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THE ANARCHIST'S GUIDE TO THE INTERNET (part 1) by cardell The Internet is a collection of computer networks that interacts as a whole on a direct basis, i.e. the computers are directly linked to each other all the time. On the net there is lots and lots of information to collect, and lots and lots of people to meet. The following is the first part of a guide for the anarchist to this collection of networks. In it you will find information on how to get access to the net, what you can do when you're on and where to find the information you want. This guide also includes information concerning Fidonet, a hobbyist computer network for electronic mail, and how you can reach Internet from Fidonet. Introduction ============ If you're reading this on the net you might as well skip the entire article. In coming parts there might be some useful information for you, but this is for the netless persons out there. There's lots and lots of information on the net that can be useful to us in different situations. If we want legal advice in a sensetive matter, there's the online library catalogs to give us the help we need by recommending books and written material. If we need more practical advice to make certain things go *BOOM* we can easily find that too. Perhaps you just need to get in touch with the right people. Well, that can be arranged over this marvellous net as well. There's chatting capabilities, either individual person-to-person (talk), or group chats (IRC). There's also public forums called newsgroups that discusses various topics, e.g. drugs, anarchy, activism etc. You can also find information, or at least references, through huge public databases. There's even more -- stay tuned. If you find errors or incomplete information please send me corrections or more information so I can update this file for future re-publication. Write to: Internet: cardell@lysator.liu.se Fidonet: Mikael Cardell, 2:205/223 Snailnet: Mikael Cardell Gustav Adolfsgatan 3 S-582 20 LINKOPING Sweden Voicenet: + 46 13 12 31 01 Access to the net ================= Get a computer or a terminal. Got that? Great, now get a modem (modulator/demodulator), a neat little thing that translates the bits of information from the computer into tones that can be sent over telephone lines. Connect it to the computer, fire up your communications program, and you're on. Well, not quite, you must have somewhere to call too. The most important thing, of course, is to have access to the Internet. There are several ways to go: