PG Weekly Newsletter: Part 1 (2003-10-22)

by Michael Cook on October 22, 2003
Newsletters

PGWeekly_October_22.txt
*The Project Gutenberg Weekly Newsletter For Wednesday, October 22, 2003*
*****eBooks Readable By Both Humans and Computers Since July 4, 1971*****

! I lost touch with someone working on a Project Gutenberg Press Release!

Please contact hart@pobox.com. . .my apologies, can't find your email....


One of the people who helped me start Project Gutenberg back in 1971 is
going in for surgery this afternoon at 3PM CDT, please send nice thoughts.



                          eBook Milestones


     >>> We Have Done Over 7,000 eBooks Since The Start Of 2001 <<<



              10,068 Books Done. . .989,932 To Go. . . !


            We're .68% Of The Way From 10,000 to 20,000!!!


               We're Over 50% Of The Way To 20,000!!!


              We're Over 10% Of The Way To 100,000!!!


              We're Over 1% Of The Way To 1,000,000!!!


               We May Do ~4,000 eBooks In 2003 !!!


Off To The Next 10,000!!!

18 months = 80 weeks to do next 10,000: now 79
We need to average 100/week for 6 months, then
we need to average 125/week for 6 months, then
we need to average 150/week for 6 months: 20K!


[The Newsletter is now being sent in three sections, so you can directly
go to the portions you find most interesting:  1.  Founder's Comments,
2. News, Notes & Queries, and  3. Weekly eBook Update Listing.]


  This is Michael Hart's "Founder's Comments" section of the Newsletter


Over Our 32 16/53 Year History, We Have Now Averaged About 312 Ebooks/Yr
And This Year Averaged Over That Same New eBook Level. . .PER MONTH!!!!!


           We Are Averaging About 346 Per Month This Year!!!


 By The Way, It's Been About 1.02 Billion Seconds Since The First eBook!!!



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Please look at this URL, and see what we can use.  We have permission
for all of them.  Reformatting to plain text may be a challenge.

 http://www.gallup.unm.edu/~smarandache/eBooks-otherformats.htm
 http://www.gallup.unm.edu/~smarandache/eBooksLiterature.htm


***


In this issue of the Project Gutenberg Weekly newsletter:
- Intro (above)
- Requests For Assistance
- Progress Report
- Flashback
- Continuing Requests For Assistance
- Making Donations
- Access To The Collection
- Information About Mirror Sites
- Have We Given Away A Trillion Yet?
- Weekly eBook update:
   Updates/corrections in separate section
    65 New Public Domain eBooks Under US Copyright
- Headline News from Newsscan and Edupage
- Information about mailing lists


*** Requests For Assistance

Interested in music?  Project Gutenberg's music project
(http://ibiblio.org/gutenberg/music) is seeking people to
digitize musical scores.  We also have a small budget to
work on publicity recruitment for our sheet music efforts.
Email Greg Newby <gbnewby AT pglaf.org> if you would like
more information.

***

!!!

I need a copy of zip for AIX that can do the "-9" high compression,
and still unzip via the standard unzip programs!!!

***

I am working on trying to collect and convert some public domain folk tunes
to ABC notation.  Could use some help tracking down public domain versions
of the melodies or proof that these songs are in the public domain.  Songs
I'm working on at present include:
I Know Where I'm Going
Simple Gifts
She Moved Throught The Fair
A Sailor Courted a Farmer's Daughter (aka Constant Lovers)
The Fisher Who Died in His Bed
Ufros Alienu
If anyone's interesting in converting folk songs to a digital public
domain format and would like to help or if you want to contact me, you can
do so through the mailing list at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pdsongs

***

Project Gutenberg DVD Needs Burners

So far we have access to a dozen DVD burners.  If you have
a DVD burner or know someone with one, please email me
so we can plan how many DVD's we can make with all 10,000
Project Gutenberg eBooks on them when they are ready.  We
can likely send you a box of CDs containing most of these
files early, and then a final update CD in November when
you would download the last month's/weeks' releases.

I have the first test DVD here right now!!!  Nearly all
of our first 9,000 eBooks, and multiple formats!


*** PROJECT GUTENBERG IS SEEKING LEGAL BEAGLES

Project Gutenberg is seeking (volunteer) lawyers.  We have
regular needs for intellectual property legal advice
(both US and international) and other areas.  Please email
Project Gutenberg's CEO, Greg Newby <gbnewby AT pglaf.org> ,
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*** Progress Report

    In the first 9.60 months of this year, we produced 3325 new eBooks.

     It took us from 1971 to 2000 to produce our first 3,325 eBooks!

                That's 42 WEEKS as Compared to ~31 Years!

                   65   New eBooks This Week
                  197   New eBooks Last Week
                  385   New eBooks This Month [October]

                  341   Average Per Month in 2003   <<<
                  203   Average Per Month in 2002   <<<
                  103   Average Per Month in 2001   <<<

                 3325   New eBooks in 2003
                 2441   New eBooks in 2002
                 1240   New eBooks in 2001
                 ====
                 7006   New eBooks Since Start Of 2001
                        That's Only 33 Months! ~200/mo

               10,068   Total Project Gutenberg eBooks
                6,187   eBooks This Week Last Year

                  282   eBooks From Project Gutenberg of Australia


*Main URL is promo.net  Webmaster is Pietro di Miceli of Rome, Italy*
Check out our Websites at promo.net/pg & gutenberg.net, and see below
to learn how you can get INSTANT access to our eBooks via FTP servers
even before the new eBooks listed below appear in our catalog.

eBooks are posted throughout the week.  You can even get daily lists.


***


                           FLASHBACK!!!

                  3325 New eBooks So Far in 2003

              It took us 31 years for the first 3325 !

       That's the 42 WEEKS of 2003 as Compared to ~31 YEARS!!!

     Here Is A Sample Of What Books Were Being Done Around #3325

Jul 2002 The Complete Wandering Jew, by Eugene Sue  [ES#12][es12vxxx.xxx] 3350
Jul 2002 The Wandering Jew, Vol. 11, by Eugene Sue  [ES#11][es11vxxx.xxx] 3349
. . .
Jul 2002 The Wandering Jew, Vol.  1, by Eugene Sue  [ES#01][es01vxxx.xxx] 3339
Jul 2002 Gilbert's Voyage to Newfoundland, by Edward Hayes [hgvtnxxx.xxx] 3338
Jul 2002 Hunting the Grisly and Other Sketches, T Roosevelt[grslyxxx.xxx] 3337
Jul 2002 Within an Inch of His Life, by Emile Gaboriau[EG7][wnohlxxx.xxx] 3336

Jul 2002 Theodore Roosevelt, An Autobiography              [trabixxx.xxx] 3335
Jul 2002 Drake's Great Armada, by Walter Biggs             [drkgaxxx.xxx] 3334
Jul 2002 Os Lusiadas, by Luis Vaz de Camoes [in Portuguese][lusdsxxx.xxx] 3333
Jul 2002 Variation of Animals and Plants by Charles Darwin [vartnxxx.xxx] 3332
Jul 2002 The Diary of Samuel Pepys, Lord Braybrooke/Editor [pepysxxx.xxx] 3331

Jul 2002 The Analects of Confucius [Confucian Analects]    [cnfcsxxx.xxx] 3330
Jul 2002 Caesar and Cleopatra by George Bernard Shaw[GBS#9][candcxxx.xxx] 3329
Jul 2002 Man and Superman, by George Bernard Shaw   [GBS#8][mandsxxx.xxx] 3328
Jul 2002 [Thomas] Bulfinch's Mythology, The Age of Fable #1[bmaofxxx.xxx] 3327
Jul 2002 The Well-Beloved, by Thomas Hardy[Thomas Hardy#22][wellbxxx.xxx] 3326

Jul 2002 Locrine - A Tragedy, by Algernon Charles Swinburne[locrnxxx.xxx] 3325
Jul 2002 A Rebellious Heroine by John Kendrick Bangs[JKB#6][rebhrxxx.xxx] 3324
Jul 2002 The Ward of King Canute by Ottilie A. Liljencrantz[wkcntxxx.xxx] 3323
Jul 2002 East Lynne, by Mrs. Henry Wood                    [stlynxxx.xxx] 3322
Jul 2002 Children of the Whirlwind, by Leroy Scott         [cwwndxxx.xxx] 3321

Jul 2002 Mohammed Ali and His House, by Louise Muhlbach[#1][mhmdhxxx.xxx] 3320
Jul 2002 Letters to Dead Authors, by Andrew Lang [Lang #32][ddthrxxx.xxx] 3319
Jul 2002 Days with Sir Roger de Coverley, Addison & Steele [cvrlyxxx.xxx] 3318
Jul 2002 Now It Can Be Told, by Philip Gibbs               [nicbtxxx.xxx] 3317
Jul 2002 How Members of Congress Are Bribed by Joseph Moore[bribexxx.xxx] 3316

Jul 2002 Down the Mother Lode, by Vivia Hemphill           [mthrlxxx.xxx] 3315
Jul 2002 The City That Was, by Will Irwin   [Will Irwin #1][citywxxx.xxx] 3314
Jul 2002 A Bit of Old China, by Charles Warren Stoddard    [ldchnxxx.xxx] 3313
Jul 2002 The Native Son, by Inez Haynes Irwin  [I Irwin #2][ntvsnxxx.xxx] 3312
Jul 2002 The Californiacs, by Inez Haynes Irwin[I Irwin #1][clfncxxx.xxx] 3311

Jul 2002 A Forgotten Empire, by Robert Sewell              [fevchxxx.xxx] 3310
Jul 2002 Prehistoric Peoples, by The Marquis de Nadaillac  [mmoppxxx.xxx] 3309
Jul 2002 The Bontoc Igorot, by Albert Ernest Jenks         [bntcixxx.xxx] 3308
Jul 2002 The Pagan Tribes of Borneo, by Hose & McDougall   [ptborxxx.xxx] 3307
Jul 2002 At Suvla Bay, by John Hargrave                    [suvlaxxx.xxx] 3306

Jul 2002 Ballads of Peace in War, by Michael Earls         [bopiwxxx.xxx] 3305
Jul 2002 The Machine, by Upton Sinclair [Upton Sinclair #8][tmchnxxx.xxx] 3304
Jul 2002 Prince Hagen, by Upton Sinclair[Upton Sinclair #7][prhgnxxx.xxx] 3303
Jul 2002 The Second-Story Man, by Upton Sinclair [U. S. #6][2ndsmxxx.xxx] 3302
Jul 2002 The Naturewoman, by Upton Sinclair[U. Sinclair #5][ntwmnxxx.xxx] 3301


Jun 2002 Wealth of Nations, by Adam Smith  [Adam Smith #1] [wltntxxx.xxx] 3300
Jun 2002 Mr Honey's Banking Dictionary [English-German]    [8bkedxxx.xxx] 3299
Jun 2002 Mr Honey's Banking Dictionary [German-English]    [8bkdexxx.xxx] 3298
Jun 2002 Schnock, by Friedrich Hebbel [In German][Hebbel#2][?schnxxx.xxx] 3297
Jun 2002 The Confessions of Saint Augustine                [tcosaxxx.xxx] 3296
Jun 2002 The Sea-Hawk, by Rafael Sabatini    [Sabatini #11][seahkxxx.xxx] 3294
Jun 2002 Conquest of Granada, by Washington Irving[W.I.#6] [cgranxxx.xxx] 3293


***

Today Is Day #294 of 2003
This Completes Week #42
   76 Days/12 Weeks To Go  [We get 53 Wednesdays this year]
 9932 Books To Go To #20,000 [18 months from last week]
[Our production year begins/ends
1st Wednesday of the month/year]

Week #1 Of Our *SECOND* 10,000 eBooks
     79 Weeks To Go At Moore's Law Rate

   79   Weekly Average in 2003
   47   Weekly Average in 2002
   24   Weekly Average in 2001

   39   Only 39 Numbers Left On Our Reserved Numbers list
         [Used to be well over 100]


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*** Have We Given Away A Trillion Books/Dollars Yet???

Statistical Review

In the 42 weeks of this year, we have produced 3325 new eBooks.
It took us from 1971 to 2000 to produce our FIRST 3325 eBooks!!!

         That's 42 WEEKS as Compared to ~31 YEARS!!!


With  10,068 eBooks online as of October 22, 2003 it now takes an average
of 100,000,000 readers gaining a nominal value of $0.99 from each book,
for Project Gutenberg to have currently given away $1,000,000,000,000
[One Trillion Dollars] in books.

100,000,000 readers is only about 1.5% of the world's population!

This "cost" is down from about $1.62 when we had 6108 eBooks A Year Ago

Can you imagine 10,000 books each costing $.63 less a year later???
Or. . .would this say it better?
Can you imagine 10,000 books each costing 1/3 less a year later???

At 10,070 eBooks in 32 Years and 4.60 Months We Averaged
      309 Per Year   [We do more per month these days!]
       25 Per Month
      .81 Per Day

At 3,325 eBooks Done In The 294 Days Of 2003 We Averaged
     11.3 Per Day
     79.1 Per Week
    346.4 Per Month

The production statistics are calculated based on full weeks'
production; each production-week starts/ends Wednesday noon,
starts with the first Wednesday of January.  January 1st was
the first Wednesday of 2003, and thus ended PG's production
year of 2002 and began the production year of 2003 at noon.

This year there will be 53 Wednesdays, thus one extra week.


***Headline News***

[PG Editor's Comments In Brackets]


From Newsscan:

APPLE iTUNES DOES WINDOWS
Apple is expanding its popular iTunes music download service into Windows
territory, promising a wider selection of songs and some new features to
maintain its lead in an increasingly competitive market. The launch was
accompanied by the usual Apple glitz -- CEO Steve Jobs chatted via remote
link-up with U2 lead man Bono and the Rolling Stones' Mick Jagger in a
prelude to a live performance by singer-songwriter Sarah McLachlan. "It's
like the pope of software meeting up with the Dali Lama of integration,"
gushed Bono -- referring to the iTunes software and Apple's integrated
online music store. Analysts say that iTunes faces stiff competition in the
Windows space, but that its flexibility to download tunes onto multiple
devices gives it an edge. "There's going to be a lot of jockeying for
position in the next 12 months," says a Forrester Research analyst. "But I
think iTunes is a real winner because it has the portable player, the
jukebox and the store all together." (Reuters 16 Oct 2003)
news.excite.com/tech/article/id/329433|technology|10-16-2003::17:32|reuters.
html

INTEL TO CALIFORNIA: WE'RE OUTTA HERE
Intel chief executive Craig Barnett says his company -- one of the biggest
success stories of California's Silicon Valley -- has ruled out any plans
to expand in that state, because of what he characterized as 20 years of
political mismanagement of the California economy. "California has to treat
business as something it has to attract and nurture." Over the past decade,
Oregon has displaced California as the state with the largest number of
Intel employees, and Arizona now has more Intel employees than Silicon
Valley, where the company's headquarters remain. Barrett notes  that, while
much of the world seeks to lure high-tech businesses, California is focused
on providing  support to such "19th century" industries as agriculture,
steel and shrimp farming. He also pointed out that India, China and Russia
alone now have somewhere between 250 million and 500 million highly
educated knowledge workers between them, a number that surpasses not just
the population of California but that of the entire U.S. (Reuters/21 Oct 2003)
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/techcorporatenews/2003-10-21-intel
-rips-cali_x.htm


CHALLENGE TO THE WEB WEAVED BY MICROSOFT
The U.S. Justice Department and 19 states have complained to U.S. District
Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly about a design feature of Windows that compels
consumers who buy music online to use only Microsoft's Internet Explorer
browser and guides them to a Microsoft Web site. The dispute may become the
first test of the Microsoft antitrust settlement approved by a federal
court in October 2002. In response, a Microsoft executive said, "We believe
that the use of Internet Explorer by the Shop-for-Music-Online link in
Windows is consistent with the design rules established by the consent
decree, and we will continue to work with the government to address any
concerns. At issue is a design feature in Windows XP called "Shop for Music
Online," which lets consumers purchase compact discs from retailers over
the Internet, but when consumers click the link to buy music, Windows opens
Microsoft's browser software even if consumers have indicated that they
prefer using rival browser software. (AP/San Jose Mercury News 20 Oct 2003)
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/7060791.htm

MICROSOFT TOUTS SELF-DESTRUCTING E-MAIL
Microsoft's new Office 2003 software, set to debut on Tuesday, will include
an e-mail feature that can be used to time-stamp messages, directing them
to delete themselves on a certain date. In addition, senders will be able
to restrict forwarding and printing of messages by the recipient. The new
Information Rights Management software could run into opposition from U.S.
regulators, who view destroying e-mail as on a par with shredding
documents. Earlier this year, Morgan Stanley was fined $1.65 million for
failing to keep e-mail records, despite the company's claim that it due to
oversight rather than a deliberate attempt to evade financial
investigation. (BBC News 19 Oct 2003)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3205080.stm

INTERCEPTING E-MAIL IS A CRIME
An Arizona woman was sentenced to 60 days of home detention for
intercepting at least 215 e-mail messages directed to her husband's
ex-wife. Law enforcement officials said Angel Lee fraudulently obtained the
ex-wife's user name and password, allowing her to log in and read mail.
Ex-wife Duongladde Ramsey said Lee's actions were comparable to breaking
into her house and reading her diary, and the judge agreed, saying Lee's
penalty is a warning to others who might be tempted to spy on others'
e-mail accounts. "Privacy is still a cherished value," said U.S. District
Judge Richard P. Matsch. (AP 19 Oct 2003)
http://apnews.excite.com/article/20031019/D7U97UCG0.html

INFO TECHNOLOGY HELPS WOMEN ENTREPRENEURS
The overall number of microbusinesses (companies with no paid employees)
increased by 9% between 1997 and 2001, and the number of those owned by
women increased by 14% over the same few years. By exploiting such
technology as PCs, fax machines, and color printers to start
information-based companies, women are changing the face of traditional
mom-and-pop ventures. "This is definitely not your father's small
business," says consultant Terri Lonier. Information technology has
liberated many women who want to leave corporate jobs for self-employment
in the same field. One example of the trend: Jennifer Lawson, who started a
TV production consulting firm in her Washington home, equipped with
video-screening equipment. Another: Jaime Caris of Las Vegas, who has
become a virtual administrative assistant, offering clients across the U.S.
assistance with word processing, accounting and other services from her
home office. (AP/USA Today 19 Oct 2003)
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/techinvestor/2003-10-19-momndad_x.htm

VERISIGN SHEDS NETWORK SOLUTIONS
VeriSign is selling its Network Solutions domain registrar business to
Pivotal Private Equity for about $100 million, but plans to retain control
over the .com and .net database that Network Solutions operates. The domain
registration business has essentially become a commodity service as more
registrars have entered the field. VeriSign has been in the news recently
for its controversial Site Finder service, which redirects all mistyped
URLs to a search page that it operates. It suspended the service under
pressure from ICANN, which expressed concern over the technical
ramifications of the Site Finder service, but VeriSign said Wednesday that
it plans to restart the service after having found "no identified security
or stability problems" in the system. (CNet News.com 16 Oct 2003)
http://news.com.com/2102-1025_3-5092316.html?tag=st_util_print

TEXT-SEARCHING OR TEXT-MINING?
Whereas Google and other Web search engines retrieve information and
display links to documents that contain certain keywords, text-mining
programs dig deeper in order to categorize information, make links between
seemingly unconnected documents, and provide visual maps that lead down new
pathways of exploratory learning. Unlike data mining, text mining works on
unstructured data -- such as e-mail messages, news articles, internal
reports, phone call transcripts, and so on. A good example of the problem
it seeks to solve is suggested by the comment of researcher Randall S.
Murch, who says: "I was an FBI agent for 20 years. And I have yet to see
anyone who is able to model the way an agent thinks and works through an
investigation." And a good example of the solution offered by text-mining
is its use in the 1980s University of Chicago information scientist Don R.
Swanson in studying the medical literature on migraines. Starting with the
word "migraine," he downloaded abstracts from 2,500 articles from Medline
and noticed a reference to a neural phenomenon called "spreading
depression" -- which prompted him to look for articles with that term in
their titles, which in turn led him to the discovery that magnesium was
often mentioned as preventing this spreading depression. Thus, as a result
of text-mining he was able to hypothesize a link between headaches and
magnesium deficiency -- a link that was later confirmed by actual
experiments.  (New York Times  16 Oct 2003)
http://partners.nytimes.com/2003/10/16/technology/circuits/16mine.html

[TeraBYTES Compared To GigaBITS. . .Didn't Those People Learn UNITS???]
[That's .5+ GigaBYTES per second. . .meaning it took ~2 kiloseconds, or
over half an hour. . .no WONDER they didn't want to be specific. . . ;-)]

RESEARCH CENTERS SET NEW RECORD FOR SPEEDY DATA TRANSFER
Two of the world's top research centers -- CERN (the European Organization
for Nuclear Research) and the California Institute of Technology -- say
they've set a new world record for speed in sending data across the
Internet: 1.1 terabytes at 5.44 gigbits per second. That's more than 20,000
times as fast as a typical home broadband connection and would be
equivalent to sending a full-length DVD in seven seconds. The previous top
speed -- 2.38 gigabits per second -- was achieved last February by a joint
team from CERN, Caltech, Los Alamos and Stanford. (Wired.com 15 Oct 2003)
http://www.wired.com/news/infostructure/0,1377,60833,00.html?tw=wn_techhead_4


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***

From Edupage

APPLE EXPANDS INTO WINDOWS MUSIC
Apple Computer CEO Steve Jobs on Thursday unveiled his company's
expansion of its iTunes music service to include Windows computers.
Jobs also announced deals Apple has struck with America Online (AOL)
and PepsiCo. Under the first arrangement, AOL will direct users of its
music site to Apple's iTunes store, where they can purchase music with
their AOL memberships. Jobs and AOL CEO Jonathan Miller said the deal
was "exclusive." PepsiCo and Apple will launch a marketing campaign
that features 100 million free iTunes songs, given away through special
caps on PepsiCo bottles. Apple's iTunes has been extremely successful
as a Macintosh-based service, and Jobs said the company has sold 1.4
million of its iPod music players. With the Windows-based version of
its service, Apple will compete with online music services including
RealNetworks, MusicNet, and BuyMusic.com.
New York Times, 17 October 2003 (registration req'd)
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/10/17/technology/17APPL.html

QUICK START FOR WINDOWS ITUNES
Early reports from Apple Computer's foray into Windows-based online
music indicate exuberance among consumers for the company's iTunes
service. Apple has sold more than one million songs to iTunes for
Windows customers since the service was launched last week, and
computer users have reportedly downloaded more than one million copies
of the Windows version of iTunes software in the past three days. Apple
launched iTunes for Macintosh-based computers in April of this year,
and since then the company has sold 14 million songs at 99 cents each.
The company said it hopes to have sold 100 million songs by the first
anniversary of the service next April.
BBC, 20 October 2003
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3207984.stm


[Of Course, No Mention That There Was No Evidence That HE Did It, Either]

HACKER'S ACQUITTAL RAISES CONCERNS OVER TROJAN HORSE DEFENSE
Some security experts fear that a British teen's acquittal on charges
of hacking into the computer system of the port of Houston will weaken
future prosecutions of computer crimes. Aaron Caffrey was charged with
a 2001 attack that left the port's computer system crippled. Although
Caffrey acknowledged that the attack originated from his computer, he
argued in court that a trojan horse program had been installed on his
computer without his knowledge. That application, Caffrey insisted,
allowed someone to remotely launch the attack from his computer.
Although no evidence of such an application was found on Caffrey's
computer, the jury ruled in his favor. Graham Cluley, senior technology
consultant for Sophos, said of the jury's decision that even without
evidence of a trojan horse application, defendants in similar cases
"might still be able to successfully claim that they were not
responsible for what their computer does."
BBC, 17 October 2003
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3202116.stm


[It's OK For Academics To Look At This Information, Just Not OK For YOU]


COMPROMISE REACHED ON DATABASE-PROTECTION BILL
A House of Representatives subcommittee has passed a bill that would
extend strong intellectual-property protections to databases after
opposition from three academic groups was withdrawn. The Database and
Collections of Information Misappropriation Act, introduced last week
by Howard Coble (R-N.C.), had stirred objections from academic groups,
which saw it as a threat to researchers. The original version of the
bill included a vague exception for academics, but the version that
passed the subcommittee this week has a much stronger exception.
According to the revised bill, "no liability shall be imposed under
this act" on higher education and research institutions or their
employees. With that language, the Association of American
Universities, the American Council on Education, and the National
Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Colleges have ended
their opposition to the bill and assumed a neutral position. Other
groups, including the National Academies, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce,
and academic-library organizations, continue to oppose the bill.
Chronicle of Higher Education, 17 October 2003 (sub. req'd)
http://chronicle.com/prm/daily/2003/10/2003101701t.htm

FEDS SEEK REVERSAL OF COMPUTER ADMINISTRATOR'S CONVICTION
Federal prosecutors have asked an appeals court to overturn the
conviction of Bret McDanel on charges that he intentionally caused
damage to the computer system of his former employer, Tornado
Development Inc.  While an employee of Tornado, McDanel discovered a
flaw that could have compromised customer accounts. He notified the
company, but it refused to fix the flaw. After leaving the company,
McDanel sent several e-mails to customers, warning them of the flaw.
Because the e-mails caused Tornado's computer system to crash and
resulted in monetary losses, McDanel was tried and convicted to 16
months in federal prison. McDanel argued that he did not intend to
cause damage to Tornado's system, and federal prosecutors conceded
they had no evidence that the damage caused was intentional.
Prosecutors have admitted the error and requested that the conviction
be overturned, though McDanel has already served his sentence.
San Jose Mercury News, 15 October 2003
http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/7020049.htm


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