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Computer Undergroud Digest Vol. 07 Issue 81

  


Computer underground Digest Sun Oct 15, 1995 Volume 7 : Issue 81
ISSN 1004-042X

Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@MVS.CSO.NIU.EDU
Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
Ian Dickinson
Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest

CONTENTS, #7.81 (Sun, Oct 15, 1995)

File 1--REVISED ACM DL'96 (Conference News)
File 2--O'Reilly's "Essential System Administration, 2nd Edition"
File 3--Announcement: Alert Mailing List
File 4--Community Democracy Online in Palo Alto
File 5-- A Day in the Life of Cyberspace (fwd)
File 6--New Web site on government censorship
File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)

CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.

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

Date: 3 Oct 1995 16:56:23 -0700
From: inouye-a@GARNET.BERKELEY.EDU(Alan Inouye)
Subject: File 1--REVISED ACM DL'96 (Conference News)

NOTE--THIS HAS BEEN REVISED!!
1. Changed submission due dates
2. New address for workshop submissions



Call for Participation

ACM DL'96 --- Digital
Libraries '96

First ACM International Conference on
Digital Libraries

Bethesda, MD
March 20-23, 1996

ACM Digital Libraries '96 is an international conference
devoted to advancing the state-of-the-art in digital
libraries. The ACM DL series continues the sequence of
Texas conferences: DL'94 in College Station and DL'95 in
Austin. The leaders of those events are helping with DL'96
organization and program efforts. The meeting will be co-
located with Hypertext '96 in 1996 and with ACM SIGIR
'97 the following year. DL '96 will immediately follow
Hypertext '96 at the Hyatt Regency
in Bethesda, Maryland. The site is located near the
Washington D.C. Metro and provides easy access to the
many attractions in the Baltimore-Washington area.

The DL series is sponsored by ACM, through SIGIR and
SIGLINK. Other ACM SIGs have joined in cooperation,
including: SIGAda, SIGART, SIGBIO, SIGCAPH,
SIGCOMM, SIGCUE, SIGDA, SIGMIS (formerly SIGBIT),
and SIGOIS.

In-cooperation sponsors include:

ASIS (American Society for Information Science),
CNI (Coalition for Networked Information),
IEEE CS (IEEE Computer Society)
KSI (Knowledge Systems Inc.),
LITA (Library and Information Technology Association),
LoC (Library of Congress),
NAL (National Agricultural Library),
NLM (National Library of Medicine),
SLA (Special Libraries Association).

Three sessions at the conference have been reserved for the
working groups of the Digital Library Forum. These
groups are studying aspects of interoperability in digital
libraries. During the sessions, members of the groups will
describe the objectives of the groups, describe progress to
date, and lead discussions of the issues. The exact list of
topics has not been finally chosen, but will likely include
open architectures for digital libraries, archiving and
digital preservation, and the National Computer Science
Technical Reports Library.



Technical Program

We seek papers, posters and videos on the one hand--and
proposals for tutorials and workshops on the other hand--
on topics related to Digital Libraries, including but not
limited to the following list:

* architectures, reference models, standards
* authoring and electronic publishing
* cataloging, indexing, preserving
* collaborative environments
* collecting, capturing, filtering
* distributed data, knowledge and information
representation and systems
* economic and social implications and issues
* education, learning and related applications
* evaluation methods and user testing
* handling of graphics, GIS, multimedia information
* hypertext and hypermedia systems (especially including
WWW) and support
* information storage and retrieval
* intellectual property rights
* modeling and simulation
* networked information discovery
* networking systems, protocols, security
* publisher plans and concerns
* user interfaces
* visualization, browsing, searching

Papers

Technical papers present original reports of innovative and
substantive new work that has not been published or
submitted for publication elsewhere. Papers are refereed by
a pool of reviewers for the conference proceedings,
published by ACM. Because of the tight time schedule,
designed to ensure that the latest results will be discussed,
there will be little time for revision, so submissions should
be in near-final form.

Important Dates:
Oct. 17, 1995 --- Papers due to Program Chair
Dec. 1, 1995 --- Authors notified about PC decisions
Jan. 1, 1996 --- Papers due to Program Chair

Submissions: Papers must be written in English and
contain a maximum of 6000 words (excluding figures). If
possible, use 10 point Times Roman, single-spaced, with
no more than a total of 12 pages. The proceedings will be
printed in typical ACM 2-column format, and articles will
have a limit of 10 pages. If submissions are made with
paper, 6 copies must be provided. If submissions are made
electronically, the Subject line must say DL96 PDF
Submission and Adobe's Portable Document Format must
be used.


Send submissions to arrive by October 17, 1995 to:

Edward A. Fox
Dept. of Computer Science
660 McBryde Hall
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg VA 24061-0106
Phone +1-540-231-5113
FAX +1-540-231-6075
Email: fox@vt.edu

Tutorials

Tutorials will precede the conference and serve to introduce
attendees to principles in the field, develop bridges
between the computer science and library/information
science communities, or examine advanced topics in depth.
Tutorials will be scheduled for 2.5 hour slots on Wednesday
afternoon and evening, March 20, 1995. Tutorials are
invited on topics such as the following:

Principles and practices of library science (Abstracting,
Indexing and Classification)
User behavior and information needs analysis (User Needs
and Services)
Information Retrieval and Hypertext (Searching,
Browsing)
Open System Design for the Internet

Submissions should include a 200-word abstract, a 1-page
topical outline of the course content, and describe course
objectives, intended audience, and the qualifications of
instructor(s). Proposers are encouraged to contact the
tutorials chairperson to discuss planned proposals.
Proposals will be evaluated on the basis of background of
the instructor(s) and the contribution of the tutorial to the
overall conference program.

Submit four copies of the proposal by October 17, 1995 to:

Edie Rasmussen
SLIS
University of Pittsburgh
135 N. Bellefield Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Phone (412) 624-9459
Fax (412) 648-7001
erasmus@lis.pitt.edu

Posters

Poster presentations allow researchers to present late-
breaking results or significant work in progress. Posters
will be refereed. Poster sessions allow authors and
conference participants to discuss the research in detail in
one-on-one or small group settings.

Submissions should consist of an extended abstract of at
most two pages emphasizing the problem, what was done
or is being done, and why the work is important. Include:
title, name and affiliation of the author(s) and complete
contact information. Note that the extended abstracts of
the posters will be published in the conference
proceedings.

Submit four copies of the proposal by November 1, 1995
to:

Beth Davis-Brown
National Digital Library Program
LIBN/O/NDL (1000)
The Library of Congress
Washington, DC 20540
Phone (202)-707-3301
Fax (202)-707-0815
bbro@loc.gov

Videos

Videos allow researchers and developers to illustrate the
dynamics of operational and prototype systems. Videos
will be refereed and selected videos will be shown at a
session during the conference so authors can verbally
annotate their work.

Submit videos that are a maximum of 5 minutes in length.
VHS format (NTSC) is required for review, and Hi-8, SVHS,
or Betacam SP are the formats required for final
submissions. It is likely that an author-supplied or
conference-prepared digital video version will be prepared
also and made available, so be sure that suitable releases
can be provided for all submissions. Also, please prepare a
one-page summary of the video which will be published in
the conference proceedings.

Submit two copies of the videotape and written summary by
October 17, 1995 to:

Charles Goldstein
National Library of Medicine
8600 Rockville Pike
Bethesda, MD 20894
Phone (301) 496-1936
Fax (301) 480-6183
chuck@nlm.nih.gov

Workshops

Workshops provide an opportunity for up to 25
participants to discuss issues in both research and applied
areas for one day. Workshop attendance is normally by
invitation based on attendees' response to a call for
workshop participation. Organizers should draft a call
describing the workshop and submit a three-page proposal
containing: an outline of the theme and goals of the
workshop, a description of the intended audience, an
overview of activities planned for the workshop, estimates
of number of participants, and a brief description of the
organizer backgrounds and experience.

Submit four copies of the proposal by October 17, 1995 to:

Maria Zemankova
c/o Ed Fox
Dept. of Computer Science
660 McBryde Hall
Virginia Tech
Blacksburg VA 24061-0106
Phone: (703) 306-1926
Fax: (703) 306-0599
mzemanko@nsf.gov


Conference Committee

General Chair
Gary Marchionini (University of Maryland at College
Park)
Technical Program Chair
Ed Fox (Virginia Polytechnical Institute and State
University)
Tutorials
Edie Rasmussen (University of Pittsburgh)
Workshops
Maria Zemankova (National Science Foundation)
Posters
Beth Davis-Brown (Library of Congress)
Videos
Charles Goldstein (National Library of Medicine)
Treasurer
Lawrence Fitzpatrick (Personal Library Software Inc.)
Publicity
Nancy Van House (University of California Berkeley)
Registration
Linda Hill (University of Maryland at College
Park/CESDIS)
Local Arrangements
Lida Larsen (University of Maryland at College Park)
Industry Liason
Roberta Rand (National Agriculture Library)

Technical Program Committee
William Arms, CNRI, USA
Robert Akscyn, Knowledge Systems, USA
Robert Allen, Bellcore, USA
Daniel Atkins, U. Michigan, USA
Ann Bishop, U. Ill. Urbana-Champaign, USA
Christine Borgman, UCLA, USA
Su-Shing Chen, NSF, USA
W. Bruce Croft, U. Mass. Amherst, USA
Steve DeRose, Electronic Book Tech., USA
Timothy Finin, U. Md. Balt. County, USA
James French, U. Virginia, USA
Mark Frisse, Washington U., USA
Richard Furuta, Texas A&M U., USA
Hector Garcia-Molina, Stanford U., USA
Henry Gladney, IBM Almaden Res., USA
Ephraim Glinert, Rennselear Poly., USA
John Guidi, U. Md. College Park, USA
Thomas Hickey, OCLC, USA
Nancy Ide, Vassar College, USA
Rob Kling, U. Ca. Irvine, USA
Ron Larsen, U. Md. College Park, USA
John Leggett, Texas A&M U., USA
Enrica Lemut, Istituto Matematica Applicata C.N.R., Italy
Michael Lesk, Bellcore, USA
David Levy, Xerox PARC, USA
Clifford Lynch, U. California, USA
Cathy Marshall, Texas A&M U., USA
Cliff McKnight, Loughbourough, UK
Fran Miksa, U. Texas Austin, USA
Eugene Miya, NASA Ames, USA
Sung Myaeng, Chungnam National U., S. Korea
A. Desai Narasimhalu, National U. of Singapore
Gultekin Ozsoyoglu, Case W. Reserve U., USA
Roy Rada, Washington State U., USA
P. Venkat Rangan, U. Ca. San Diego, USA
Pamela Samuelson, U. Pittsburgh, USA
Bruce Schatz, U. Ill. Urbana-Champaign, USA
John Schnase, Washington U., USA
Terence Smith, U. Ca. Santa Barbara, USA
Scott Stevens, Carnegie-Mellon U., USA
Chris Welty, Vassar College, USA
Terry Winograd, Stanford U., USA


For further information, see
http://fox.cs.vt.edu/DL96/

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

Date: Fri, 6 Oct 1995 11:22:59 -0700
From: Sara Winge <sara@ora.com>
Subject: File 2--O'Reilly's "Essential System Administration, 2nd Edition"

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 6, 1995

PRESS--FOR REVIEW COPIES, CONTACT:
Sara Winge
707-829-0515
sara@ora.com

O'REILLY RELEASES 2ND EDITION OF "ESSENTAIL SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION"
Updated Classic Covers All Major UNIX Platforms

SEBASTOPOL, CA--O'Reilly & Associates has released the second edition
of "Essential System Administration," its bestselling guide for UNIX
system administrators. This new edition has been updated for the latest
versions of all major UNIX platforms (including Sun OS 4.1, Solaris
2.3, AIX 4.1, Linux 1.1, Digital UNIX OSF/1, SCO UNIX version 3, HP/UX
versions 9 and 10, and IRIX version 6), and the entire book has been
thoroughly reviewed and tested on all of the platforms covered. In
addition, coverage of networking, electronic mail, security, and kernel
configuration has been expanded substantially.

Originally published in 1991, "Essential System Administration" was the
first book to take an in-depth look at the fundamentals of UNIX system
administration in a real-world, heterogeneous environment. The book
approaches UNIX systems administration from the perspective of the
system administrator's job -- the routine tasks and troubleshooting
that make up the sysadmin's day. When faced with the challenges of
dealing with frustrated users, convincing an uncomprehending manager
that new hardware is needed, rebuilding the kernel, or simply adding
new users, system administrators will find help in this book. It covers
back up and restore, organizing and planning file systems, TCP/IP
networking, and setting up email. In addition, it explains core system
administration tasks such as setting up printers, adding terminals and
disk drives, and securing the system. But "Essential System
Administration" is not for full-time systems administrators alone.
Linux users and others who administer their own systems will benefit
from its practical, hands-on approach.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

AEleen Frisch has been a system administrator for 15 years. Currently,
she spends some of her time looking after a very heterogeneous network
of UNIX workstations and PCs. She also writes the "Systems Wrangler"
column for RS/Magazine, which focuses on system administration on AIX
systems. AEleen has a B.S. in literature from Caltech and a Ph.D. in
cultural studies from Pitt.

ABOUT O'REILLY & ASSOCIATES

O'Reilly & Associates is recognized worldwide for its definitive books
on the Internet and UNIX, and more recently for its development of
online content and software. O'Reilly developed the Global Network
Navigator (GNN), a pioneering web-based publication which it sold to
America Online in June 1995. O'Reilly is a major developer of Win32
software for the Internet. WebSite, O'Reilly's web server software for
Windows 95 and Windows NT, was released in May 1995.

Working closely with developers of new technologies, O'Reilly's editors
are "computer people" who use the software they write about. The
company's planning and review cycles link together authors, software
developers, computer vendors, and technical experts throughout the
industry in a creative collaboration that mirrors the strengths of the
open systems philosophy itself.

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

Date: Mon, 9 Oct 1995 18:07:28 +1494730 (PDT)
From: Christopher Klaus <cklaus@ISS.NET>
Subject: File 3--Announcement: Alert Mailing List

The Alert will be covering the following topics:

- Security Product Announcements
- Updates to Security Products
- New Vulnerabilities found
- New Security Frequently Asked Question files.
- New Intruder Techniques and Awareness

To join, send e-mail to request-alert@iss.net and, in the text of your
message (not the subject line), write:


subscribe alert

To remove, send e-mail to request-alert@iss.net and, in the text of your message
(not the subject line), write:

unsubscribe alert

This is a moderated list in the effort to keep the noise to a minimal and
provide quality security information.

If your site is interested in network security, we put out several
FAQes (Frequently Asked Question) that cover the following main areas
of topic:

Vendor Contacts
- Who is the security contacts at IBM, HP, Dec, Motorola, etc.
- Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/vendor.html

Patches
- List of all security related patches catergorized by OS type.
- Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/patch.html

Compromise
- Check list of things to do if your machines are compromised.
- Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/compromise.html

Anonymous FTP Security
- How to correctly set up FTP and check for vulnerabilities.
- Web page at: http://iss.net/iss/anonftp.html

Sniffers
- What they are. How they work. How to detect them. And solutions.
- Web page: http://iss.net/iss/sniff.html

Security Mailing Lists
- A comprehensive list of security mailing lists.
- Web page: http://iss.net/iss/maillist.html


If possible, it might be a good idea for you to add links to the above
web pages on your own Web server and point people who need to know
some of the network security issues to the web page. It is
possible to point to all of the FAQ pages at:

http://iss.net/iss/faq.html

--
Christopher William Klaus Voice: (770)441-2531. Fax: (770)441-2431
Internet Security Systems, Inc. "Internet Scanner lets you find
2000 Miller Court West, Norcross, GA 30071 your network security holes
Web: http://iss.net/ Email: cklaus@iss.net before the hackers do."

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

Date: Thu, 28 Sep 1995 13:54:57 -0700
From: Marilyn Davis <madavis@IGC.APC.ORG>
Subject: File 4--Community Democracy Online in Palo Alto

Please repost as appropriate
============================


Announcing: The first evening meeting of the

Palo Alto Community Network



Topic: CREATING DEMOCRACY

A Plan for Palo Alto's Electronic Communities


Speaker: Marilyn Davis, Ph.D.
Palo Alto Resident and Developer of eVote

When: OCTOBER 10 -- Tuesday, 7:30 pm

Where: Palo Alto Cultural Center Auditorium
1313 Newell Rd. at Embarcadero

Contact: Marilyn Davis (415) 493-3631 madavis@igc.org

"As the world grows smaller and our hierarchical systems prove
increasingly inadequate, we must create new, cooperative, and more
nurturing systems of human organization in cyberspace. It's our only
chance to overcome the threat of environmental and social demise."
... Marilyn Davis

Ms. Davis views our current democracies as futile attempts to
facilitate equally shared decision-making on a large scale. She
believes that all humans share a longing for a fair system and that
cyberspace is unfolding as a manifestation of that longing.

In cyberspace, we *can* facilitate equally distributed, broad-based
decision-making --- Should we?

As the developer of eVote, vote-serving software for online groups,
Marilyn will demonstrate a prototype of the theoretically *perfect*
community server: a web-accessible, graphical meeting package with
branching discussion trees, outline support, and user-generated
polling.

She will describe the relatively small development task this community
software requires: a synthesis of three existing software applications
-- A WWW browser/server; Participate, meeting software; and eVote.

* * *

The Palo Alto Community Network, or PA-COMNET, is a group of Palo Alto
area residents who share a common interest in using Internet-based
online communications to build a better community.

PA-COMNET meets continuously by means of an email list. To join, send
an email message to majordomo@svi.org with no subject line but a
message that says: subscribe pa-comnet

++++++++++

Catch Marilyn on TV: Palo Alto Cable Channel 6

Monday Oct 2 5:30pm
Monday Oct 6 5:00pm
Monday Oct 9 6:30pm

Marilyn Davis and Carl Loebner discuss the future of democracy as
aided by technology on "The Democracy Project", a series produced for
Public Access TV in San Jose.

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

Date: Fri, 6 Oct 1995 23:51:09 -0500 (CDT)
From: David Smith <bladex@BGA.COM
Subject: File 5-- A Day in the Life of Cyberspace (fwd)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date--Mon, 2 Oct 95 23:16:42 -0400
From--Michael Hawley <mike@pia.media.mit.edu


As part of the Media Lab's 10th Anniversary, we are assembling
snapshots of Cyberspace. We would like *you* to be part of the
first global portrait of human life in the digital age. This site
will collect bits from October 1 through October 10. Results will
be published on the Web, in a subsequent book, and will become part
of a permanent archive.

Stop and think: five years ago, the internet for most people felt
like tin cans and string. Two years ago the Web and Mosaic were
just beginning to be noticed. Now, every day, something utterly
mindblowing turns up with a point and a click. This is a pivotal
era, and a perfect time to ask the digital world to pause, and
ponder the implications of digital media on future world culture.

WANTED: DIGITAL PIONEERS ===========================================

We are searching for compelling stories about digital life.

For example, we received an amazing message about how the Net is
being used to protect endangered mountain gorillas. As part of
NASA's Mission to Planet Earth, the space shuttle Endeavour made
radar scans of the gorillas' habitat near the Virunga volcano, in
central Africa. With handheld GPS satellite instruments, which
anti-poaching rangers have been trained to use in the field, daily
readings of gorilla movements and poacher activities are sent from
a portable ground station in the mountains to another satellite,
HealthSat II, and then over the Internet to the 3-D tracking system
based at Rutgers University. There are only 650 mountain gorillas
left in the world, and this system is helping to save them.

What we need are *your* bits -- your stories, in text, sound, and
picture. How are global digital media affecting your life? Changing
the fabric of world society? Touching human interests? What might
the picture look like in 5 years? 50 years? Let us know, and quickly.

COUNT TO TEN =======================================================

During the days from 10/1 to 10/9 we focus on several themes:

1 Privacy -- Anonymity, Security, Privacy & Trust in a Digital Society
2 Expression -- Digital Art, Entertainment & Community Creativity
3 Generations -- Kids & Childhood, Seniors, Life Stories and Family
4 Wealth -- Advertising, Barter, Commerce and Personalized Trade
5 Faith -- Religion and Politics and their Net Effects
6 Body -- Sex, Health, Your Body and Technology
7 Place -- Our Sense of Place in a Post-Digital World
8 Tongues -- Languages in the Global Village
9 Environment -- Coexistence and Coevolution of Natural and Virtual Worlds

For example, in "Generations" we'd like to hear from the youngest
kids on line, and connect them with the oldest senior citizens.
During the day on "Place" we'd like to collect images from every
netcam on earth, and bits from every country on earth with some
tie to the Net. Do you communicate with a friend in Antarctica or
Bosnia by e-mail? Did you find life-saving medecine in time, thanks
to the Net? Was your wedding online? Your newborn child?

10/10: A DAY IN THE LIFE OF CYBERSPACE =============================

Then, on 10/10, live from the Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
teams of professional editors and World Wide Web hackers working
in "mission control" at MIT will collect, edit, and publish the
best of those bits on the net. Taken together, these bits will
create a mosaic of life at the dawn of the digital revolution that
is transforming our planet.

HOW TO DO IT =======================================================

1. Through the World Wide Web: http://www.1010.org
2. By e-mail, send specific remarks to:
cyber@1010.org --- general reflections on digital life
privacy@... --- comments regarding privacy, anonymity
expression@... --- art, entertainment & community creativity
generations@... --- kids, seniors, life stories, family
wealth@... --- advertising, barter, commerce, personalized trade
faith@... --- religion and politics
body@... --- sex, health, our bodies & technology
place@... --- geography, telecommuting, mobility, virtual v. physical
tongues@ --- languages and communications on line
environment@... --- mixing of natural and digital worlds
3. By ftp (to send sounds, pictures):
ftp to ftp.1010.org, login anonymous
cd pub/incoming
"put" your bits.
Please pick a unique filename, and also give us
a file called "<mybits.README" to explain who you
are and what your data is.
4. For more information, mail to: info@1010.org

ABOUT YOUR BITS ====================================================

You are writing a community book.

Your input is being used to illuminate the stories of digital life.
Your bits will become part of a global, public, community event --
a canvas that we all paint together. The visualizations and time
capsules, as well as selected responses will be archived and may
be published by the MIT Media Lab or its agents in the future. Some
material will be selected, edited, and arranged for redisplay on
the Web on 10/10 and may appear in book form later. You retain
all copyrights to your entries but by submitting them are granting
MIT a perpetual non-exclusive right, without cost, to use your
entries in all forms for purposes that will advance public
understanding of this event.

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

Date: Wed, 11 Oct 1995 14:55:40 -0400
From: Andy Oram <andyo@ORA.COM>
Subject: File 6--New Web site on government censorship

The Web sites I've seen on Exon etc. seem to be getting out of date,
or just focus on one or two details. So, with help from Cyber-Rights
members (a CPSR working group) and some other people, I wrote a new
Web page to present the main issues in a punchy, direct way. The
title is "Government Censorship Threatens the Information
Infrastructure." It refers to other Web pages for details.

Please let everyone who might be interested know about this URL.

http://jasper.ora.com/andyo/cyber-rights/free-speech/

Thanks to everybody who contributed information and ideas,
particularly Craig Johnson.

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

Date: Sun, 19 Apr 1995 22:51:01 CDT
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
Subject: File 7--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 19 Apr, 1995)

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violate copyright protections.

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

End of Computer Underground Digest #7.81
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