Showdown over computer 'crime'


SUBMITTED BY: azzar

DATE: April 10, 2017, 10:17 p.m.

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  1. Some of the nation's computer pioneers see the digital world in
  2. which they toil as a cybernetic rangeland with its own kind of
  3. frontier justice. And some of them have set out to change the
  4. system.
  5. Their rallying cry is Operation Sun Devil and other government
  6. probes into malfeasance by so-called computer "hackers." These
  7. investigations, they assert, smack of hang-em-high justice and
  8. all to often become examples of government heavy-handedness.
  9. "Some of the government's actions clearly weren't
  10. constitutional," said Mitch Kapor, founder of Lotus Development
  11. Corp. and a new software firm ON Technology in Cambridge, Mass.
  12. Kapor, along with a small group of fellow computer pioneers,
  13. recently announced the formation of the Electronic Frontier
  14. Foundation, a group dedicated to protecting the rights of
  15. computer users. Its ultimate goal is to extend the same First
  16. Amendment protection that the print and broadcast media enjoy to
  17. digital communications.
  18. "Our idea is to get people to understand the issues and not to
  19. try and make decisions in a controversial and confrontational
  20. atmosphere," Kapor said.
  21. Secret Service and U.S. Justice Department spokesmen in
  22. Washington declined to comment on Operation Sun Devil or other
  23. computer investigations. But they stressed that the federal
  24. agencies are mindful of the need to protect civil rights.
  25. "We are not just some renegade agency breaking into peoples's
  26. computer systems,"said Secret Service Agent Rich Adams. "We
  27. would not be investigating if we were not mandated by Congress.
  28. That's why we're involved."
  29. The foundation is pushing its goals by providing legal assistance
  30. to computer users who become victims of what they see as overly
  31. zealous law enforcement officials. It also is awarding grants to
  32. civil liberties organizations such as the Computer Professionals
  33. for Social Responsibility in Palo Alto.
  34. Kapor stresses that the foundation is not a defense fund for
  35. "hackers" and does not support breaking into computer systems or
  36. pirating software.
  37. The foundation has already had an impact. It recently located
  38. defense witnesses in the government's case against computer
  39. bulletin board operator and newsletter publisher Craig Neidorf.
  40. On July 27, in the middle of the trial, the government abruptly
  41. dropped its case against Neidorf.
  42. Neidorf was accused of interstate transportation of a stolen
  43. BellSouth Corp. document describing its emergency 911 system, a
  44. charge which stems from the government's investigation into a
  45. group of hackers called the Legion of Doom.
  46. Prosecutors dropped Neidorf's case when Sheldon Zenner, Neidorf's
  47. attorney, showed that the information which BellSouth alleged was
  48. proprietary could be purchased by calling an 800 number and
  49. paying $13.
  50. 'Private police force'
  51. Terry Gross, an attorney that aided Neidorf's defense team,
  52. accused the government of serving as a private police force for
  53. large corporations.
  54. "I think it is a very serious concern that we should all have of
  55. the government being used as a private police force for private
  56. corporations," Gross said. "Especially when BellSouth made a
  57. claim that the government accepted."
  58. The foundation contends that prosecutors, policemen and judges
  59. must think of computer communications in the same way they think
  60. of printed and broadcast communications.
  61. In the eyes of foundation leaders, their main opponent is the
  62. federal government. Operation Sun Devil, a two-year
  63. investigation, has so far resulted in seven arrests and some 40
  64. computers and 23,000 disks of data.
  65. Kapor's group draws a parallel between the Pentagon Papers case,
  66. which involved classified government papers documenting the
  67. history of U.S. involvement in Vietnam, and Neidorf's. If
  68. Neidorf had published the document in a newspaper, as The New
  69. York Times and The Washington Post published the Pentagon Papers,
  70. he would have been protected.
  71. "The example they use is a good one," said Ken Wasch, executive
  72. director of the Software Publishers Association. If someone
  73. printed a document on how to get into a federal facility there
  74. would be no restrictions on publication, he explained. "But if
  75. you put it on a (computer) bulletin board there would be."

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