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-------------------------------------------------------------------- T H E N E T W O R K O B S E R V E R VOLUME 1, NUMBER 2 FEBRUARY 1994 -------------------------------------------------------------------- Welcome to TNO 1(2). This issue includes an article by Leslie Regan Shade on the slow start of debate on information infrstructure issues in Canada. As with most other issues, Canadians have the risk of getting American solutions (and American rhetoric, info highways and all) spilling over the border by default, as well as the opportunity to look at the American example critically and choose alternatives that fit their own conception of themselves as a decent liberal democracy. We'll see which way it goes. The good news is that Canada's civic networking movement has gotten started. Indeed, the civic networking movement the world over is starting to do its networking in earnest now, and that's terrific. Will it be Home Shopping Channel the whole planet wide? You can make the difference by getting involved right now. This issue also includes two more articles. One of them, which was motivated by some positive comments on TNO 1(1)'s article on political action alerts, is a tutorial on getting help on the Internet by sending messages to mailing lists and news groups and the like. This is a big issue right now because lots of schools are teaching students how to do research using the net, and by all indications some of these schools could use a little more of a textbook on the subject. Perhaps my own notes will be of use to someone. The other article is a somewhat hostile meditation on the illegal trade in information. I personally feel that the crusade for freedom and privacy in the digital age needs much better theories of the actual threats to freedom and privacy. Images like "Big Brother Is Watching You" really are not adequate, and better images of both the problems and the potential solutions will be a crucial part of the increasingly global campaign for democracy. But first, this editorial note... -------------------------------------------------------------------- Setbacks for the mighty. The arrest of former counterintellence branch chief Aldrich Hazen Ames on espionage charges is further proof, if any more was needed, of the absolute incompetence of the US Central Intelligence Agency. The CIA has gotten virtually everything wrong for at least fifteen years, from the fall of the Shah to the end of Communism to this ridiculous business about Jean-Bertrand Aristide's mental health. It no longer serves any purpose at all, even within the disordered worldview of its creators, except to continue paying salaries to the shadow-world of professional paranoids who constitute an extra-Constitutional government unto themselves in the world's most powerful country. The cause of democracy would be much better served by dismantling the CIA and massively increasing peer-reviewed civilian funding for openly published scholarship on the world's cultures and ideas. This openness is not simply expedient; it is a prerequisite of democratic life and we should be appalled that it isn't happening. Likewise, the collapse of the proposed merger between Bell Atlantic and TCI demonstrates what critics have been saying all along: that the merger was predicated on a business model that presupposes a perpetuation of the anti-competitive practices that have made TCI what it is. Let us give credit where it is due: to the massive numbers of American citizens who got pissed off at their cable bills and complained to Congress -- and then kept complaining until the FCC finally exercised some kind of control over the monopolists, however slight. We should consider ourselves lucky to have had such a crude and obvious reminder of the monopolistic practices that arise in poorly regulated telecommunications industries. Activists who are pursuing democratic models of telecommunications regulation in the era of digital convergence should build on this success by making everyone -- not just in Washington, and not just on the net -- aware of the deeper issues. The cause of democracy requires diversity, openness, and widespread access to telecommunications. At a minimum this means the avoidance of monopolies. But more fundamentally, it means common carrier regulation and the associated technical standards, so that everyone can produce content in all media as well as consuming it, and the iron-clad principle that bandwidth must be set aside for public use. Is the future going to look like the Internet? Now is the time when we, the people, make this choice. As a practical-political matter this process requires, among other things, that somebody throw some more light on the practices of the would-be monopolists, the companies whose business models are predicated on poorly regulated control of both carrier and content. This is not the free market in operation. Rather, it's large-scale "issues management" aimed at institutionalizing a set of anti-competitive regulatory structures. Issues management is the high-powered synthesis of lobbying, legal advocacy, public relations, and the quasi-intellectual work of "think tanks". (One manifestation of issues management is the recent round of vague promises that unregulated telecommunications monopolies will connect large numbers of schools to the info highway, with little if any guarantees about the technical nature, economic terms, and equity of distribution of these connections.) This process is furthest along in Brussels, where a truly scary anti-democratic system is being shaped under the guidance of Europe's largest trans-national companies. Issues management is being practiced at a high level of refinement in Washington as well, but the game is much more fluid at this point, due precisely to what little democracy is still operating in this country. The cause of democracy would be greatly enhanced world-wide if the practices of issue management were thoroughly exposed and if clear, powerful metaphors for the process became as widespread as Big Brother and the Panopticon. For basic information about issues management see the following: Robert L. Heath and Richard Alan Nelson, Issues Management: Corporate Public Policymaking in an Information Society, Beverly Hills, CA: Sage, 1986. An academic book summarizing the methods of issues management as they existed in the mid-1980's. William Greider, Who Will Tell the People: The Betrayal of American Democracy, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1992. A critical journalistic account of issues management in practice and the democratic resistance to it. His examples are drawn from environmental controversies, but you can easily substitute telecommunications issues. Here's the bottom line: if you want the future of digital community-building to look like the Internet, you want the future of telecommunications regulation to be organized on common carrier principles. Do yourself a big favor this month: say the phrase "common carrier" over and over until you start to like the sound of it. Then get yourself going: agitate, educate, and organize. Without you it just won't happen. To find out how to get involved, consult the Electronic Frontier Foundation's excellent guide to public networking organizations worldwide, a copy of which can be gotten by sending a message that looks like: To: rre-request@weber.ucsd.edu Subject: archive send eff.faq -------------------------------------------------------------------- The art of getting help. In the Risks Digest 15.57, Dan Yurman <dyurman@igc.apc.org complained about a worrisome new net phenomenon, "the practice by college students of using subject matter listservs as sources of first resort for information they should be looking up in their university library". He tells the tale of a college course in which students were directed to do research for term papers on environmental issues using messages posted to Listserv groups. The result was a flood of basic questions being directed to a group of specialists in ecology. His note is valuable in its entirety, and you can fetch it from the RRE archive by sending a message that looks like: To: rre-request@weber.ucsd.edu Subject: archive send courtesy The basic problem, in Dan's view, was that "neither the TA nor the students had any idea who was at the other end of the line. All they saw was a computer that should be giving them answers." That may well be true, but I would like to suggest that his tale raises an issue of much broader importance: teaching students how to get help -- both off the Internet and on it. My own experience as a college teacher is that most students have little understanding of how to get help. Many cannot seek help, for example by showing up for a professor's office hours, without feeling as though they are subordinating themselves to someone. The reasons for this feeling might well be found in the workings of educational institutions. My own issue here is what to do about it, and how the Internet might (or might not) help. We should start by telling ourselves three obvious things: (1) that needing and getting help are normal parts of any project that isn't totally spoon-fed, (2) that getting help is a skill, and (3) that nobody is born with this skill. What are the basic principles of getting help? They might all sound obvious to you, but they're definitely not obvious to beginners -- maybe you can store them where beginners can find them. * Be able to explain your project. If you can't explain the basic ideas and goals of your project in language that any given person can understand, then back up and figure out what you're trying to do. * Know what your question is. Just because you feel like you need help, that doesn't mean you know what it is you want. If you need help formulating your question, *get* help with that first. * Try the obvious sources first. Never ask a person, or at least a person you don't know well, any questions until you've tried the obvious references -- encyclopedias, almanacs, card catalogs, phone books, and so forth. Failing to doing so regularly causes great offense. * Make friends with a librarian. Librarians have chosen to be librarians because they are dedicated to helping people find information. If you're feeling uncertain about how to find information, go to a library and ask questions. You'll get much better and more patient answers than you'll ever get on the net. If you don't know what to say, say this: "Hi. I'm working on a project about X and I'm trying to find information about Y. Who can help me figure out how to do this?" * Ask the right person. Figure out whether your question is basic or advanced, and don't ask an expert unless it's advanced. It's okay to ask librarians how to find basic information. * Provide some context. Unless your question is quite straightforwardly factual in nature, it probably won't make sense to anyone unless you explain something about your project first. * Don't get hung up on the Internet. Think of the Internet as simply one part of a larger ecology of information sources and communication media. Don't look for your answer on the Internet just because the Internet is fashionable or easy. The Internet, at least as it stands today, is very good at some things and very bad at other things. * Do some homework. Let's say you *do* wish to get information by sending a message to a discussion group (Listserv group, Usenet news group, etc) on the net. If at all possible, subscribe to that group for a little while first in order to get a sense for it. How heavy is the load? How polite is the general tone of interaction? Does the list maintainer have a FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) file available? (Do you figure your question might be frequently asked?) * Take some care. Keep in mind that the people aren't obligated to help you; they're busy and have lives just like you. So don't just dash off a brief note. Write in complete sentences and check your spelling. Avoid idioms that people in other countries might not understand. Don't attempt any ironic humor; it doesn't travel well in e-mail. Start out by introducing yourself in a sentence or two. And wrap up with a polite formula such as "Any suggestions would be much appreciated." * Make yourself useful. If your question might be of general interest, offer to assemble the answers you receive and pass them along to whoever else is interested. You might even consider maintaining a file of useful information on the subject and advertising its availability to others in your situation. * Ask who to ask. Consider including a statement such as, "If nobody knows the answer, perhaps you can tell me who else might know it." Indeed, it's often a good idea to formulate your question this way in the first place. That is, instead of "Can anybody tell me X?", try "Can anybody tell me how to find out X?" * Use the Reply-To: field. Keep in mind that e-mail discussion groups are often destroyed by too much random chatter. You can help minimize the amount of random chatter that your request generates by including a Reply-To: field in the header of your message, indicating that replies should be directed to your own e-mail address and not to the whole group. * Sign the message. Include your name and e-mail address in the message, in case it isn't obvious from the header. * Say thank you. Send a brief message of thanks to each person who replies constructively to your request. Do not simply include a generic "Thank you in advance" in your request -- you risk making the net more impersonal. * Let it take time. You won't necessarily get an answer right away. You won't necessarily get an answer at all. It might take a while before you learn how to use the net. That's life. -------------------------------------------------------------------- The economics of information crimes. Recently a hoax has been circulating the Internet, a fake ad for a company called BlackNet that uses cryptography to anonymously match buyers and sellers for illegal transfers of information. It's not really that great a joke, but at least it should set us thinking about how the illicit trade in information is actually organized. This trade certainly exists. Although it is obviously secretive, many instances of it have been documented by privacy activists and others. We might inquire into the nature of this trade in many ways, but I propose to sketch an economic theory of illegal information exchange. Why? In these free market times, if neoclassical economics is going to be made to explain family life and campaign contributions then surely it should be made to explain crime as well. Fraud, extortion, violations of personal privacy and intellectual property rights, extrajudicial executions, and other criminal activities surely obey the laws of the market just as well. To my knowledge, which is of course necessarily limited, the market in illicit information is structured in a pretty conventional way. There are roughly two market structures. One of them is highly decentralized and depends on very specific knowledge about what information is likely to be useful to whom (that is, knowledge about the economic uses of specific categories of knowledge); it thus depends heavily on particular professional relationships. In particular, it has little use for cryptography since all the hiding goes on in the specificity of particular relationships. The other kind is more of a mass-market phenomenon, and more closely resembles the conventional image of a market, with well-defined commodities and sharp competition among suppliers. This sector of the market trades primarily in highly standardized personal information, and operates through a wide variety of what marketing people call "grey channels", distribution channels other than those the marketing organization intends. (An example would be the widespread practice in packaged-goods arbitrage; if Safeway holds a sale on toothpaste in San Francisco and not in Los Angeles, or if Procter and Gamble discounts wholesale toothpaste in San Francisco and not in Los Angeles for competitive or promotional reasons, then someone will buy crates of toothpaste in San Francisco and ship them to Los Angeles.) Aside from these two market structures, and interacting to some extent with them, are the very widespread and deeply rooted informal networks of non-market information-sharing, for example between the police and utility companies. Money usually does not change hands, though no doubt it is worth understanding these informal patterns of reciprocal assistance in economic terms as well. As with most favor-sharing networks, the process is thoroughly decentralized (although some organizations offer specific training in how to participate in them). One distinctive feature of the market in illicit information is that the principal cost is not the stolen item, which after all is not normally discovered to be missing, but rather the risk of getting caught. Unfortunately that risk is usually pretty small, although the cost associated with getting caught can be large if civil liability is clearly defined or if professional reputations are at stake -- not normally the case with mass-market personal information, which is typically handled by low-paid clerical workers. But the really important thing about the illegal information market is that it is so similar to the *legal* information market. It has much the same structure, although advertising and other market-making institutions don't work the same way. The similarity is particular striking at the commodity end of the market -- the market in personal information. In practice there is one huge industry, all of which depends on the same basically immoral device: taking information that you left behind somewhere, for some specific purpose, and diverting it to an unlimited variety of other purposes. The status of this diversion is, unfortunately, not very well defined at all, either under common law or the statutes of most countries -- particularly the United States. The line between legal and illegal information selling is thoroughly vague, enforcement is minimal, public awareness is inchoate, obfuscation is rampant, and the economic incentives to collect information and to deceive people about its intended uses are massive. The next question is what can be done about this dire situation. For some possible answers, look out for future issues of TNO. -------------------------------------------------------------------- What's happening up north, eh? Leslie Regan Shade McGill University Graduate Program in Communications shade@ice.cc.mcgill.ca One of the difficulties and risks academics face in writing about current developments in technology--particularly networking technology-- is that by the time the articles go through the typical blind referred mill, which averages somewhere between 6-12 months before actual publication, some of the information in the articles might be painfully out of date. For instance, in my recently published article, "Computer Networking in Canada: from CA*net to CANARIE", (_Canadian Journal of Communication_, vol. 19, 1994, p. 53-69), I wrote: "So far, there has been little public discussion and debate on CANARIE, aside from those in the academic, industrial, and government sectors. For instance, the media might mention in passing the need to create an 'electronic superhighway' but CANARIE has not become a household name" [p.60]. (CANARIE--the Canadian Research Network for the Advancement of Research, Industry, and Education--is essentially the Canadian archetype of the NREN). Well, since these words were written last April, the hyperbole surrounding the "information super-highway" has certainly hit Canada. No, CANARIE is not yet a household name, but it has been mentioned in the media more in the last month than in the whole of last year. And, our new Premier, Jean Chretien, in his Throne Speech, mentioned briefly the need to upgrade the existing network. An apropos-to-our-current-weather (coldest January in about 50 years) cartoon, reprinted from the Palm Beach Post by Don Wright (_Globe and Mail_, February 3): snowy landscape, buried car, voices in house say: "Another ferocious blizzard! No power! No phone! No TV! No computer! We're totally cut off from the information superhighway!" Another voice says: "Isn't it wonderful?" Is this why Le Groupe Videotron Ltee. of Montreal thinks their newest venture will be a hit here? They recently announced a partnership with 6 companies, including Canada Post, Hydro Quebec, Loto-Quebec, the National Bank of Canada, and Hearst Corp., to build a $750-million interactive network in Quebec, whose purpose will be to bring home shopping and banking, purchase of lottery tickets, and payment of bills, to over 34,000 coach potatoes by 1995. It is true that Quebecers suffer from long, cold winters. Just think: we can comfortably sit at home programming our TV to feature a myriad of different camera angles of our favorite hockey teams, while using up more hydro, whose bills we can pay directly through tthe TV, and--we can hope to win millions playing the lottery so that we can move to warmer and sunnier climes... The ghosts of Telidon and Alex (Bell Canada's defunct videotext system), loom largely as I ponder Videotron's strategy. None of the editorials and articles I've read in the Canadian media exude any real confidence that the 500-Channel Universe is a Great Thing. Most are skeptical. And remember, many Canadians are concerned about maintaining Canadian content. Jack Valenti doesn't exactly inspire the Red Carpet Treatment in some circles here. This week's 2-day conference in Toronto, "The Information Superhighway: Powering Up North America", brought together all the Big Names and Heavy Shakers (the "great minds") that will purportedly fashion the highway. Like many others, I was not able to attend the conference--yes, the $995.00 plus GST fee was slightly steep for me this month. However, I got a good, free sampling of what the conference was about--"Futurescape: Canada's Information Highway", was a 12-page advertising supplement to the _Globe and Mail_, January 26. It was put out by the Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC). The Great Minds included the U.S. presidents of Bell Atlantic, Oracle, Sprint, and Thinking Machines; the heads of Canadian firms such as Unitel, Newbridge, Rogers Cable; some MIT folks--Negroponte and Russell Neuman; Vint Cerf (typo'ed as "President, Internet"), and various and sundry such as Bob Rae, Premier of Ontario. ITAC President and CEO Janice Moyer was quoted as saying that the target audience for the conference "reflects the diversity of interests that will be affected by the Information Highway: enterprise leaders; corporate alliance and change planners; competition catalysers; information managers; policy makers; senior managers; telecommunications executives; and marketers." Indeed, Geoffrey Rowan, reporting on the conference in the February 2nd _Globe and Mail_, wrote: "[The conference] sounded more like a sales pitch than the visionary big thinking it was advertised to be". Whither the public? In my aforementioned article, I concluded by saying: "It would appear that, to date, however, CANARIE has borrowed only the technical spirit, and not the social or legal tone, of its counterpart, the NREN. The lively debate in the U.S. now regarding access and policy issues should galvanize Canadians to consider how they will address such important and fundamental issues. What are the implications of a predominantly privately owned network? Will this increase the commercialization of networking resources? Will Canada's heterogeneous networking community, including K-12 schools, non-profit organizations, freenets, local BBSs, and public libraries have access to CANARIE resources, or will networking still remain within the prevailing provenance of academic and industry?" [p.68] On the second day of the "Powering Up" conference, Jon Gerrard, Secretary of State for Science, Research, and Development, announced that Ottawa will strive to implement policies to address issues such as job creation; cultural sovereignty and cultural identity; and universal access at a universal cost. He also mentioned the success of efforts such as civic freenets and educational networks such as SchoolNet. But, the Canadian public is still not as organized as our Southern neighbors. We don't have the equivalent to the EFF or CPSR here. There are some small beginnings, though: *The Coalition for Public Information, an initiative of the Ontario Library Association, is a new group whose aims are to "ensure that the developing information infrastructure in Canada serves the public interest, focuses on human communication, and provides universal access to information". The Coalition plans to build a broad coalition of public interest groups. *Prime Minister Jean Chretien isn't online yet, but the Premier of New Brunswick, Frank McKenna, is. You can contact him at premier@gov.nb.ca. Also, New Brunswick has appointed the first provincial minister responsible for the Information Highway. *The free-net movement in Canada is burgeoning. The National Capital FreeNet (NCF) in Ottawa has been officially up for just a year, yet already has more than 12,000 members and over 100 national, provincial, regional, and local organizations participating. (Telnet to freenet.carleton.ca). Freenets in Victoria and Trail, B.C. are up; and 16 other organizing committees are in the works. The Toronto and Vancouver freenets are hoping to open up this spring. A national organization (akin to the NPTN) is in progress. Future issues of TNO will feature more detailed examples of Canadian initiatives in public networking. -------------------------------------------------------------------- 666. Here's an excerpt from the CPSR publication CPSR Alert 3.04, sent out by Dave Banisar <Banisar@washofc.cpsr.org: The Defense Department reportedly plans to employ the Clipper technology in a device known as a "Tessera Card." We checked the dictionary and found the results to be kind of frightening: Terrerea n. Lat. (pl. tessereae). Literally, "four-cornered". Used to refer to four-legged tables, chairs, stools, etc. Also, a single piece of mosaic tile; a single piece of a mosaic. _Pol._: An identity chit or marker. Tessereae were forced on conquered peoples and domestic slaves by their Roman occupiers or owners. Slaves or Gauls who refused to accept a tesserea were branded or maimed as a form of identification. From Starr's History of the Classical World and the Oxford Unabridged. (thanks to Clark Matthews) -------------------------------------------------------------------- This month's recommendations. John Walton, Western Times and Water Wars: State, Culture, and Rebellion in California, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992. A history of fights over water resources in Owens Valley in eastern California. The city of Los Angeles took over the water through dirty politics in the 1920's, and the citizens of Owens Valley have been fighting back ever since -- particularly during the 1980's, when they won a lot of the water back by appealing to environmental laws. Walton's book makes two contributions: first, a detailed and compelling picture of the early West that has little or nothing to do with the classical John Wayne picture of individualism; and second, a longitudinal study of collective action and its cultural background. The people of Owens Valley understood their situation in particular ways in each decade; this cultural understanding can be explained historically, and it in turn helps explain what the people did and why it succeeded or failed. Ralph H. Kilmann, Mary J. Saxton, and Roy Serpa, eds, Gaining Control of the Corporate Culture, San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1986. This is a truly scary anthology of articles about how managers can evaluate and intervene in the "corporate cultures" underneath them. Nothing's wrong with a little harmless morale boosting, of course, but these folks are particularly disturbed when workers decide that something is down-deep wrong with the system and start doing something about it. I most particularly recommend Vijay Sathe's chilling article, "How to decipher and change corporate culture". Stalin and his ilk have established our stereotypes of the "engineers of human souls", but they can't hold a candle to the forces of the market. William A. Smalley, Chia Koua Vang, and Gnia Yee Yang, Mother of Writing: The Origin and Development of a Hmong Messianic Script, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1990. A perfectly wonderful work of linguistic anthropology about a fellow named Shong Lue Yang, an uneducated Hmong who invented a linguistically sophisticated alphabet in the late 1950s and led a messianic cult in the midst of a massive civil war for about fifteen years before he was killed by the Hmong military establishment. A couple chapters of the book are the believers' stories about Shong Lue, told by the second and third authors who are two of his main followers. Smalley then retells some history and then dissects the writing system. He concludes that the writing system was not influenced in any significant way by other writing systems and that Shong Lue really did come up with it himself. The most interesting linguistic idea is that an alphabet reflects a folk phonology; alphabets are arranged into a hierarchy depending on the detail to which they embody a theory of the phonology of the language. Dolores Hayden, Redesigning the American Dream: The Future of Housing, Work, and Family Life, New York: Norton, 1984. A fascinating and thoroughly original feminist history and critique of the American postwar suburbs. The book starts with a vignette of a WWII-era town built for women who were working in a ship-building plant, where the entire town was designed around the coordination of work and child-care. The suburb, of course, is based on different gendered images of family life, based on the premise of a man's "family wage". Many of the planned suburbs were flagrantly racist, abetted by FHA policies. Hayden discusses many largely forgotten alternative traditions and images of housing, for example in the temperance movement. Many progressive housing movements just addressed distributing the housing rather than the basic assumptions underlying it. To rethink housing, she argues, you have to rethink both private and public life. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Company of the month. This month's company is R R Donnelley Information Services 77 West Wacker Drive Chicago, Illinois 60601-8000 +1 (312) 326-8000 R R Donnelley is the world's largest printing company. Many in the United States might be familiar with RRD's phone book, "The Donnelley Directory". Telephone books involve large amounts of personal information and large amounts of printing. And R R Donnelley's business is in the intersection of those two concerns. What else requires large amounts of both personal information and printing? Direct mail, of course. One of RRD's businesses is Metromail, which offers targeted marketing services to a wide range of business customers. RRD's literature presents a truly amazing variety of scenarios for information-intensive targeted marketing, including both customized analysis of customer data and customized preparation and printing of direct mail items. RRD is the going to play a big role in the future evolution of computerized marketing, and I encourage you to find out more about them. I am NOT, however, recommending that you harass them. Don't request the brochures on Metromail and RRD's other services unless you are genuinely interested in reading them. Thanks. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Abstract of the month. Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., African Americans and privacy: Understanding the black perspective in the emerging policy debate, Journal of Black Studies 24(2), 1993, pages 178-195. Analysis, group interviews, questionnaires and telephone interview responses indicate that Afro-Americans perceive invasion of privacy in a manner different from that of other Americans, due to the discrimination directed against them. Public protests over direct mail and telemarketing as invasions of privacy do not bother African Americans. This abstract comes from the "Mags" database of the University of California Libraries' clunky but nonetheless indispensible Melvyl system, which is a product of Information Access Company (IAC). Incidentally, I recommend everything that Oscar Gandy has ever written. Of particular relevance to TNO are: Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Public relations and public policy: The structuration of dominance in the information age, in Elizabeth L. Toth and Robert L. Heath, eds, Rhetorical and Critical Approaches to Public Relations, Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1992. Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., The Panoptic Sort: A Political Economy of Personal Information, Boulder: Westview Press, 1993. Oscar H. Gandy, Jr., Beyond Agenda Setting: Information Subsidies and Public Policy, Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1982. -------------------------------------------------------------------- Follow-up. Jonathan Hardwick <jch@cs.cmu.edu tells me that David Chapman's "How to Do Research at the MIT AI Lab", mentioned in TNO 1(1), is available on the WWW. He says, "Just feed the URL http://cs.indiana.edu/docproject/mit.research.how.to/mit.research.how.to.html to your favorite WWW client (e.g. Mosaic)." Check it out. Also, courtesy of Tom Galloway, David's how-to is also available from the RRE archives. Send a note that looks like: To: rre-request@weber.ucsd.edu Subject: archive send howto.tex -------------------------------------------------------------------- Phil Agre, editor pagre@ucsd.edu Department of Communication University of California, San Diego +1 (619) 534-6328 La Jolla, California 92093-0503 FAX 534-7315 USA -------------------------------------------------------------------- The Network Observer is distributed through the Red Rock Eater News Service. To subscribe to RRE, send a message to the RRE server, rre-request@weber.ucsd.edu, whose subject line reads "subscribe firstname lastname", for example "Subject: subscribe Jane Doe". For more information about the Red Rock Eater, send a message to that same address with a subject line of "help". For back issues etc, use a subject line of "archive send index". -------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright 1994 by the editor. You may forward this issue of The Network Observer electronically to anyone for any non-commercial purpose. Comments and suggestions are always appreciated. --------------------------------------------------------------------