EFFECTOR ONLINE July 26,1991

 ########## |   Volume I         July 26,1991          Number 9    |

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###        |                   EFFECTOR ONLINE                    |

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########## |           The Electronic Newsletter of               |

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###        |                       Staff:                         |

#######    |             Gerard Van der Leun (van@eff.org)        |

#######    |             Mike Godwin (mnemonic@eff.org)           |

###        |             Mitchell Kapor (mkapor@eff.org)          |

###        |             Chris Davis (ckd@eff.org)                |

###        |             Helen Rose (hrose@eff.org)               |

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effector n, Computer Sci. A device for producing a desired change.

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                              WE WUZ HACKED!


As Monty Python has wisely noted, "NOBODY expects the Spanish

Inquisition!" In like manner, nobody expects people to crack their

system in quite the way that they *are* cracked. After all, if you

knew about an unlocked door in your system, you'd lock it. Right? As

soon as you could get around to it, of course.


One of the machines here at eff.org is named "black-cube". As you might

suspect, that machine is a NeXT. A remote execution daemon called "rexd"

that runs on the NeXT (and many other machines) has an authentication

routine that is effectively brain dead, and is automatically turned on

with a new installation (NeXT Operators Take Note!). Those who know that

one of the eff.org machines is a NeXT, or who might guess it by seeing

the name "black-cube" can exploit the weakness of "rexd" to gain entry

into the system.


On July 1, this happened to us. If you run a NeXT, or even if you don't,

it could happen to you.


The sequence of events, as detailed in Chris Davis' report on the

incident was as follows:

 

   "At about 1 am on July 1, the NeXT was breached by an intruder using 

the rexd remote execution daemon. The following things happened, in

uncertain but approximate order: 


   "(1) rexd mounted file systems from 'kropotkin.gnu.ai.mit.edu'. Only 

that, the local disk, and the /home partition from the Sun were

mounted. 


   "(2) the /etc/inetd.conf internet daemon configuration file was edited, 

as user mkapor, to allow rexecd to be run. 


   "(3) the /etc/nu.cf new user program configuration file was edited or 

modified in an unknown fashion as user mkapor (it's possible that only 

the modification date was changed).


   "(4) a file 'rc', a 16K Mach executable, was created in mkapor's home 

directory, as mkapor.


   "(5) the /etc/wtmp file was overwritten with an empty file, removing 

login accounting timestamps


   "User 'mycroft' was logged into kropotkin.gnu.ai.mit.edu at the appropriate 

time, and admits entering the machine, but denies 2, 3, 4, and 5."


We note that "mycroft" was the name of Sherlock Holmes' older brother.

He was said to be even more brilliant that Holmes himself. But it

doesn't take great brilliance to crack a machine, only weak routines,

a certain specific knowledge, and the willingness to wander around in

other peoples' homes without being invited.


The security hole was apparently known to CERT (Computer Emergency

Response Team), but the alert was netcast before we owned the NeXT so

we were not aware of it. We've retired black-cube from active service

and have reviewed all other security programs and measures.


We were very careful to close all known security holes on our principal

machine. We were not quite careful enough to apply the same level of

discipline with black-cube. 


Eternal vigilance is the price of network security.

  

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        "When the 'oppressors' become too strict, we have what is 

         known as a police state, wherein all dissent is forbidden,

         as is chuckling, showing up in a bow tie, or referring to 

         the mayor as 'Fats.' Civil liberties are greatly curtailed 

         in a police state, and freedom of speech is unheard of, 

         although one is allowed to mime to a record. Opinions 

         critical of the government are not tolerated, particularly 

         about their dancing. Freedom of the press is also 

         curtailed and the ruling party 'manages' the news,

         permitting the citizens to hear only acceptable political 

         ideas and ball scores that will not cause unrest." 


                        Woody Allen, "Without Feathers" (Ballentine,1972)


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                   THE AUSTIN EFF ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING 

                             by Steve Jackson


     An Austin meeting for those interested in the EFF and its mission

 was held July 19 at the offices of Steve Jackson Games. About 60

 people (50 or so actively interested, and another 10 along for the

 ride) attended to cook hot dogs, drink sodas and beer, and talk

 about Constitutional freedoms in the electronic age.

     The meeting had been publicized almost exclusively over the net

 and local BBSs; some attendees read about it first on the Well. Local

 media were informed, but as far as we know, none mentioned it.

     I introduced the idea of an Austin EFF chapter by pointing out

 that the EFF *has* no local chapters, and one of the first missions of

 an Austin group - if we started one - would be to find out what a

 local chapter was good for.


     Suggestions from the group included:

     * Liaison with local law enforcement groups, both to influence

 their attitudes and to offer expert assistance and cooperation.

     * Liaison with media: offering information, correcting errors,

 and if necessary being ready to go to editorial boards if facts are

 consistently misrepresented.

     * Education and communication with others: speaking at schools

 and club meetings, writing opinion pieces for newspapers, and so on.

     * Education and communication among ourselves. The issue of ``Just

 what ARE the laws regarding sysop liability?" was specifically raised.

     * Direct political action: querying candidates on their stands on

 EFF-related issues, and initiating legislation to preserve civil

 rights in the high-tech age.

     * More organized input into national EFF concerns, especially

 creation of "ethical standards and practices."

     * Recruitment of members for the national EFF.

     * General networking among people with common interests. (Earl

 Cooley, sysop of SMOF - an old and respected, but underutilized, local

 board - volunteered to host a local EFF discussion. SMOF, the `World's

 Oldest Online SF Convention,' can be reached at 512-467-7317.)


     Four people - Bruce Sterling, John Quarterman, Matt Lawrence

 and myself - expressed willingness to serve on a local EFF board

 "provided no one of us has to do all the work." Four seems to be

 about the *minimum* workable number; we'll certainly be looking for

 more organizers.

     Another attendee was a Houston civil-libertarian, representing a

 group of about 20 like-minded computer users; a Houston EFF chapter

 is probably in the offing.

     10 people signed up as national EFF members at the meeting (several

 others had already joined), and many more membership forms were

 distributed. A signup sheet was passed around so that everyone could

 be contacted directly for further meetings. And there will be more

 meetings; the "sense of the crowd" was clear on that. Our four

 volunteers will now have to discuss the next step.


     Thanks go to Loyd Blankenship, for making sure that all the food,

 drink and furniture arrived at the right time and place; to

 Monica Stephens, Mike and Brenda Hurst, and John Quarterman for

 assorted help with cooking, cleanup and publicity; and to everyone

 who brought chairs and food!


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


                      "Think Globally, Act Locally"


We are really encouraged and a bit overwhlemed by the spontaneous

interest in forming chapters. In comp.org.eff.talk several other

individuals offered to help organize local chapters in different parts of

the country. Local activities to promote EFF causes can be a major factor

in civilizing the frontier. Over the summer we will be thinking about

what constitutes a good set of ground rules for chapters and how to

coordinate and support activities from the already-busy EFF office. We'd

certainly like to see more discussion on comp.org.eff.talk about possible

roles for local chapters. Thanks to Steve Jackson for getting the ball

rolling. 



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                   MORE TITLES ON THE EFF MAGAZINE STAND


      INTERTEXT, an electronic magazine devoted to fiction, is published

bi-monthly by Jason Snell (jsnell@ucsd.edu). 

      Although primarily established as a place on the net to publish genres 

other than sci-fi/fantasy, it does still contain some.  The quality of

the fiction is about that of what you would find in alt.prose.

      Jason welcomes submissions of all genres.  INTERTEXT is also available 

by e-mail subscription and is primarily archived on network.ucsd.edu.  


      QUANTA is the electronically distributed journal of Science Fiction

and Fantasy.  As such, each issue contains fiction by amateur authors as well

as articles, reviews, and other items of interest.

      You'll find pretty standard sci-fi/fantasy in QUANTA, with an

occasional gem or two.  The editors of INTERTEXT and QUANTA are

friends and they tend to use some of the same editorial policies: they

publish just about whatever they get and they publish their favorite

writers all the time. QUANTA is much sharper in format than INTERTEXT.

      QUANTA is edited by Daniel Applequist (daln@andrew.cmu.edu). Submissions

should be sent to quanta@andrew.cmu.edu. Subscription requests should

be sent to quanta+requests-acii@andrew.cmu.edu.


      PARSONS MESSENGER AND INTELLIGENCER is a fictional small-town 

newspaper consisting primarily of editorials written by the fictional

residents of Parsons, MidWest, USA. The Editor, Jane Smith, is also

fictional.

      Most of the letters and opinions etc. are stock stereotypes, but

a few are creative and interesting.  It's a fresh idea, but it stales

too quickly.


      THE UNPLASTIC NEWS is a brand new little magazine of quips and 

quotes from anywhere and everywhere. It's published by Todd Tibbetts

(tibbetts@hsi.hsi.com), who is new to the net and hasn't quite figured

out how to effectively distribute Unplastic yet.

      Unplastic's first issue is a collection of fully documented quotes

>from sources outside the net.  I get the impression that Todd wants to

collect brilliant offerings from the net for future issues and mix them

in heavily with the quotes from other sources.  If he can pull this off

successfully, THE UNPLASTIC NEWS will be one cutting-edge pub.


All four titles are available via anonymous ftp from eff.org. They are

to be found in the Journals Directory.



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                      Paraphrased from Time magazine:


President Bush is finally switching from his manual typewriter to a

personal computer, and taking lessons on how to use it. But he hasn't

set his sights too high. "I don't expect this to teach me how to set

the clock on the VCR or anything complicated," says the President.


-- Denis Coskun, Alias Research Inc., Toronto Canada dcoskun@alias.com 


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                        HACKER HYSTERIA DOWNUNDER

                   by Mike Godwin, Staff Counsel, EFF


I had just begun to think we had been making progress against the

reflexive prejudice that so often afflicts the policy debates about

hackers and computer crime. Then I read Tom Forester's recent

distressing article about the need to "clamp down" on hackers.


It's not that I disagree with Forester about the principle that

computer intrusion and vandalism should be illegal. But I was

astonished at both at the moral simplicity and the factual inaccuracy

of Tom Forester's newspaper column.


The article, "Hackers:Clamp Down Now", appeared in an Australian

newspaper earlier this summer. I had expected a well-reasoned article

from Forester, who co-authored COMPUTER ETHICS: CAUTIONARY TALES AND

ETHICAL DILEMMAS IN COMPUTING (Blackwell / Allen & Unwin, 1990). After

all, it was a book I had reviewed favorably for WHOLE EARTH REVIEW's

Summer 1991 issue.


But "Hackers:Clamp Down Now" turned out to be a potpourri of various

statements and misperceptions regarding hackers that were common in

the American media a year ago and still persist in many quarters. It

was painful and infuriating to see them surface again in Australia.

Especially when written by someone who should know better. 


Among other things, Forester writes:


>Breaking into a computer is no different from breaking into your

>neighbour's house. It is burglary plain and simple - though often

>accompanied by malicious damage and theft of information. 


Yet nothing is "plain" or "simple" about analogizing computer trespass

to burglary. The English common law that informs the British,

American, and Australian legal systems has always treated burglary

harshly, primarily because it involves a threat to the victim's

*residence* and to his *person*.


But computer intrusion in general, and the cases Forester discusses in

particular, pose neither threat. A mainframe computer at a university

or business, while it clearly ought to be protected "space" under the

law, is not a house "plain and simple." The kind of invasion and the

potential threat to traditional property interests is not the same.


Consider this: anyone who has your phone number can dial your home--

can cause an electronic event to happen *inside your house*. That

"intruder" can even learn things about you from the attempt

(especially if you happen to answer, in which case he learns your

whereabouts). Do we call this attempted burglary? Do we call it spying

or information theft? Of course not--because we're so comfortable with

telephone technology that we no longer rely on metaphors to do our

thinking for us.


This is not to say that all computer intrusion is innocuous. Some of

it is quite harmful--as when a true "vandal" runs programs that damage

or delete important information. But it is important to continue to

make moral and legal distinctions, based on the intent of the actor

and the character of the damage. 


Tom Forester seems to want to turn his back on making such 

distinctions. This, to me, is a shameful position to take. 


Forester supported his oddly simplistic moral stance with some odder 

factual errors. Here are some of the more egregious ones. 


>Last year, the so-called 'Legion of Doom' managed to completely 

>stuff up the 911 emergency phone system in nine US states, thus 

>endangering human life. They were also later charged with trading 

>in stolen credit card numbers, long-distance phone card numbers 

>and information about how to break into computers. 


Only a person who is willfully ignorant of the record could make these

statements. The so-called Legion of Doom never damaged or threatened

to damage the E911 system. If Forester had done even minimal research,

he could have discovered this. What they did, of course, was copy a

bureaucratic memo from an insecure Bell South computer and show it to

each other. 


At the trial of Craig Neidorf, who was charged along with Legion of

Doom members, it was revealed that the information in that memo was

publicly available in print. 


Thus, there was no proprietary information involved, much less a

threat to the E911 system. Forester is simply inventing facts in order

to support his thesis. For an academic, this is the gravest of sins.


>Leonard Rose Jr. was charged with selling illegal 

>copies of a US $77,000 AT&T operating system. 


Len Rose was never charged with "selling" anything. His crime

concerned his possession of the expensive source code, which he, like

many other Unix consultants, used in his work. 


>Robert Morris, who launched the disastrous Internet worm, got a 

>mere slap on the wrist in the form of a US $10,000 fine and 400 

>hours' community service.


If Forester had investigated the case, he might have discovered an

explanation for the lightness of Robert Morris Jr.'s sentence: that

Morris never intended to cause any damage to the networks. In any

case, Morris hardly qualifies as a "hacker" in the sense that Forester

uses the word; by all accounts, he was interested neither in "theft"

nor "burglary" nor "vandalism." 


Of course, making such subtle distinctions would only blunt the force

of Forester's thesis, so he chooses to ignore them. 


>Instead, [the hacker] tends to spend his time with the computer, 

>rising at 2pm, then working right through to 6am,, consuming mountains 

>of delivered pizza and gallons of soft drink. 


This is the kind of stereotyping that Forester should be embarrassed

to parrot in a public forum.


>Some suffer from what Danish doctors are now calling "computer 

>psychosis" - an inability to distinguish between the real world 

>and the world inside the screen.

>

>For the hacker, the machine becomes a substitute for human 

>contact, because it responds in rational manner, uncomplicated by 

>feelings and emotions.


And here Forester diagnoses people whom he has never met. One is

forced to wonder where Forester acquired his medical or psychiatric

training. Of the people whose names he blithely cites, I have met or

spoken to half a dozen. None of them has been confused about the

difference between computers and reality, although it may be

understandable that they prefer working with computers to working with

people who prejudge them out of hatred, ignorance, or fear.


>One day, these meddlers will hack into a vital military, utility 

>or comms system and cause a human and social catastrophe. It's 

>time we put a stop to their adolescent games right now. 


History suggests that we have far more to fear from badly designed or

overly complex software than from hackers. Recent failures of phone

networks in the United States, for example, have been traced to

software failures.


Even if we grant that there are some hackers with the ability to

damage critical systems, the question Forester fails to ask is this:

Why hasn't it happened already? The answer seems to be that few

hackers have the skill or desire to damage or destroy the very thing

they are interested in exploring. 


Of course, there are some "vandals" out there, and they should be

dealt with harshly. But there are far more "hackers" interested in

exploring and understanding systems. While they may well violate the

law now and then, the punishments they earn should take into account

both their intentions and their youth. 


It has been noted many times that each generation faces the challenge

of socializing a wave of barbarians--its own children. We will do our

society little good if we decide to classify all our half-socialized

children into criminals. For an ethicist, Forester seems to have given

little thought to the ethics of lumping all computer trespass into one

category of serious crime.


                         -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-



                   "Twas midnight, and the UNIX hacks

                    Did gyre and gimble in their cave

                    All mimsy was the CS-VAX

                    And Cory raths outgrave.   


                   "Beware the software rot, my son!

                    The faults that bite, the jobs that thrash!

                    Beware the broken pipe, and shun

                    The frumious system crash!"



                         -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-



                   STUDENT SUSPENDED FOR MAILING PASSWORDS

                            by Rita Rouvalis


The University of Georgia's (UGA) Student Judiciary has recently

sentenced a student to two quarters suspension for e-mailing Athena's

/etc/passwd file to an unauthorized user who wanted to break into the

system. Intense debate ensued when the following post was made to

eff.talk: 

                             

>The University will soon be issuing a news release about this incident.

>In the meantime, here is a summary:


>(1) A number of unauthorized users have been using various University

>of Georgia computers. Most of them have left much more of a trail than

>they realized and will be hearing from us. 


>(2) The first person actually caught as part of this incident has now

>been sentenced to 2 quarters' suspension, plus a probated expulsion,

>by the Student Judiciary. This was a U.Ga. student whose name cannot

>be released due to confidentiality of educational records. What this

>student did was mail a copy of /etc/passwd from athena.cs.uga.edu to a

>"hacker" who had already penetrated another system, and who wanted to

>use a password-guessing program to break into athena. The student was

>fully aware that he was assisting in a break-in. 

> --  Michael Covington, sysadmin UGA

                             

Discussion was muddied considerably by confusion with other threads,

and opinions were posted without factual basis. If one looks at the

facts, one finds the student received surprisingly fair treatment from

the University of Georgia, whether or not one agrees with the actual

sentence. 


Upon investigating an intrusion into one of the AI Lab's machines, the

sysadmin for the AI lab found that the intruder had saved, on disk, a

copy of Athena's /etc/passwd file with an email header indicating it

had come from the student in question's account on Athena. Assuming at

first that either the e-mail header was bogus, or that the student's

account had also been hacked, the Athena sysadmins deactivated the

account. Notice that this was a file saved under an unauthorized

username; no e-mail was ever intercepted.


Upon further investigation, the student admitted to being the

owner/sender of this e-mail message. He also apparently admitted to

being a member of an "elite group of hackers/phreakers," and knowing

that the /etc/passwd file would be used to try to crack Athena.


When the matter came before them, UGA officials felt the needs of the

student would be better served if he/she was brought before the

Student Judiciary instead of filing criminal charges. The only

punishments the Student Judiciary can hand out are expulsion,

suspension, and community service; all proceedings are kept

confidential as required by federal law.


According to UGA Student Judiciary policy, a student can choose either

an administrative hearing, or a student court hearing before three

specially trained students. In either case, the student is assisted by

a trained defender (also a student) and has the right to have other

people present for his defense. The hearing is supervised by UGA's

staff of Judicial Programs and follow the same rules of evidence and

procedure as a courtroom trial. If convicted, the student can appeal

to the Vice President and to the President (which this student has

done).


Despite protests from a few netters about the sentence the student

received, it is clear that the student court carefully considered the

intent and personality of the student when handing down the sentence

-- a consideration not taken in too many hacker cases. Officials felt

that two quarters suspension would effectively remove the student from

the influence of the hackers/phreakers and realign his priorities.

Community service involving computers was not chosen for the express

reason of not encouraging hacking to prove ability.


While some netters may disagree with the sentence handed down, they

should agree that this case was fairly and thoroughly handled by UGA

officials. Their measured deliberation of all the issues involved

should be used as an example in this era of hacker hysteria.


EFFector Online will keep you posted as the case progresses...

Portions of postings by Michael Covington, sysadmin of one of the UGA

machines involved, are reproduced by permission.


                     -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-


                       Letters From The Sun


From: mib@gnu.ai.mit.edu (Michael I Bushnell) 

To: editors@eff.org

Subject: Free software and electronic freedom 


There is a convergence of interests between advocates of free software

and the EFF, which I think bears some examination. I think we can

"assist" the government, the police, the media, and the courts by

stressing that what is happening to computers is by no means new. I do

not believe that education (though it will help) can solve our problem.

The people from AT&T who assign $50,000 price tags to login.c and claim

millions of dollars of damage done by Riggs, Darden, and Grant are

completely aware of the real nature of what was done. The same is

certainly true of Apple's claim that irrevocable damage was done by the

distribution of NuPrometheus. We can end, through education, damage to

people like Steve Jackson wrought by overzealous police. But the damage

done by the false claims of knowledgeable people seeking money and

victims will not be ended solely be education.


The possiblility of perjury suits should be considered, of course, but

that is not the only way to end the problem. The computer shares with

certain other inventions several important characteristics: it is cheaper

than older alternatives; it is faster; and it offers new ways of thinking

about the world. The most obvious invention in the past with these

characteristics is the movable-type printing press. Suddenly books could

be published by only a few people, rather than requiring laborious

copying. Printing presses were cheaper than the hundreds of copyists

previously required. And, perhaps most importantly, the availability of

books encouraged people to see the world as somewhat smaller, as

information could suddenly be transmitted more quickly.


Gutenberg's first book was the Bible, published in German translation,

and the Church reacted vehemently to this new "problem". Its monopoly on

Biblical interpretation suddenly ended, and the Church quickly realized

that something "needed" to be done. The index of prohibited books became

its most effective tool. Those who assisted in the production of

unauthorized books (rulers who refused to arrest recalcitrant printers,

for example) would be in turn vilified or even excommunicated.


Even today, in many countries, access to the printed word is difficult

and managed by the state. Those we are fighting must be more visibly

compared with past opponents to free speech. We must be more vocal in

admitting and even pointing out that, yes, the computer is powerful and

dangerous, and in precisely the same ways cheap printing is powerful and

dangerous. We do not believe, in this country, that access to printing

presses should be carefully managed and regulated by the government to

ensure the safe use of this power. Instead, thanks to the wisdom of

Voltaire, and his ultimate victory over Rousseau, we recognize that the

solution to the printing of falsehood is the printing of truth. We must

encourage the same attitude in the public towards computers: that

computers, and associated networks, must be encouraged to grow without

regulation and forced record-keeping. Yes, computers are dangerous. But

they are only dangerous to those who hide in shadows and plot power in

the dark of night, for they are tools for light if available to all. 


                     -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-


"I'm hosed." -- Steve Jobs, after his NeXT machine froze up during a 

demonstration to 500 people at Lotus last year. 


                     -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-


         MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION


If you support the goals and work of EFF, you can show that support by

becoming a member now. Members receive our quarterly newsletter,

EFFECTOR, our bi-weekly electronic newsletter, EFFector Online (if you

have an electronic address that can be reached through the Net), and

special releases and other notices on our activities. But because we

believe that support should be freely given, you can receive these things

even if you do not elect to become a member.


Your membership/donation is fully tax deductible.


Our memberships are $20.00 per year for students, $40.00 per year for

regular members. You may, of course, donate more if you wish.



>>>---------------- EFF@eff.org MEMBERSHIP FORM ---------------<<<


Mail to: The Electronic Frontier Foundation, Inc.

         Online Office Nine 

         155 Second St.  

         Cambridge,MA 02141


I wish to become a member of the EFF  I enclose:$__________

                        $20.00 (student or low income membership)

                        $40.00 (regular membership)


        [  ] I enclose an additional donation of $___________


Name:______________________________________________________


Organization:______________________________________________


Address: __________________________________________________


Town: _____________________________________________________


State:_______Zip:________Phone:(    )_____________(optional)


FAX:(    )____________________(optional)


Email address: ______________________________


I enclose a check [  ].  

Please charge my membership in the amount of $_____________

to my Mastercard [  ]  Visa [  ]  American Express [  ]  


Number:____________________________________________________


Expiration date: ____________


Signature: ________________________________________________


Date:______________________


I hereby grant permission to the EFF to share my name with 

other non-profit groups from time to time as it deems 

appropriate   [ ]. 

                       Initials:___________________________


**OUR PRIVACY POLICY: The Electronic Frontier Foundation will never,

under any circumstances, sell any part of its membership list. We will,

>from time to time, share this list with other non-profit organizations

whose work we determine to be in line with our goals. But with us, member

privacy is the default. This means that you must actively grant us

permission to share your name with other groups. If you do not grant

explicit permission, we assume that you do not wish your membership

disclosed to any group for any reason.**


        The EFF is a non-profit, 501c3 organization.

          Donations to the EFF are tax-deductible.

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






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