Christopher Jones, "Net Appliance Not Quite Free," Wired News,
April 11, 2000 at
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,35584,00.html

===============================================
[16] EU-US privacy pact stalls
===============================================
Efforts to standardize European-American privacy protections have been
delayed once again.

Over the past few years, the United States had feuded with the European
Union over how personal data would be protected. The two sides recently came
to a tentative agreement. The pact includes "safe harbor" provisions,
meaning intermediate countries taking part in an exchange of private
information must protect that data to the same degree as the EU. American
companies reportedly would have to get the consent of European consumers
before transferring personal data into the United States. Furthermore, these
same companies would have to disclose how they would use such information.
Ironically, this deal may give European citizens greater data privacy
protection from American firms than US citizens, according to several
privacy experts in the United States.

However, hopes for quick approval of the measure were soon dashed. EU member
countries are worried that the Safe Harbor agreement does not provide
sufficient remedies to deter potential privacy violators. Based on these and
other issues, the EU postponed further consideration of the plan. Some
observers worry that this lack of progress might cause a trade war between
the Union and the United States.

See Ayla Jean Yackley, "Safe Harbor Vote Delayed," Wired News, April 17,
2000 at
http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,35406,00.html

===============================================
[17] Ireland relaxes crypto rules
===============================================
It may be getting easier to use computer encryption in the Emerald Isle.

The Irish government has announced a new "simplified licensing procedure"
that may foster greater use of digital cryptography. Under this procedure,
software companies in Ireland will not have to apply for export licenses for
individual products or nations. According to Ireland's deputy prime
minister, Mary Harney, these measures will help ensure that the country
remains "the world's largest exporter of software."

Read Thomas Molloy, "Ireland Eases Restrictions on Encryption Export
Procedures," Bloomberg News, April 19, 2000, at
http://quote.bloomberg.com/fgcgi.cgi?ptitle=Technology%20News&s1=blk&tp=ad_t
opright_tech&T=markets_fgcgi_content99.ht&s2=blk&bt=ad_bottom_tech&s=AOPb25R
YfSXJlbGFu&_ref=1844260342

===============================================
[18] Turkish gov't wants new Net taps
===============================================
The government of Turkey is considering new invasive Internet measures in
the name of national security.

The plan calls for a new agency to patrol the Internet and search for
possible subversives. The proposal, entitled "Bill on the National
Information Security Organization and Its Duties," is designed to promote
"[p]rotection of the information base ... against those with evil
intentions, terrorist activities and disasters." The Bill contains language
that allows the government to gather all types of Internet transmissions,
including private e-mail, "at any level of secrecy." Moreover, "[t]hose who
do not fulfill their obligations will be punished with one to five years in
jail."

See Elif Unal, "Turkey Debates Cyberspace Controls," Reuters, April 16, 2000
at
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000416/wr/turkey_internet_1.html

===============================================
[19] New Dutch surveillance scheme
===============================================
The Dutch parliament is considering a proposal to expand the government's
surveillance powers.

Under the "Act on the intelligence and security agencies" (known as WIV),
the Dutch Intelligence Agency BVD would be allowed to scan all
communications that are not cable bound, which apparently would include
Internet transmissions. Furthermore, the bill would apparently give BVD the
power to intercept such communications (including private e-mails)
wholesale, then siphon out pertinent material using keywords. BVD could then
store collected transmissions for a full year. The Act also gives BVD other
powers, including the right to conduct surveillance for economic purposes
and the right to intercept satellite communications.

See Jelle van Buuren, "Echelon in Holland," Heise Telepolis, April 11, 2000,
at
http://www.heise.de/tp/english/inhalt/co/6731/1.html

===============================================
[20] Zimbabwe net tracking bill criticized
===============================================
A new surveillance bill in Zimbabwe may undermine the privacy of Internet
users.

Under the Posts and Telecommunications Bill, the president has the power to
force Internet service providers to "intercept or monitor communications or
suspend services to individuals in the interests of national security or the
maintenance of law and order." These broad provisions, coupled with the
largely authoritarian rule of current President Mugabe, have provoked
considerable fear among opposition leaders and the Internet community. Some
opponents have promised lawsuits in order to prevent the Bill from taking
effect.

Read Grant Ferrett, "Outcry at Zimbabwe internet bill," BBC News Online,
March 20, 2000, at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_683000/683681.stm

===============================================
[21] Yahoo investigated over privacy abuses
===============================================
Yet another major dot-com is being investigated for privacy abuses.

The United States Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is conducting a probe into
whether Yahoo improperly revealed personal information about its users to
third parties. Yahoo confirmed that the investigation was ongoing when it
filed its annual report with the US Securities Exchange Commission, as
required by law. The FTC's interest was particularly piqued by a recent
report which cited Yahoo's apparent failure to "guarantee the privacy of
individuals' information," particularly with regard to health-care related
websites.

See Cliff Edwards, "FTC Investigating Yahoo!", Associated Press, March 31,
2000, at
http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/tech/DailyNews/yahoo000331.html

===============================================
[22] Canadian privacy conference held
===============================================
In early April, the Computers, Freedom, and Privacy (CFP) conference was
held in Toronto to foster discussion of various cyberliberties issues.

Among the conference's many events was the second annual Big Brother Awards
ceremony, sponsored by Privacy International (a GILC member). These awards
were designed to spotlight some of the biggest threats to individual privacy
online. DoubleClick won the corporate invader award for its plans to match
its profiles of tracked Internet users with database information from its
recently acquired subsidiary, Abacus. United States Secretary of Commerce,
William Daley, won the worst government official award.

Another highlight of the conference was the Pioneer Awards ceremony,
sponsored by the Electronic Frontiers Foundation (EFF-a GILC member). This
year's award winners included Tim Berners-Lee and Phil Agre. Berners-Lee has
been one of the primary forces behind the development of the World Wide Web.
Agre, who is an associate professor at the University of California/Los
Angeles, was honored for his activities with the Red Rock Eater News
Service, which documents many of the social and political issues faced by
the computing community. EFF also honored "librarians everywhere" for their
efforts to promote "the public's right to free expression in cyberspace."

The CFP gathering also included panel discussions about a variety of
Internet-related subjects, ranging from domain name disputes to on-line
voting.

Press coverage of this event (including the Big Brother Awards) is available
via Declan McCullagh, "DoubleClick Wins for Losing," Wired News, April 6,
2000, at
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,35432,00.html

For more about the 2000 EFF Pioneer Awards, read
http://www.eff.org/awards/20000406_pioneer_pr.html

Visit the official CFP 2000 website at
http://www.cfp2000.org

===============================================
[23] Internet privacy bunker built
===============================================
Many people want shelters to protect their privacy on-line. It's just that
very few people have built a shelter with concrete and steel...until now.

A California company named Equinix has created a heavily fortified bunker
with the goal of providing complete privacy protection for Internet
companies. The bombproof facility, which includes sophisticated
anti-personnel devices and geometric hand-scanners, seems to provide strong
physical protection for computers housed inside. However, considerable
doubts have been raised about whether the facility will provide the same
level of protection against hackers as it does against hand grenades.
Moreover, there are concerns about the cost of these Doomsday redoubts;
while Equinix plans to build some 30 Internet forts around the world, the
price tag is estimated at $1 billion US.

See Todd Wallack, "Web Makes It Hard to Hide 'Secret' Facility Equinix's
Internet bunker listed on San Jose's site," San Francisco Chronicle, April
11, 2000, page C1, at
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/04/11
/BU60610.DTL

==========================================================
[24] Russian Internet freedom conference held
==========================================================
On April 19-21, the "Outlook for Freedom - 2000" conference was held in
Moscow. The event was organized by several GILC member organizations
(including the Russian Human Rights Network and the American Civil Liberties
Union) and was sponsored by the Ford Foundation and the Open Society
Institute. Discussions at the conference centered on such topics as online
privacy, computer cryptography, surveillance systems (such as the Russian
government's SORM initiative) and recent Russian Internet draft regulations.
The list of attendees included human rights activists, Internet experts,
lawyers and journalists. Sergei Smirnov of the Russian Human Rights Network
noted that the event was particularly important because it was "the first
time in Russia [that] we came together in one hall to discuss online privacy
issues."

For more details about the conference, visit
http://www.hro.org/2000/eindex.htm

==========================================================
	ABOUT THE GILC NEWS ALERT:
==========================================================

The GILC News Alert is the newsletter of the Global Internet Liberty
Campaign, an international coalition of organizations working to protect and
enhance online civil liberties and human rights.  Organizations are invited
to join GILC by contacting us at
gilc@gilc.org.

To alert members about threats to cyber liberties, please contact members
from your country or send a message to the general GILC address.

To submit information about upcoming events, new activist tools and news
stories, contact:

Christopher Chiu
GILC Coordinator
American Civil Liberties Union
125 Broad Street, 17th Floor
New York, New York 10004
USA

Or email:
cchiu@aclu.org

More information about GILC members and news is available at
http://www.gilc.org

You may re-print or redistribute the GILC NEWS ALERT
freely.

To subscribe to the alert, please send e-mail to
gilc-announce@gilc.org

with the following message in the body:
subscribe gilc-announce

========================================================
PUBLICATION OF THIS NEWSLETTER IS MADE POSSIBLE BY A
GRANT FROM THE OPEN SOCIETY INSTITUTE (OSI)
========================================================




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