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Subject: CSTB report on rights and responsibilities
The National Academy Sciences report is now available
on-line.
Via the WWW/Mosaic (nicest):
http://www.nas.edu:70/1/nap/online/rights
Via gopher (pretty good):
Try: "gopher -p1/nap/online/rights gopher.nas.edu"
Via anonymous ftp (the directory is there, but the files aren't yet):
ftp to "ftp.nas.edu"
"cd pub/reports/rights_and_responsibilities"
Among the workshop participants: David Farber, Mitch Kapor, Mike Godwin,
Dorthy Denning, Iowa State U.'s legal counsel, me, and many others.
- Carl
========================================
The Computer Science and Telecommunications Board (CSTB) is
pleased to announce the availability of a new report entitled
_Rights and Responsibilities of Participants in Networked
Communities_. Given increasing public interest and concern over the
behavior of people on electronic networks, the report seeks to
illuminate, to question, and to articulate difficult issues that
arise in this context, and thus to help to lay a foundation for a
more informed public debate and discussion of the rights and
responsibilities of those who operate in this domain.
The report is based on a workshop and a public forum involving
technologists, lawyers, policy analysts, network service providers, and
network operators in the exploration of several hypothetical but plausible
scenarios in four areas (free speech, electronic vandalism, intellectual
property interests, and privacy). The report illustrates how disagreements
in these areas are rooted in value judgments; for example, the extent to
which continuity with past precedents is desirable. Lawyers and
policy-makers often argue that rights and responsibilities in a new domain
inherently derive from existing rules, the report says. By contrast,
technologists with extensive network experience often assert that with a
new medium and a new form of human expression should also come new
rules of social intercourse. The report notes that these four areas have
always been inherently contentious, but over time certain compromises and
understandings have evolved that guide what people do when
communicating via traditional media such as print, telephone, radio, and
television. Today the proliferation of networking technology threatens this
state of understanding because it changes the environment in which
previous compromises were achieved, leading to a re-examination of the
same fundamental issues.
The report is available from the National Academy Press for $25.00
(prepaid) plus $4.00 shipping for the first copy and $.50 shipping for each
additional copy; tel. (202) 334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242. It will also be
available soon on the WorldWide Web at http://www.nas.edu; via Gopher
at gopher.nas.edu; and via FTP at ftp.nas.edu.
The National Research Council is the principal operating arm of the
National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering.
It is a private, non-profit institution that provides independent advice on
science and technology issues under a congressional charter. CSTB
addresses national scientific and policy issues in computing science,
telecommunications, and computer technology and their applications.
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