Online Activism Organizations List

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From: Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>

Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk,alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk,alt.politics.datahighway,alt.internet.services,alt.culture.internet,alt.cyberspace,alt.culture.usenet,alt.culture.internet,comp.answers,alt.answers,news.answers

Subject: ONLINE OUTPOSTS -- Cyberspatial Community Groups -- Local, Nat'l, Internat'l

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===



Online Activism Organizations List 4.07

=======================================


Outposts on the Electronic Frontier - International, National, Regional &

Local Groups Supporting the Online Community  


An ACTION/EFF FAQ by Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>


Updated: 10/11/94


Archived at: ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Issues/Activism/activ_groups.faq


See also /pub/EFF/Issues/Activism/activ_resource.faq, the Online Activism

Resources List.


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


 

CONTENTS

========


RECENT CHANGES

ORGANIZATION LISTINGS

 NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL

  USA

  AUSTRALIA

  CANADA

  UK/GREAT BRITAIN

 GLOBAL/MULTINATIONAL

 REGIONAL/LOCAL

  USA

   [Misc states]

  UK/GREAT BRITAIN

   [Misc areas]

ADMINISTRIVIA 

 


Recent Changes

==============


4.07 - updated CPSR (listserv corrections); updated EFA (new domain, no

       more IRC, mailing list corrections).

4.06 - updated Administrivia section (added Excerpting subsection)

4.05 - added TPR; added ASIS; minor update to PRC entry; added CGS; added CPI;

       update to EFA (new WWW server)

4.04 - update to EFC entry (new ph. numbers, new ftp site); update contact

       info for Mike Barnes (newsletter ed.) under CommUnity; update of

       EF-Houston info; update of EFF-Austin info

4.03 - update to HEIRAlliance/CNI entry; other minor changes

4.02 - added Voters Telecom Watch

4.01 - Made this list/FAQ a resource of the ACTION forum. Updated and

       reformatted Administrivia section.

4.00 - major update.  Reformatted in Setext markup style. Added or

       corrected information for a large number of organizations.  Moved 

       "Cyberspace" section to the new Online Activism Resource List

       (activ_resource.faq)



 *************************************************************************



ORGANIZATION LISTINGS

=====================



GLOBAL/MULTINATIONAL

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

 

* CAUSE

  CAUSE is the association for managing and using information technology

  in higher education. An international nonprofit association, CAUSE is

  dedicated to enhancing the administration and delivery of higher

  education through the effective management and use of information

  technology. Informally organized in 1962, CAUSE today includes over 1,060

  campuses and 54 corporate members, worldwide.  CAUSE's scope encompasses

  the management and use of academic computing, library automation, and

  networking, as well as administration of the enterprise.  CAUSE strives

  to promote more effective planning, management, and evaluation of

  computing and information technologies in colleges and universities, and

  believes that, while information technology is an enabling force,

  people are the key to accomplishing our mission.  Goals: provide

  support for IT managers; inform IT decision-makers and users; educate

  and influence non-educational (incl. business and govt.) communications

  leaders.  CAUSE collaborates with various other organizations incl. the

  Assoc. of Research Libraries, CHEMA, NACUBO, ACUTA, etc., and

  participates in EDUCOM's Networking and Telecommunications Task Force.

  Participates in the Higher Education Information Resources Alliance (see

  their entry for more info) and the Coalition for Networked Information,

  with Assoc. of Research Libraries and EDUCOM.

  Info: info@cause.colorado.edu

  HEIRAlliance/CNI general: joan@cni.org

  Gopher: cause-gopher.colorado.edu

  WWW: gopher://cause-gopher.colorado.edu:70/1

  HEIRAlliance/CNI gopher: gopher.cni.org

  Snail: 4880 Pearl E. Circle

Suite 302E

Boulder CO 80301 USA

  Voice: +1 303 449 4430

  Fax:   +1 303 440 0461

   

* Institute for Global Communications (IGC)

  The Institute for Global Communications (IGC) provides computer

  networking tools for international communications and information

  exchange. The IGC Networks -- PeaceNet, EcoNet, ConflictNet and

  LaborNet -- comprise the world's only computer communications system

  dedicated solely to environmental preservation, peace, and human

  rights.  New technologies are helping these worldwide communities

  cooperate more effectively and efficiently. IGC, located in San

  Francisco, California, is a division of the Tides Foundation, a

  501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization. By subscribing to any one of the IGC

  Networks, you have full access to the resources of any of the other IGC

  Networks.  IGC maintains a major program to develop low-cost access to

  computer networking from outside the United States, especially in

  non-industrialized areas.  This program is the Association of

  Progressive Communications (APC) which now includes low-cost computer

  networks in several countries.

  Basic info: igc-info@igc.apc.org, apc-info@igc.apc.org

  General: support@igc.apc.org, support@igc.org

  FTP: igc.apc.org

  Gopher: igc.apc.org

  PeaceNet staff: peacenet@igc.apc.org

  ConflictNet staff: ?

  LaborNet staff: ?

  EcoNet staff: ?

  International Affiliates: 

   US/Mexico/China/Japan/MidEast: support@ign.apc.org

   Argentina (Wamani/CCI network): apoyo@wamani.apc.org

   Australia/Pac. Is./SE Asia (Pegasus network): support@peg.apc.org

   Brasil/misc. S.Am. areas (AlterNex/IBASE network): suporte@ax.apc.org

   Canada/Cuba (Web/Nirv Centre network): support@web.apc.org

   Ecuador (EcuaNex network): intercom@ecuanex.apc.org

   Nicaragua/Panama/misc Central Am. areas (Nicarao/CRIES network):

     support@ni.apc.org

   Germany/Italy/Austria/Switzerland/Zagreb/Beograd (ComLink e.V.

     network): support@oln.comlink.de 

   Russia/Commonwealth of Independent States (GlasNet): support@glas.apc.org

   S. Africa (SANGONet): support@wn.apc.org

   Sweden/Scandinavia/Baltic/St. Petersburg area (NordNet): 

    support@pns.apc.org

   Uruguay/Paraguay (Chasque network): apoyo@chasque.org.uy

   UK/Africa/misc. Asian & European areas (GREENET): support@gn.apc.org

  Snail: 18 de Boom St.

San Francisco CA 94107 USA

  Voice: +1 415 442 0220 (USA/etc.)      +1 416 596 0212 (Can./Cuba)

+54 1 35 6842 (Arg.)           +44 71 608 3040 (UK/etc.)

+61 7 257 1111 (Austral./etc.) +49 511 350 1573 (Ger./It./etc.)

+55 21 286 0348 (Braz./etc.)   +7 095 207 0704 (Rus./CIS)

+27 11 838 6943 (S.Af.)        +46 8 6000331 (Swe./etc.)

+593 2 528 716 (Ecu.)          +505 2 26 2 28 (Nic./etc.)

+598 2 596 192 (Uru./Para.)

  Fax: +1 415 546 1794 (USA) - contact other offices for non US

       fax numbers and mailing addresses.


* Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) 

  See Internet Society


* Internet Society (ISoc) - Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)

  The Internet Society is the international organization for global

  cooperation and coordination for the Internet and its internetworking

  technologies and applications. Its members reflect the breadth of the

  entire Internet community and consist of individuals, corporations,

  non-profit organizations, and government agencies. Its principal purpose

  is to maintain and extend the development and availability of the

  Internet and its associated technologies and applications - both as an

  end in itself, and as a means of enabling organizations, professions, and

  individuals worldwide to more effectively collaborate, cooperate, and

  innovate in their respective fields and interests. The Internet Society

  is incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation in Washington DC USA.

  ISoc hosts the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), a volunteer 

  group which works on Internet technical standards.

  Membership (individual): membership@isoc.org 

  Membership (organization): org-membership@isoc.org

  ftp: ftp.isoc.org

  Gopher: gopher.isoc.org; ietf.cnri.reston.va.us

  WWW: gopher://gopher.isoc.org

  IETF general: ietf-info@cnri.reston.va.us

  IETF dicussion mailing list: ietf-request@cnri.reston.va.us

  IETF announcements mailing list: ietf-announce-request@cnri.reston.va.us

  Snail: 12020 Sunrise Valley Drive, suite 270

Reston VA 22091 USA

  Voice:  +1 703 648 9888

   1 800 468 9507 (USA only)

  Fax:    +1 703 648 9887


 

NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL

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


 

 USA

----


* American Society for Information Science (ASIS)

  The American Society for Information Science (ASIS) is a nonprofit

  professional association organized for scientific, literary, and

  educational purposes and dedicated to the creation, organization,

  dissemination and application of knowledge concerning information and its

  transfer.  Founded in the mid-1930's, ASIS has a history which stems from

  the earliest days of the modern era of documentation.  ASIS counts among

  its membership some 4,000 information specialists from such fields as

  computer science, management, engineering, librarianship, chemistry,

  linguistics, and education.  ASIS and its members are called upon to help

  determine new directions and standards for the development of information

  policies and practices. The mission of the American Society for

  Information Science is to advance information professionals and the field

  of information science.

  General: asis@cni.org

  Voice: +1 301 495 0900

  Fax:   +1 301 495 0810

  Snail: P.O. Box 554 

Washington DC 20044-0554 USA

 

* Americans Communicating Electronically (ACE)

  ACE membership is diverse and represents private and govt. organizations

  and individuals who wish to promote interactive communications among

  federal, state, and local governments, private businesses, public

  libraries, and schools, rural cooperatives, public and private

  universities, community-based arts and theater groups, voluntary

  associations, job training services, and health care organizations.  The

  members of ACE are particularly concerned that access and participation

  be made possible and convenient for Americans who do not own modem

  equipped computers. To support the development of interactive

  communications between governments and communities, ACE is recommending

  that all government agencies establish information access programs to

  help create and foster an "interactive citizen-government communications

  system."  Many govt. agencies, from the White House to the NSF and the 

  Dept. of Labor, are already participating in the ACE project.  Unlike

  everything else on this list, ACE is actually a govt.-sponsored project.

  There are several ACE mailing lists: ACE-MG (general ACE info), CET-MG

  (Communities in Economic Transition), CET-NEWS (C.E.T. bulletins), etc.

  Basic info: info@ace.esusda.gov

  General: letters@ace.esusda.gov

  Mailing list subscriptions: almanac@ace.esusda.gov [message body:

      subscribe <listname> <your name>]

 

* Center for Civic Networking (CCN/CivicNet)

  The Center for Civic Networking is a non-profit organization,

  based in Boston and Washington, D.C., that promotes broad public

  benefits of the emerging national information infrastructure.

  The Center brings together expertise in large-scale computer and

  network systems, community-based applications of computing, non-

  profit management, community development, architecture, public

  policy, and democratic participation. The Center's Programs

  focus on framing a national vision for civic networking,

  developing a policy framework that supports civic networking,

  developing and supporting model civic networking projects, and

  assisting in the technology transfer needed to achieve the broad-

  based benefits of civic networking.  CCN is involved with SDIN network,

  the Cambridge Civic Forum, and the "From Townhalls to Local Civic

  Networks" conference, and ACE. 

  General: Miles Fidelman <mfidelman@world.std.com>

  <mfidelman@civicnet.org>, Exec. Dir.   

   Richard Civille <rciville@civicnet.org>, Dir., DC office

  FTP: world.std.com, ftp/amo/civicnet

       ftp.eff.org, pub/Groups/CCN

  Gopher: gopher.std.com, 1/associations/civicnet 

  gopher.eff.org, 1/Groups/CCN

  WWW: gopher://gopher.std.com:70/11/associations/civicnet

       http://www.eff.org/pub/Groups/CCN/

  Voice: +1 202 362 3831 (R. Civille, Washington DC office)

 

* Center for Governmental Studies (CGS)

  A Los Angeles-based non-profit, research organization which works to

  improve the processes of media and democratic governance.  In 1989 the

  Center launched The California Channel, the nation's first "state C-SPAN"

  now available to over 4 million California homes.  With the Babcock,

  Carnegie, Cummings, Gerbode and Irvine foundations, CGS initiated the

  Democracy Network, a plan for an interactive network/station for the NII 

  that will allow voters, through their TV sets or computers to access

  information on demand from political candidates and ballot measure

  committees, and to talk with candidates and voters in an electronic town

  hall, to increase voter participation, decrease campaign costs, encourage

  candidates to devote more attention to substantive issues, and demonstrate

  to elected officials the value of incorporating free voter information

  into the new definition of "universal service."

  Email: dnetcgs@aol.com

  Voice: +1 310 470 6590

  Fax:   +1 310 475 3752

  Snail: 10951 West Pico Blvd., Suite 206

Los Angeles CA 90064 USA


* Coalition for Networked Information (CNI) - HEIRAlliance

  (See Higher Education Information Resources Alliance for more info.)


* Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR)

  CPSR is a national membership organization, based in Palo Alto,

  California.  CPSR conducts many activities to protect privacy and civil

  liberties.  Membership is open to the public and support is welcome. 

  CPSR maintains local chapters in several US cities.  CPSR hosts several

  mailing lists, including cpsr-cpu (CPSR's "CPU" newsletter for informa-

  tion technology workers), cpsr-announce (CPSR's general news and announce-

  ments list, gated to Usenet newsgroup comp.org.cpsr.announce), and bawit-

  announce (Bay Area Women & Information Technology working group announce-

  ments), among others.

  General (nat'l. HQ): cpsr@csli.stanford.edu

  General (DC offc.): Marc Rotenberg <rotenberg@washofc.cpsr.org>

  Washington DC chapter: Larry Hunter <hunter@nlm.nih.gov>

  NY chapter: David Friedlander <friedd@pipeline.com>

  Berkeley CA chapter: Karen Coyle <cpsr-berkeley@cpsr.org>

  Palo Alto CA chapter: Andre Bacard <abacard@well.sf.ca.us>

  Portland OR chapter: Erik Nilsson <erikn@goldfish.mitron.tek.com>

  Los Angeles chapter: Rodney J. Hoffman <rodney@oxy.edu>

  Mailing lists: listserv@cpsr.org, message body: "subscribe <listname - see

above> <name>"

  FTP: ftp.cpsr.org

  Gopher: gopher.cpsr.org

  WWW: http://www.cpsr.org/

  UseNet: comp.org.cpsr.talk, comp.org.cpsr.announce

  Nanotechnology SIG: Ted Kaehler <kaehler2@applelink.apple.com>

  Electoral issues: Eva Waskell, voice: +1 703 435 1283 evenings

  Snail: CPSR National Office        CPSR/Berkeley

P.O. Box 717                SE P.O. Box 40361

Palo Alto CA 94302 USA      Berkeley CA 94704 USA

  Voice: +1 415 322 3778             +1 415 398 2818

  Fax:   +1 415 322 3798

 

* Consortium for School Networking (CoSN)

  Through computer networking, the Consortium will help educators and

  students access information and communications resources that will

  increase their productivity, professional competence, and opportunities

  for learning and collaborative work. The Consortium advocates the

  following goals: the timely deployment of the national research and

  education network; the development and distribution of network-based

  information resources for schools; the development of the human

  resources needed to make full and efficient use of networks through

  staff development programs, educational materials and software; form a

  national leadership group for educational telecommunications, to have a

  voice in shaping policy in this area; provide access to information

  about the National Research and Education Network (NREN) and other

  educational telecommunications efforts; reach a large community of

  individuals involved in every aspect of network technology and its

  application to K-12 education; help advance the development of

  information resources and tools for networking; foster collaborative

  opportunities to develop new resources and services for educators. 

  CoSN is a non-profit organization, 501(c)(3) application pending.

  General: cosn@bitnic.bitnet, cosn%bitnic@cunyvm.cuny.edu

  Gopher: digital.cosn.org

  Snail: P.O. Box 6519

Washington DC 20035-5193 USA

  Voice: +1 202 466 6296

  Fax:   +1 202 872 4318


* Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI)

  A non-profit research and development organization formed in 1986 to

  help focus U.S. strengths in information processing technology.  Working

  with industry, government, and academia, CNRI is engaged in scientific

  research on the design of experimental infrastructure which can improve

  the country's long-range scientific and engineering productivity.

  CNRI organizes multi-party collaborative research activities among

  U.S. government, business and academic organizations.  An experimental

  information infrastructure will provide an important basis for joint

  university/industry research and facilitate rapid transfer of advanced

  scientific concepts and technology between research groups and also into

  experimental applications.

  General: info@cnri.reston.va.us

  Gopher: ietf.cnri.reston.va.us, 1/CNRI Information

  WWW: gopher://ietf.cnri.reston.va.us:70/11/CNRI%20Information

  Snail: 895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100

Reston, VA  22091

  Voice: +1 703 620 8990


* Corporation for Research and Educational Networking (CREN)

  Despite the name, this is a non-profit organization. CREN advances the

  goals of institutions of higher education by facilitating, catalyzing

  and leveraging contributions from the worldwide higher education

  community directed toward building a global computing and

  communications infrastructure that: supports access to shared

  information services and resources; supports scholarly collaboration

  and educational outreach; and contributes to enhanced individual and

  institutional productivity.  CREN provides BITNET (and thus Internet

  email) access to member institutions, and is also working on NII

  issues, hoping to help ensure that such a future network provides

  for the needs of the educational and research communities.

  General: bitnet@cren.net

  ftp: info.cren.net, cren.org

  gopher: info.cren.net

  Snail: 1112 16th St. NW,  Suite 600

Washington, DC 20036 USA

  Voice: +1 202 872 4200

 

* Electronic Frontier Foundation

  A non-profit public interest membership organization, working to protect

  individual rights in the emerging information age.  EFF supports legal

  and legislative action to protect the civil liberties of online users;

  hosts and participates in related conferences and projects, including

  Big Dummy's Guide to the Internet, and Computers and Academic Freedom; 

  and works to educate the online community about its legal rights and

  responsibilities.  EFF members receive online bulletins about the

  critical issues and debates affecting computer-mediated communications

  and participate in online political activism. Donations are welcome and

  are tax deductible.  EFF is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization.

  Basic info: info@eff.org

  General: ask@eff.org

  Membership: membership@eff.org

  Legal: Shari Steele <ssteele@eff.org>, Dir. of Legal Services

Mike Godwin <mnemonic@eff.org>, Online Counsel

  Policy/Open Platform/NII: Daniel J. Weitzner (djw@eff.org),

    Senior Staff Counsel  

  Tech: Dan Brown <brown@eff.org>, Systems Administrator

  Online newsletter: Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>, Online Activist

  Hardcopy publications: pubs@eff.org

  Mailing list requests: listserv@eff.org (message of "HELP" or "LONGINDEX")

  FTP: ftp.eff.org, 

  Gopher: gopher.eff.org

  WAIS:  wais.eff.org 

  WWW:  http://www.eff.org/

  Usenet: comp.org.eff.talk, comp.org.eff.news, alt.politics.datahighway

  WELL: g eff

  AOL: keyword EFF

  CIS: GO EFFSIG

  Computers & Academic Freedom: kadie@eff.org, greeny@eff.org

  CAF mailing list: listserv@eff.org (add comp-academic-freedom-news)

  Computer underground Digest archives: cudarch@eff.org

  Snail: 1001 G St. NW, Suite 950 E

Washington DC 20001, USA

  voice: +1 202 347 5400

  fax:   +1 202 393 5509

* Higher Education Information Resources Alliance (HEIRAlliance) - CNI

  The Higher Education Information Resources Alliance (HEIRAlliance) is a

  vehicle for cooperative projects between the Association of Research

  Libraries, CAUSE, and EDUCOM. Currently, its major projects are

  The Coalition for Networked Information, (formed in 1990; promotes the

  creation of and access to information resources in networked environments

  in order to enrich scholarship and to enhance intellectual productivity. 

  Roughly 175 organizations and institutions are members of the Coalition)

  and the HEIRAlliance Executive Strategies reports (designed to keep chief

  higher education executives informed about critical issues related to

  information technologies.)

  General: Craig A. Summerhill <craig@cni.org>, Systems Coord./Program Ofcr.

  CNI general: Joan Lippincott <joan@cni.org>, Asst. Exec. Dir.

  Exec. Strategies report queries: Karen McBride <kmcbride@CAUSE.colorado.edu>

  CNI Announcements list: listproc@cni.org, message body: "subscribe

  cni-announce <firstname> <lastname>"

  Gopher: gopher.cni.org

  WWW: gopher://gopher.cni.org:70/1

  Snail: 21 Dupont Circle, N.W.

Washington DC 20036 USA

  Voice: +1 202 296 5098


* Information Systems Security Association (ISSA)

    [No information available.]

  Voice: +1 312 644 6610, Dave Lenef (Communications Coordinator) 

  Fax:   +1 312 321 6869

 

* National Online Media Association (NOMA)

  NOMA is a trade association for BBS's, Internet service providers, and

  other online services and public networking operations.  It was formed

  at ONE BBSCON '93 in August at Colorado Springs, CO.  NOMA will be in an

  initial organizational phase for a while. NOMA's mission is to act for

  the BBS and online service industry  on matters of national importance

  by creating an industry presence in Washington, D.C. and other means;

  assist its members at the state and local levels; educate the public on

  the unique social, business and legal roles of BBS's and other online

  services; establish appropriate industry standards and guidelines;

  promote business development in the industry; and maintain and provide

  access to resources and industry information for use by the public and

  the industry.  A forum on Delphi has been provided, as well as the

  internet mailing list, which may be freely gated to BBS networks.

  General: Phill Liggett <liggett@delphi.com> 

   Lance Rose <elrose@echonyc.com>

   Steve Barber <sbarber@echonyc.com>

  Mailing list requests: listproc@echonyc.com (subscribe natbbs <name>)

  FidoNet: Jim Taylor, 1:310/5 <jim.taylor@f5.n310.z1.fidonet.org>

  Delphi: [no contact info provided]  

  Snail: NOMA, c/o Phill Liggett

Solutions, Inc.

89 Seymore Ave.

West Hartford CT 06119 USA

  Voice: Phill Liggett, +1 203 233 3163

Lance Rose, +1 201 509 1700 FOR

  BBS: +1 805 520 2300 (sysop: Celeste Clark)

       +1 703 648 1841 (sysop: Tony McClenny)

       +1 209 685 8487 (sysop: W. Mark Richmond)

 

* National Public Telecomputing Network (NPTN) - a.k.a. Free-Net

  The National Public Telecomputing Network exists to make free public 

  access to computerized communications and information services a 

  reality; to help people in cities throughout the U.S. and the world 

  to establish free, open access, community computer systems (Free-Nets);

  to link those systems together into a common network similar to 

  National Public Radio or PBS on TV; to help supplement what the local 

  systems are able to produce with high quality network-wide services 

  and features. NPTN is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation.  [Note:

  not all "Free-Net"-like systems are part of NPTN, just most of them.]

  General: info@nptn.org [note: this is not an automailer, but a person]

  Canadian Free-Net mailing list: listprocessor@cunews.carleton.ca, 

  (subscribe CAN-FREENET <name>)

  Charlotte NC Free-Net list: listserv@unccvm.uncc.edu (subscribe

      CITYNET <name>)

  Snail: National Public Telecomputing Network          

P.O. Box 1987                                    

Cleveland, Ohio  44106                       

  Voice: +1 216 247 5800

  Fax: +1 216 247 3328

  Community Free-Net affiliate systems                    modem number

    Big Sky Telegraph           Dillon, Montana         +1 406 683 7680   

    Buffalo Free-Net            Buffalo, New York       +1 716 645 6128

    Cleveland Free-Net          Cleveland, Ohio         +1 216 368 3888

    COIN                        Columbia, Missouri      +1 314 884 7000

    Denver Free-Net             Denver, Colorado        +1 303 270 4865

    Heartland Free-Net          Peoria, Illinois        +1 309 674 1100

    Lorain County Free-Net      Elyria, Ohio            +1 216 366 9721

    Medina County Free-Net      Medina, Ohio            +1 216 723 6732

    National Capital Free-Net   Ottawa, Ont., Canada    +1 613 564 3600

    Tallahassee Free-Net        Tallahassee, Florida    +1 904 576 6330

    Tristate Online             Cincinnati, Ohio        +1 513 579 1990

    Tri-Cities Free-Net         Hanford, Washington     +1 509 375 1111

    Victoria Free-Net           Victoria, BC, Canada    +1 604 595 2300

    Wellington Citynet          Wellington, New Zealand +64 4 801 3060

    Youngstown Free-Net         Youngstown, Ohio        +1 216 742 3072

  For more detailed information, including internet addresses and login

  instructions, see ftp.eff.org, pub/Groups/NPTN-Freenet/login.info

  [NOTE: Not all systems called "free-nets" are part of the NPTN group.] 


* OMB Watch

  OMB Watch is a nonprofit research, educational & advocacy organization

  that monitors Executive Branch activities affecting nonprofit, public

  interest & community groups.  OMB (the White House Office of Management 

  & Budget) is the main focus as it oversees nearly all executive branch

  functions.  Our goal is to encourage broad public participation in

  government decision-making to promote a more open & accountable gov/t.

  Our activities include: technical assistance on budget, regulatory 

  accountability, govt. secrecy, & general govt. decision-making through 

  publications, training sessions & direct links to certain govt. data; 

  community forums on the federal budget to reorder priorities to domestic 

  needs; RTK NET (Right-to-Know computer network); advocacy--through the

  tools to empower community groups and coordination of coalitional efforts

  in a variety of areas; support of public access to and use of gov't 

  information.  Most activity conducted offline, so send a snailmail

  address if you want OMB Watch materials.

  General: Patrice McDermot <patricem@cap.gwu.edu>


* Telecommunications Policy Roundtable (TPR)

  The TPR is a coalition of more than 100 organizations which was organized

  in the spring of 1993 to discuss federal telecommunications and

  information policy.  The group as a whole meets every month in

  Washington, DC, and it also sponsors several regular and ad hoc

  committees and subcommittees to address specific roundtable concerns.

  TPR members include EFF, CME, CNI, TAP, and CPSR.  TPR sponsors an

  open-to-all mailing list forum for discussion of U.S. telecom policy,

  called ROUNDTABLE.

  General: Jeff Chester <cme@access.digex.net>,

  Technical admin: Craig Summerhill <craig@cni.org>                         

  Mailing list subscription: listproc@cni.org, message body: "SUBSCRIBE

     ROUNDTABLE <firstname> <lastname>"  

  Mailing list admin: Jamie Love <love@essential.org>

  Voice: +1 202 628 2620 (Center for Media Education, initial contact for

organizations wishing to joing TPR)

  Fax:   +1 202 234 5176 (c/o Jamie Love at TAP)


* Voters Telecom Watch (VTW)

  The Voters Telecomm Watch is a volunteer organization dedicated to

  monitoring federal legislation that affects telecommunications and

  civil liberties.   VTW is based primarily out of New York, though they

  have volunteers throughout the US.  Voters Telecomm Watch keeps scorecards

  on legislators' positions on legislation that affects telecommunications

  and civil liberties.

  General: vtw@vtw.org

  Press contact: stc@vtw.org

  Mailing list requests (announcements): vtw-announce-request@vtw.org, message

      body: "subscribe vtw-announce

      <firstname> <lastname>"

  Mailing list requests (discussion): vtw-list-request@vtw.org, message body:

      "subscribe vtw-list <firstname> 

      <lastname>"

  FTP: ftp.eff.org, /pub/Groups/VTW/ [minimal info]

  Gopher: gopher.panix.com, 1/vtw [much more info that at ftp site]

  WWW: gopher://gopher.panix.com/11/vtw

  Voice: +1 718 596 2851



 Australia

----------

 

* Association for Community Telematics (ACT)

  Founded in 1993 to help promote an enlightened democratic order in the

  emerging cyberspace. Telematics = telecommunications + informatics -

  the socio-technological aspects of computer communications and

  networking. In the information revolution underway in Australia,

  the grassroots level of the community is being overlooked.  The gap

  between the information rich and the information poor is growing wider,

  and the broader community has yet to gain direct access to these tools 

  of the information revolution.  There is a danger that the evolving

  information society will be more about social control than empowerment

  of the community.  ACT serves as a lobby for greater resources to develop

  community-based computer networks, to simplify the use of these networks,

  to provide better support for new users, and to encourage a wider range

  of people, including those with no previous experience with computers, to

  come online.  ACT exists to encourage all sectors, including government,

  the private sector, community groups, educational and research sectors,

  activist groups and trade unions, to develop a vision statement and a

  plan for Australia's transition to a more democratic and socially just

  information society.

  General: Geoff Holland <geoff@uow.edu.au, gholland@peg.apc.org>

  FTP: ftp.eff.org, pub/Groups/ACT/

  Gopher: gopher.eff.org - "...Groups"/"ACT"

  Snail:  PO Box 683

  Bondi Jcn. NSW 2022 Australia 

  Voice: (02) 365 2251, International: +61 2 365 2251

 

* Electronic Frontiers Australia Inc. (EFA)

  EFA is an association formed to define, promote and defend the

  freedoms of electronic network users. Incorporated in May 1994,

  membership is open to anyone who supports its aims, which are to:

  ensure that people have the same basic freedoms 'within' computer

  based communication systems as without; educate the community at

  large about computer based communication systems and their use;

  support, encourage and advise on the development and use of computer

  based communication systems, and related innovations; and research

  and advise on the law as applied to computer based communication

  systems and related technologies.  EFA has set-up a mailing list,

  a USENET newsgroup and Fidonet conference (all cross-gated) for

  discussion and organising of its activities.

  Information: info@efa.org.au

  General: ask@efa.org.au

   EFA at 3:632/552 (FidoNet)

  Membership: membership@efa.org.au

      Brenda Aynsley at 3:620/243 (FidoNet)

  CompuServe: Michael Baker <100026,1321>

  Board of directors mailing list: board@efa.org.au

  Administration mailing list: admin@efa.org.au

  Usenet: aus.org.efa

  Fidonet echo: EFA, avail. from 3:632/552

  Mailing list subscribe: efa-request@efa.org.au, message body: "subscribe"

  FTP: ftp.eff.org, /pub/Groups/EF-Australia/

       [.au site to be announced soon]

  Gopher: gopher.eff.org, 1/Groups/EF-Australia

  WWW: http://www.efa.org.au/EFA/

  MOO: EFA-MOO, telnet://cleese.apana.org.au:7777

  Snail: Electronic Frontiers Australia Inc.

PO Box 382

North Adelaide SA 5006 Australia

  Voice: (08) 384 7316, International: +61 8 384 7316


 

 Canada 

-------


* Electronic Frontier Canada (EFC)

  EFC was founded in Januaury 1994 "to ensre that the principles embodied

  in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms are protected as new

  computing, communications, and information technologies emerge".  EFC

  was co-founded by Dr. Jeffrey Shallit of U. Waterloo and Dr. David Jones

  of McGill U.

  General: efc@graceland.uwaterloo.ca

   Dr. Jeffrey Shallit <shallit@graceland.waterloo.ca>

   Dr. David Jones <djones@cim.mcgill.ca>

  FTP: insight.mcmaster.ca, /pub/efc

  Gopher: gopher.ee.mcgill.ca, 1/community/efc

  WWW: http://www.ee.mcgill.ca/efc/efc.html

       gopher://gopher.ee.mcgill.ca/11/community/efc 

  Voice: +1 519 888 4804, Dr. Shallit

+1 905 525 9140 x24689, Dr. Jones

  Fax:   +1 519 885 1208, Dr. Shallit

+1 905 546 9995, Dr. Jones

 


 UK/Great Britain

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

 

* CommUnity (Computer Communicators' Association)

  Formed in 1993, to repesent the interest of the UK online community. It

  was initally formed in response to the threat of BBS licencing posed by

  the ELSPA (European Leisure Software Publishers Association) and FAST

  (Federation Against Software Theft); and out of widespread concern over

  growing press and media misrepresentation of the comms-using community

  in the UK.  To date CommUnity has: actively responded to a number of 

  television documentaries and magazines misrepresenting computer-comms 

  users as primarily software pirates and pornographers; Met with a key 

  Member of Parliament to head off a proposed BBS licensing scheme; pro-

  duced a comprehensive report for a Home Affairs Select Committee

  enquiry into computer pornography; lauched its own electronic magazine,

  CommUnicator.

  General: community@arkham.demon.co.uk

   Jim Trash <jim@chaos.infocom.co.uk>

     FidoNet 2:250/310

     CompuServe 100016,251

  Newsletter: Mike Barnes <mjb@mavericks.bt.co.uk>

  Convener: Oliver Clarke <oliver@pigpen.demon.co.uk> 

    FidoNet Classic 2:252/150

  FTP: ftp.demon.co.uk, /pub/archives/community/

       ftp.eff.org, /pub/Groups/CommUnity/

  Gopher: gopher.eff.org, Groups/CommUnity

  Usenet: uk.org.community (gated to FidoNet, et al. "COMMUNITY" echo)

  FidoNet/GTNet/WildNet/TheNet/NeST: COMMUNITY conference

  FidoNet netmail: 2:254/151, 2:254/152

  Snail: CommUnity                Newsletter:  CommUnicator

89 Mayfair Avenue                     13 Martin Rd.

Worcester Park                        Ipswich, Suffolk

Surrey KT4 7SJ, UK                    IP2 8BJ, UK

  Voice:    n/a                                +44 01473 692975

  BBS: +44 71 738 5596/5557 (London - Arkham, FidoNet: 2:254/151,

       +44 706 821837       (Manchester - Pig Pen, FidoNet: 2:252/150)

       +44 532 605876       (Leeds - Owl Service, FidoNet: 2:250/312)

 

 

REGIONAL/LOCAL

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

 

 USA

----

 

** Alabama **

 

HUNTSVILLE & N. ALABAMA

 

* Linux Users of North Alabama (LUNA) [formerly Huntsville Group]

  LUNA is more than an advocacy group for Linux (a freeware version of

  Unix for PCs), having become involved in network access issues on a

  local basis, including encouragement of the BBS community, assisting

  the startup of a local Internet access site, working on UAH's campus

  network, providing tutorials on networking home computers, and

  assisting communications development at a local high school. "LUNA is

  here to provide community networking", says Matt Midboe. Though not

  currently working on policy issues, LUNA's technically-oriented members

  concentrate on bringing cyberspace to people who did not have the

  capability and know-how before.

  General: Matt Midboe <mmidboe@nyx.cs.du.edu>

   [also try postmaster@luna.cs.uah.edu to see if this

   new site is up yet.]


 

** California **


STATE-WIDE


* Privacy Rights Clearinghouse (PRC)

  The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse is a non-profit consumer education

  project funded by the Telecommunications Education Trust, a program

  of the Telecommunications Education Trust. We are a service for

  California consumers, providing an 800-number hotline, free

  information sheets, publication of an annual policy report, and

  open research facilities. Our publications can be accessed by

  gopher. The PRC focuses on technology-related privacy issues and the

  protection of personal information. These issues include: direct

  marketing, credit reports, workplace monitoring, Social Security

  numbers, government records, wireless phones and medical records.

  The PRC tracks federal and state legislation that affects

  privacy rights. We also research the effects of future services and

  technologies on privacy rights, such as the National Information

  Infrastructure and health care reform.  PRC has been in operation since

  October 1992.

  General: prc@teetot.acusd.edu

  FTP: ftp.acusd.edu, /pub/privacy/

  Gopher: gopher.acusd.edu, 1/USDinfo/privacy

  WWW: gopher://gopher.acusd.edu.:70/11/USDinfo/privacy

  Telnet: teetot.acusd.edu, login: privacy

  BBS: +1 619 260 4670 (8N1, 2400bps, local> c teetot, login: privacy)

       +1 619 260 4789 (8N1, 9600-14400bps, local> c teetot, login: privacy)

  Snail: The Privacy Rights Clearinghouse

The Center for Public Interest Law 

5998 Alcala Park

San Diego, CA  92110

  Voice: +1 619 260 4806

  1 800 773 7748 (Hotline, CA US only, 9a-5p PDT, M-F)

+1 619 298 3396 (Hotline, all others, 9a-5p PDT, M-F)

  Fax:   +1 619 260 4753



SAN FRANCISCO BAY/BERKELEY AREA

 

* BAWiT (Bay Area Women in Telecom)

  Hosted by CPSR/Berkeley, and probably involved with This!Group, BAWiT

  is a group of women working with telecom to make the online community

  inclusive rather than exclusive of women and minorities. The

  working group's activities include outreach and mentoring, and

  providing speakers for events & informal online discussions. 

  Info: Judi Clark <judic@sunnyside.com, judic@netcom.com>

  Mail lists: listserv@cpsr.org (message body containing:

      subscribe bawit-announce [1st & last name])

       

* This!Group

  [This!Group is dormant as of this writing, but enthusiasm for new

  projects and activism might get the ball rolling again.]   

  General: Judi Clark <judic@netcom.com>


 

** District of Columbia **

 

WASHINGTON DC METRO AREA

    

* Group 2600 [and some public access operators]

  General: Bob Stratton <strat@intercon.com, strat@uunet.uu.net>

   Mikki Barry <ooblick@intercon.com>

 


** Massachusetts **

 

CAMBRIDGE-BOSTON METRO AREA

 

* EF128 (Electronic Frontier Route 128). 

  [No information available at this time; appears to be defunct]

  General: Lar Kaufman <lark@ora.com>

 


** Mississippi **

 

GULF COAST

 

* SotMESC/GCMS

  Local chapter with chapters in Alaska, Orlando Florida, Atlanta

  Georgia, Mobile Alabama, Montgomery Alabama, Oxford Miss,

  California, Ocean Springs Miss, and other locations.

  [No info available on what this group is or does.] 

  General: R. Jones <rjones%ucicp6.bitnet@vm.tcs.tulane.edu> 

[NOTE: this email address may or may not be current]

  Snail: PO Box 573

Long Beach MS 39560 USA

 

 

** Minnesota **


STATE-WIDE


* Minnesota Electronic Democracy Project (E-Democracy)

  Minnesota E-Democracy 1994 is a non-partisan effort to provide the

  public with greater access to campaign and election information in

  electronic form.  This volunteer effort is working to help candidates

  place their position papers and other information on the Internet.

  Information, knowledge, and connectivity are key ingredients in our

  democracy.  This effort may demonstrate how electronic communication

  can be a positive contribution as well as a challenge in our democracy.

  NOTE: this project's working groups are now forming, and goals are to

  acheved by Aug.-Nov. 1994.

  General: E-Democracy@free-net.mpls-stpaul.mn.us

  Mailing list: majordomo@mr.net [message body: subscribe mn-politics]

  Mailing list admin: Mick Souder <masouder@alex.stkate.edu>

  Tech. Coord.: Scott Fritche <fritche@free-net.mpls-stpaul.mn.us>

  Project Coord.: Steven Clift <clif0005@gold.tc.umn.edu>



** Missouri **


KANSAS CITY AREA

 

* Greater Kansas City Sysop Association (GKCSA)

  [No info available.]            

  General: Scott Lent <slent@vax1.umkc.edu>

  P.O. Box 14480

  Parkville, MO 64152

  Voice: +1 816 734 2949

  BBS:   +1 816 734 4732 

 


** New Hampshire **

 

* Electronic Frontiers New Hampshire (EFNH)

  A state/local group founded to work with federal and state legislators

  and media on issues of electronic democracy, freedom of speech in the

  online world, privacy of email and other electronic communication, access

  to govt. information, and access issues surrounding the Nat'l. Information

  Infrastructure debate.  Goals include airing important networking ideas,

  attracting media & govt. attention to the issues, focussing on civil

  rights online and providing a forum for discussion of same, protect

  against, draw attention to, and provide a voice to speak against govt.

  encroachments on individual liberties in networking, especially from a

  grassroots level, and improving public access to govt. information.

  EFNH is still in the formative stages.  It plans to formalize

  considerably before long.  The "kickoff" meeting was Jan. 21, '94.

  General: efnh@mv.com

   Dan York <dyork@copley.mv.com>

   Mark E. Mallett <mem@mv.mv.com>

   Marta Greenberg <marta@mv.mv.com>

  FTP: ftp.eff.org, pub/Groups/EF-New_Hampshire

  Gopher: gopher.eff.org, "...Groups"/"EF New Hampshire"

  Voice: +1 603 437 5868 (Dan York)

 


** New York **

 

NEW YORK CITY METRO AREA

 

* The Society for Electronic Access (SEA)

  SEA is a membership organization focusing on civil liberties and access

  issues that affect the online world. SEA is based in New York City, so

  many of their activities are focused toward the New York metropolitan

  area, though issues of national concern are addressed.

  Basic Info: sea-info@sea.org (auto reply)

  General: sea@sea.org

  Membership: sea-member@sea.org

  Administration: Simona Nass <simona@sea.org>, President

  Media Contact: Steve Barber <sea@sea.org>, Secretary

  Snail: Post Office Box 7081

New York, NY, 10116-7081

  Voice: +1 212 592 3801

   

 

WESTERN NY STATE

 

* Genesee Community College Group

  [No info available.]

  General: Thomas J. Klotzbach <3751365@mcimail.com> 

  Snail: Thomas J. Klotzbach

Genesee Community College

Batavia, NY 14020

  Voice (work) +1 716 343 0055 x358

       


** Oklahoma **

STILLWATER

 

* [Group name unknown.]

  [No info available.]

  General: Lonny L. Lowe <u941013@unx.ucc.okstate.edu>

  Snail: Lonny L. Lowe

c/o Freelance Consulting

514 S. Pine

Stillwater OK 74074-2933 USA

  Voice: +1 405 747 4242

  

     

** Rhode Island **


STATEWIDE


* Center for Public Information (CPI)

  A group of Rhode Islanders active in government reform and/or providing

  electronic access to information have united to form the Center for

  Public Information, Inc. (CPI), a nonprofit organization devoted to

  making information by and about government more accessible.  The agency

  will utilize computer technology and traditional publishing methods to make

  information from government agencies and nonprofits dealing with

  government reform and policy easier, faster, and less expensive to

  access.  Projects include: assisting state and local government agencies

  with making their information electronically available; developing

  computerized resource databases; publishing resource guides; requesting

  and reporting public records and information regarding government

  activities; developing and supporting legislation supporting public access

  to govt. information; Assisting nonprofit agencies involved with

  government reform and govt. information; and improving electronic access to

  govt. information.

  General: David M. Goldstein <pulse@world.std.com>

  FTP: ???

  Gopher: ???

  WWW: ???

  BBS: ???

  Voice: Linda DiCecco, +1 401 942 3984

  Fax: +1 401 351 9122

  Snail: 428 Smith St.

Providence RI 02908 USA



** Tennessee **

 

NASHVILLE

 

* [Group name unknown.]

  [No info available.]

  General: Craig Owensby <basset@jackatak.raider.net>

  Snail: Craig Owensby

805 Harpeth Bend Dr.

Nashville TN 37205

  Voice: +1 615 662 2011 (home)

+1 615 248 5271 (work)

 


** Texas **

 

AUSTIN

 

* EFF-Austin

  EFF-Austin was formed to protect constitutional guarantees of free

  speech and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure for

  users of computer networks. Experience has taught us that these

  freedoms must be fought for if they are to survive in the online

  world.  EFF-Austin was created as an experimental local chapter of

  the national EFF but became independent in 1993 while retaining

  contacts with the parent organization. We're heavily involved

  in public speaking, education, and advocacy of constitutional

  rights in cyberspace. "We're Austin's forum for discussion of all

  concerns related to the cutting edge where society meets technology."

  [NOTE: Though originally formed as a chapter of EFF, EFF-Austin is

  an independent organization.]

  General: eff-austin-moderator@tic.com

  Mailing list subscriptions: eff-austin-request@tic.com

  Directors: eff-austin-directors@tic.com

  Usenet: austin.eff

  FTP: ftp.zilker.net, /eff-austin/

  Gopher: gopher.zilker.net, 1/eff-austin

  WWW: gopher://gopher.zilker.net:70/11/eff-austin/

  Snail: P.O. Box 18957

Austin TX 78760 USA

Voice: +1 512 465 7871

  BBS: +1 512 467 7317, the SMOFboard (and many other local info-sites)

   


HOUSTON

 

* Electronic Frontiers Houston (EFH)

  a non-profit corporation devoted to working with and for the

  Houston computer and telecommunications community.  Working in

  alliance with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, EFF-Austin and

  other national and regional organizations, EFH acts as a focal

  point for the diverse set of individuals who find themselves

  involved in computer communications. Included on the EFH's agenda

  are: advocating civil liberty issues in "cyberspace," promoting

  wider public access to computer networks, exploring artistic and

  social implications of new digital media, and educating the public

  about the increasingly important on-line world.  

  General: efh@blkbox.com

  WWIVnet: efh@5285

  Board of Directors: efh-directors@blkbox.com (efh-directors@5285 on WWIVnet)

  Usenet: houston.efh.talk

  FidoNet: EF_HOU echomail conf (available on local BBSs)

  FTP: ftp.zilker.net, /EFH/

  Gopher: gopher.zilker.net, 1/EFH

  WWW: gopher://gopher.zilker.net:70/11/EFH/

  Snail: 2476 Bolsover #145

Houston TX 77005 USA

  Voice: Ed Cavazos, +1 713 781 3310

  BBS: +1 713 781 4305, Bamboo Gardens (login as EFH GUEST, pw EFH)


 

  UK/GREAT BRITAIN

------------------ 


** SCOTLAND **

 

LOTHIAN

 

* Learning Opportunities in Computer Applications within Lothian (LOCAL)

  An organization created to: provide networking for the handicapped, 

  provide computer training, creation of electronic clubs for youth

  activities, development of global e-penpal systems for cultural

  exchange, promote online educational and employment opportunities

  (incl. industrial training), set up electronic links between the

  handicapped and distant family members, electronic one-to-one tuition 

  to supplement classrooms, link up organizations working with children,

  support documentary reasearch systems online, encourage international

  inter-networking, promote "virtual workgroups" and other online

  joint projects.

  General: Robert Regan <greenway@gn.apc.org>  

  Snail: Kaimes Landfill

Kirknewton EH27 8EJ UK

  Voice: +44 31 451 5195

 


 *************************************************************************

 


ADMINISTRIVIA

============= 

 


* WHO/WHERE: This list is maintained by Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>,

and FAQ-ized and distributed by L. Detweiler. It is based on a previous

version by Shari Steele.  Future updates will be posted to ACTION mailing

list and comp.org.eff.talk, besides several other places.  The most current

version is available from: 

ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Issues/Activism/activ_groups.faq

gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF/Issues/Activism, activ_groups.faq

http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Issues/Activism/activ_groups.faq



* SCOPE: This list focuses on: 

 1) organizations dealing with online issues such as cryptography,

    intellectual freedom in networking, and access to government information,

 2) organizations working on access to online resources, and supporting 

    community networking, and 

 3) general  activism and civil liberties organizations providing material

    online. 

The listing of all activism groups (e.g. [non-]smokers' rights, environment-

alism, gun ownership/regulation, etc.) and partisan politics groups, is

outside the scope of this list.



* YOUR LISTING: Please! Check your entry regularly and make sure it is up to

date. If your org/group does not have a description, please send one ASAP,

or there's not really much point in listing you.  Please expand on your

group's contact information as much as possible.  Thank you.


 

* BIG ORGS: Wide-spread organizations, with many local affiliates,

subdivisions, or chapters, are listed as one organization.  So far, this

includes CPSR, NPTN/Free-Net, and APC/IGC.  To list all the local groups

individually would consume a large amount of space, and would

make this list much longer than it needs to be.


 

* THANKS to: Steve Barber, Simona Nass, Art McGee, Ed Cavazos, John S.

Quarterman, Jon Lebkowski, Shari Steele, L. Detweiler, Elizabeth Reid,

Bernard Aboba, Ellen Pack, Eric Hughes, Derek Atkins, Tom Gray, Karl

Lui Barrus, Malcolm Arnold, Mike Godwin, Shari Steele, Phil Agre, Jim

Warren, Carl Kadie, Kurt Fuchs and all the other folks I pumped for info.



* CONTRIBUTIONS: We are constantly looking to update this list, so if you 

know of other groups that we should add, or if you are trying to form a 

group in your local area, please forward the name of the group and contact 

information to Stanton McCandlish <mech@eff.org>.  Please also inform of any

updates or changes that need to be made.  


 

* DISTRIBUTION:  This FAQ is Copyright 1994 Electronic Frontier Foundation,

and is made available as a freeware service to the online community, on

behalf of the the ACTION forum.


This document may be freely distributed by any means, provided

  1) proper credit/attribution is given

  2) the list is not sold for profit(*)

  3) the list is not modified without permission(**)


 [* Systems that charge for access are specifically exempted, as are CD-ROM

  collections, and similar distribution methods. Just don't demand a special

  fee for this file itself, you know what I mean. If in doubt, send email

  about it.]

 

 [** other than necessary reformatting, such as stripping of linefeeds/

  carriage returns, translation to postscript, etc. -i.e. no QUALITATIVE

  modification of the contents please.  If you need to update something,

  please tell me, and I will make sure the master copy is corrected and a

  new version distributed.]


The maintainer(s) of this document will greatly appreciate notification of

hardcopy publication or inclusion in other non-ephemeral collections

(CD-ROM compilations, etc.)   


Note that some of this text is borrowed from the promotional literature of

the organizations described herein.  The purpose of such things is to be

copied and to spread info, so I can't see there being any objections, but

if you are paranoid about reprint rights, best to contact the organizations

yourself and make sure it's ok.  Before printing in any "real" publication,

it would be a good idea to do so anyway, just to make sure the info is

correct and current.  



* EXCERPTING


Journalists, maintainers of other FAQs (e.g. a more specific, say privacy,

resource list), and anyone else should feel free to excerpt from this

document.  Excerpts in articles and books should follow standard

acceptable use guidelines.  Mainters of FAQs and lists may use and reformat

relevant information for their own lists, and simply credit the creators

and maintainers of the list in the apropriate manner (e.g. at specfic

entries, or in a "thanks to" section, or whatever fits the document format.)

Electronic reposts of only sections of the document should include a pointer

to the location of the complete file so others can get the entire thing if

they wish to do so.



* THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) was founded in July of 1990

to ensure that the principles embodied in the Constitution and the Bill

of Rights are protected as new communications technologies emerge.

Since its inception, EFF has worked to shape our nation's communications

infrastructure and the policies that govern it in order to maintain and

enhance First Amendment, privacy and other democratic values. We believe

that our overriding public goal must be the creation of Electronic

Democracy.


 Membership & General Info: info@eff.org

 

 The Electronic Frontier Foundation

 1001 G Street NW, Suite 950 E

 Washington DC 20001 USA

 +1 202 347 5400 (voice)

 +1 202 393 5509 (fax)

 +1 202 638 6120 (BBS)

 Internet: ask@eff.org

 Internet fax gate: remote-printer.EFF@9.0.5.5.3.9.3.2.0.2.1.tpc.int



* ACTION: The Activism Online Forum

Action is an Internet "mailing list" forum, and serves as a virtual

community supporting grassroots political action through networking

technology.  Action is a focused working group, rather than a chat area.

To subscribe, send a message body of 


subscribe ACTION


to listserv@eff.org via internet email.


===

DISTRIBUTION: How to obtain this document


This document has been brought to you in part by CRAM, involved in the

redistribution of valuable information to a wider USENET audience (see

below). The most recent version of this document can be obtained via

the author's instructions above. The following directions apply to 

retrieve the possibly less-current USENET FAQ version.


  FTP

  ---

    This FAQ is available from the standard FAQ server rtfm.mit.edu via

    FTP in the file /pub/usenet/news.answers/net-community/orgs-list


  Email

  -----

    Email requests for FAQs go to mail-server@rtfm.mit.edu with commands

    on lines in the message body, e.g. `help' and `index'.


  Usenet

  ------

    This FAQ is posted every 21 days to the groups

 

      comp.org.eff.talk

      alt.comp.acad-freedom.talk

      alt.politics.datahighway

      alt.internet.services

      alt.culture.internet

      alt.cyberspace

      alt.culture.usenet

      alt.culture.internet

      comp.answers

      alt.answers

      news.answers


_ _, _ ___ _, __,  _, _  _, ___ _  _, _, _ _  _, __,  _, _  _ ___ __,

| |\ | |_ / \ | )  |\/| / \  |  | / \ |\ | | (_  | ) / \ |  | |_  | )

| | \| |  \ / |~\  |  | |~|  |  | \ / | \| | , ) |~  \ / |/\| |   |~\

~ ~  ~ ~   ~  ~  ~ ~  ~ ~ ~  ~  ~  ~  ~  ~ ~  ~  ~    ~  ~  ~ ~~~ ~  ~


===

CRAM: The Cyberspatial Reality Advancement Movement


In an effort to bring valuable information to the masses, and as a

service to motivated information compilers, a member of CRAM can help

others unfamiliar with Usenet `publish' their documents for

widespread dissemination via the FAQ structure, and act as a

`sponsor' knowledgable in the submissions process. This document is

being distributed under this arrangement.


We have found these compilations tend to appear on various mailing

lists and are valuable enough to deserve wider distribution. If you

know of an existing compilation of Internet information that is not

currently a FAQ, please contact us and we may `sponsor' it. The

benefits to the author include:


- use of the existing FAQ infrastructure for distribution:

  - automated mail server service

  - FTP archival

  - automated posting


- a far wider audience that can improve the quality, accuracy, and 

  coverage of the document enormously through email feedback


- potential professional inquiries for the use of your document in 

  other settings, such as newsletters, books, etc.


- with us as your sponsor, we will also take care of the 

  technicalities in the proper format of the posted version and 

  updating procedures, leaving you free of the `overhead' to focus on 

  the basic updates alone


The choice of who we `sponsor' is entirely arbitrary. You always have

the option of handling the submission process yourself.  See the FAQ

submission guidelines FAQ in news.answers. 


For information, send mail to <ldetweil@csn.org>.


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  _______       ________          _____        _____  _____

///   \\\      |||   \\\        /// \\\       |||\\\///|||

|||     ~~      |||   ///       |||   |||      ||| \\// |||

|||     __      |||~~~\\\       |||~~~|||      |||  ~~  |||

\\\   ///      |||    \\\      |||   |||      |||      |||

  ~~~~~~~       ~~~     ~~~     ~~~   ~~~      ~~~      ~~~

 /   /   /   /   /   /   /   /   /   |   \   \   \   \   \   \   \   \   \   \


C y b e r s p a t i a l  R e a l i t y  A d v a n c e m e n t  M o v e m e n t


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