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News from ISOC
- To: Multiple recipients of list <epc-l@iucr.org>
- Subject: News from ISOC
- From: Howard Flack <Howard.Flack@cryst.unige.ch>
- Date: Wed, 13 Sep 2000 08:46:39 +0100 (BST)
* U.S. HOUSE PASSES ANTI-SPAM BILL The U.S. House of Representatives passed the Unsolicited Commercial Electronic Mail Act of 2000 on 18 July by a vote of 427-1. Under the bill, Internet service providers (ISPs) can set their own anti-spam policies, which senders must obey as long as the policy is published. Also, ISPs and recipients of spam can sue for $500 per spam -- a cause of action that recipients of junk faxes already enjoy -- and the U.S. Federal Trade Commission can fine violators of anti-spam policies. The bill also requires all commercial e- mail (CE), solicited or not, to have a working return address, and senders of CE must stop sending e-mail when requested to do so. Forged headers on CE would become illegal under the bill. It now goes to the U.S. Senate, where it must be reconciled with anti-spam bills already introduced in the Senate. For more information see http://www.cauce.org/newsletter/v4n1.shtml (Coalition Against Unsolicited Email Newsletter, July 2000) * SOUTH AFRICAN PRESIDENT WANTS TO E-NABLE AFRICA South African President Thabo Mbeki has pledged to bring Africa into the electronic information age, saying that the availability of technology and its dissemination are crucial for the continent's economic and social development. In a speech following the conclusion of the G-8 summit held in Okinawa, Japan, he said that the focus needs to be on wiring the continent. Excluding South Africa, the continent has 14 million phone lines -- fewer than either Manhattan or Tokyo. Even in South Africa, there were only 829 information technology (IT) engineers and 1,416 IT professionals at the end of 1999, a fraction of those in either the U.S. or European countries. Mbeki, along with the presidents of Nigeria and Algeria, was instrumental in lobbying for the Dot Force (Digital Opportunity Task Force), which will investigate ways for poorer nations to harness the Internet and e-commerce. The G-8 has committed itself to the Dot Force, which will present its findings at next year's summit in Genoa, Italy. For more information see http://sa.internet.com (Internet News South Africa, 25 July 2000) * EU HOPES TO RID INTERNET OF ILLEGAL CONTENT The European Union has announced a plan to remove illegal and harmful content from the Internet. Under its Internet Action Plan, 10 new projects will promote safer use of the Net. One project is establishing a network of hotlines across Europe that the public can use to report illegal Internet content; the hotlines will pass the reports onto Internet service providers, the police, or other authorities. Another project is the development of software that rates and filters Internet content, intended for parents to use to protect their children. The Internet Action Plan is also funding awareness programs to educate parents, teachers, and children about the downsides of the Internet. A new call for proposals is currently under way. The Plan, begun in 1998, runs until 2002. For more information see http://www.ispo.cec.be/iap (Nua Internet Surveys, 3 July 2000) * OLYMPICS SUE OVER DOMAIN NAMES The International, U.S., and Salt Lake City Olympic committees have filed suit to have 1,804 Internet domain names either deleted from the database of Internet addresses or turned over to the Olympic committees. It is the largest suit filed so far under the anticybersquatting act passed by the U.S. Congress last fall; a previous case, involving domain names using the word "Porsche," covered 260 domain names. In most cases, Web sites have not been established under the domain names in question -- they have only been purchased. Some of the names involve pornography and gambling, and some appear as if they are offering tickets to Olympic events. In addition to creating false associations with the Olympic name and damaging its value, the committees argue that the Web sites could encroach on the Olympics' sales of broadcasting rights to Olympic games coverage, worldwide sponsorships, and licenses -- all major sources of revenue for the Olympic committees. (Washington Post, 14 July 2000) ISOC MEMBERSHIP If you or your organization is not a member of the Internet Society, show your support. Join the Internet Society today! For individual membership, send e-mail to membership@isoc.org. For organizational membership, see http://www.isoc.org/isoc/membership or send e- mail to org-membership@isoc.org. ** It might be a good idea for the IUCr R&D group to take out an individual membership ISOCGVA PRESIDENT'S LETTER ICANN is still hot news, with procedures beginning for the attribution of new generic top-level domain names (to work along side .com, .net and .org). For more details, see http://www.icann.org/tlds/application-process-03aug00.htm The at-large membership of ICANN has shot up in the last weeks to over 150000 members. Switzerland has nearly 2000, on a par with France, the UK, Canada and Australia. The overall large membership figure is mainly due to campaigns in countries like China and Germany. In the case of Germany, the popular press has been selling ICANN as the up-and-coming Internet Government, which is quite false. As Vint Cerf pointed out to me in Yokohama, there is considerable confusion about what governance means. ICANN is not a government of the Internet but governance of a part of the running of the Internet. It is this mixture of the current importance of the notion of governance and the confusion about exactly what it is, that has led us at ISOCGVA to work on organising an international event for next year on the question of models of governance. We are preparing this with other ISOC Chapters and various organisations around the world. If you are interested in getting involved, please write to me. * E-mail Privacy A new law is now in effect in the United Kingdom that makes significant changes in expectations of privacy of electronic mail. The law, known as the Regulation of Investigatory Powers (RIP) Bill, was passed by Parliament on 26 July. It requires Internet service providers to install hardware that allows UK security agencies to gain access to electronic message traffic upon issuance of a warrant. Intercepted messages will be transferred to a new "Government Technical Assistance Centre." The law has already been the subject of considerable controversy and was amended in several respects before passage. Criticism centers on the ease of obtaining warrants for interception by security agencies. The law is likely to face further challenge if the UK becomes a member of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The controversy in the UK parallels a similar controversy raging in the United States over the Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI's) use of Carnivore, a program that can be used on special hardware installed by the FBI at a service provider's location. The FBI claims that its program is selective in reading e-mail traffic that is subject to a search warrant, but the bureau has so far refused to allow independent confirmation of the program's capabilities. The law has already had an impact on the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). At the IETF meeting in Pittsburgh in August, an open meeting was scheduled to discuss the possibility of moving the next scheduled meeting to a country other than the UK. The IETF is also looking into the possibility that members' laptops will be subject to examination by UK customs authorities when the members enter the UK, a practice that has also recently been the subject of considerable controversy. * INVITATION TO DEBATE ON GOVERNMENT CONTROL OF THE INTERNET IN LONDON ISOC-England is looking for participants and speakers to take part in an event being hosted by the Real Time Club in London on 13 September 2000. The topic is control of the Internet by governments and whether or not it is imperative for the well-being of society. The topic will be proposed by Harold Thimbleby, professor of Computing Research at Middlesex University and coauthor of the Church of England report on the Internet: Cybernauts Awake! Ethical and Spiritual Implications of Cyberspace. It will be opposed by Tricia Drakes, founder and former CEO of International Banking Information Systems, Ltd, Deputy Master of the Worshipful Company of Information Technologists, and chair of the Internet Society of England's advisory board. Rachel Burnett, who specializes in legal services relating to the IT industry and is author of Outsourcing: The Legal Aspects, will serve as chair. Speakers will be called by making themselves known to the chair from the floor and can give a five-minute oration. Dinner is provided with the ticket price. To register, send e-mail to cdel@firsthand.net or lstroombergen@itnto.org.uk, or see http://www.realtimeclub.org.uk * GERMAN CABINET OKAYS E-SIGNATURES In an effort to promote electronic commerce, Germany's Cabinet approved a bill last month giving electronic signatures the same status as pen-and-paper signatures. "With the new signature law," said Economics Minister Werner Mueller, "we are setting the decisive course for a European single market for e-commerce. I am confident that electronic signatures will soon become a normality of daily life." The bill, which is expected to be passed by Parliament in the fall, will take effect next year. (Yahoo News and AP, 16 August 2000) * NSI REGISTRY OPENS MULTILINGUAL DOMAIN NAME TESTBED TO REGISTRARS The Network Solutions Registry (NSI Registry) announced on 24 August that it will open a testbed for accredited registrars to register domain names in non-English-language character sets in .com., .net, and .org. Initially, the testbed will allow users to register domain names with registrars in three languages: Japanese, Korean, and Chinese (traditional and simplified), and soon thereafter in Spanish, Portuguese, and Arabic. The NSI Registry has plans to establish a preliminary environment wherein Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers-accredited registrars can analyze the Registry Registrar Protocol (RRP) command functionality prior to entering an operational test and evaluation environment. In an official statement made available on its Web site (http://www.icann.org), ICANN states that it "recognizes that it is important that the Internet evolve to be more accessible to those who do not use English-language character sets. At the same time, the internationalization of the Internet's domain name system must be accomplished through standards that are open, nonproprietary, and fully compatible with the Internet's existing end-to-end model and that preserve globally unique naming in a universally resolvable public name space. ICANN strongly supports the principle stated by the IETF's working group on Internationalized Domain Names. . . . With those goals in mind, ICANNN intends to monitor closely the implementation of non-English language character sets by NSI Registry in the .com, .net, and .org top-level domains." Complete information about the NSI Registry testbed can be found at http://www.nsol.com/news/2000/pr_20000824.html * WIPO SEEKS PUBLIC COMMENTS The World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) invites public comments on a comprehensive study of the intellectual property-related needs of holders of traditional knowledge. The report is based on hundreds of interviews conducted by WIPO during nine fact-finding missions in almost all regions of the world in 1998 and 1999. Comments on the draft, available at http://www.wipo.int/traditionalknowledge/report/, can be sent to the WIPO through 30 October 2000. For more information, see http://www.wipo.int/eng/newindex/press.htm. -- Howard Flack http://www.unige.ch/crystal/ahdf/Howard.Flack.html Laboratoire de Cristallographie Phone: 41 (22) 702 62 49 24 quai Ernest-Ansermet mailto:Howard.Flack@cryst.unige.ch CH-1211 Geneva 4, Switzerland Fax: 41 (22) 702 61 08
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