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Author Message
25 new of 316 responses total.
keesan
response 50 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 15 19:13 UTC 1999

Did anyone catch 'to finding' which should be 'to find' (volunteers) and 
'this kind of perspective be gained' (missing can/could before be)?
Will this document be archived for future reference?
aruba
response 51 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 15 19:21 UTC 1999

Got "to finding".  Can't find "this kind of perspective be gained" - I think 
that was from an earlier version.
janc
response 52 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 15 22:10 UTC 1999

It looks like I will be declarant for this, since John's travel times
may be incompatible with the dates testimony might be needed.
remmers
response 53 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 15 23:04 UTC 1999

Yes. The attorney called me this afternoon and indicated that this
was their preference, because of my non-availability during much of
July.

He also indicated that if a hearing is held when I *am* available,
they might want to call me as an expert witness. I told him I'm
quite willing to do that. So I'm not off the hook.  :)
aruba
response 54 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 15 23:51 UTC 1999

I sent Marshall a new version with typos corrected and Jan's biographical info
filled in.  It's in ~aruba/aclu/dec4.txt .
scg
response 55 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 01:03 UTC 1999

I would hesitate, or at least discuss it with the attorneys first, before
submitting part of an item along with a URL for the rest of it.  My guess is
that the judge may not want to be bothered to go out on the Net and look for
stuff the parties to the lawsuit are supposed to have provided.  That may be
wrong, but assuming URLs alone are ok is at least not a good unspoken
assumption.
janc
response 56 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 03:11 UTC 1999

I don't think there is any law that says we have to submit whole items. 
An item is an extract from a conference.  A conference is a extract from
Grex.  We can't submit all the text on Grex, we have to pick some very
small bits of it as examples.  I think that could have been one
response, or even just part of a response, if that was what we thought
would make our case.  We submitted some surrounding text, because we
wanted to show these (possibly) sexually explicit responses in the
context of a community.  But that doesn't mean we have to give 157
responses worth of surrounding context, or a whole conference's worth of
surrounding context.
aruba
response 57 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 04:15 UTC 1999

Right.  Marshall Widick suggested using only a selection of the responses, if
the item was too long.
scg
response 58 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 05:16 UTC 1999

Ah, ok.  I'll certainly defer to the opinion of the attorney on this.
dpc
response 59 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 13:35 UTC 1999

Right; if our opponents or the judge want to see the full items,
all they have to do is ask.   8-)
aruba
response 60 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 16 15:28 UTC 1999

Actually, all they have to do is click.
aruba
response 61 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 13:31 UTC 1999

I just got mail from Dave Cahill saying that Mike Seinberg told him Cyberspace
Communications is likely to be the lead plaintiff in the case.  Apparently
"Cyberspace v. Engler" has a ring to it.  So we might get some media
attention after all.  This is exciting!
dpc
response 62 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 13:42 UTC 1999

It looks like Grex will be the *lead plaintiff* in the suit!
Mike Steinberg says they like the ring of "Cyberspace v. Engler".
janc
response 63 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 14:21 UTC 1999

Amusing.
mary
response 64 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 17:38 UTC 1999

John and I got a telephone call late last night, from Mr. Steinberg,
giving us a "heads-up" that Grex would most likely be the lead
plaintiff, that the suit would be filed Monday morning, and a
press conference would be scheduled for sometime later that 
morning.  He asked I attend.  I'm trying to make arrangements 
to do be there.
remmers
response 65 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 17 17:42 UTC 1999

Yes, it's exciting. It is possible that the ACLU might change its
strategy and make another party the lead plaintiff, possibly
depending on who the final list of plaintiffs turns out to be. But
they do feel that we make a very strong plaintiff because of our
structure and mission.
janc
response 66 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 12:37 UTC 1999

Cool.  I've been thinking that it would be a good idea to write a "press
release" document about this.  It could use some text from our
declaration, but would at least need a bit more information introducing
what the Act is about, and could stand to be shorter and more compact.

I'd be interested in helping to write such a thing, but I won't be
available for about a week, so we should probably find someone else.
aruba
response 67 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 12:44 UTC 1999

I can do that.  I'll work on it today.
scg
response 68 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 14:55 UTC 1999

Where and when is the press conference?
remmers
response 69 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 18:04 UTC 1999

We don't know yet. Somewhere in Detroit. It's not definite yet
that it will happen, only likely. When I know more, I'll post it
here.

Thanks for working on the press release, Mark. Regardless
whether the press conference happens, it will be a useful
document to have.
dpc
response 70 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 18 20:34 UTC 1999

Indeed it is.
mary
response 71 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 19 16:56 UTC 1999

Mr. Steinberg left a message on our machine today (in response
to a message I left on his) saying that late yesterday afternoon
a decision had been made to file the lawsuit on Tuesday and
not hold a press conference.  Instead they'd be supplying the
media with a written statement and contact telephone numbers
for the plaintiffs.  He suggested someone will be contacting
me with more information on Monday.
aruba
response 72 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 19 18:15 UTC 1999

Here's a draft of a press release:

Cyberspace Communications Inc., a Michigan non-profit corporation that  
operates the online community Grex (www.cyberspace.org), has joined a suit to 
block the implementation of Michigan Public Act 33 of 1999, which makes it
illegal to transmit "sexually explicit" material to minors.  The Act is 
scheduled to go into effect on August 1st, 1999.  Other plaintiffs in the suit 
include the ACLU, [list other plaintiffs here].

Grex (which means "group" in Latin) has been operating since 1991 as an open 
access computer system promoting free speech.  Its charitable mission includes 
allowing people of limited means access to the Internet and providing a place 
for people of all ages and backgrounds to exchange ideas.  Grex does not 
charge any fees to use its system, and anyone with a computer and modem or 
access to the Internet may read and post text anonymously.  Funding comes 
almost entirely from donations, which are tax-deductable.  Grex's total gross 
income for 1998 was approximately $8200, and the bulk of its assets is a 
collection of obsolete computer equipment that fits in a small rented room.  
Grex is staffed entirely by volunteers. 

Although Public Act 33 is well intentioned, it would make it impossible for 
Grex to keep operating as it does now.  We currently have about 29,000 active 
users all over the world, and 200 new accounts are created daily.  Users may 
post responses in any of over 100 public forums (conferences), which have 
topics such as music, the arts, writing, consumer information, finance, small 
businesses, philosophy, living with disabilities, men's and women's issues, 
parenting, pets, computer hardware and software, nature, and games.  The 
conferences currently contain about 42 million words of text, roughly 5 times 
as much as a typical 20-volume encyclopedia.  Approximately 200 new messages 
are posted to the conferences every day.  Grex also hosts a live chat area in 
which over 5000 short messages are posted daily.

Since users access Grex anonymously, we do not know which users are minors and 
which are not.  It would take several people working full time to verify the 
age of every person who creates an account on Grex, and we do not have the 
resources to pay for that.  It would be even harder to monitor all the 
conferences and the chat area to censor any material which was deemed 
"sexually explicit," and difficult to find people qualified to make that 
determination.

Furthermore, censorship would have a chilling effect on many valuable 
discussions which touch on sexual issues.  Very little of the material on Grex 
is probably "sexually explicit" under the law, but enforcement of the law 
would undoubtedly result in broader censorship than is strictly necessary.  
We feel that this is an unacceptable encroachment on the First Amendment 
guarantee of free speech.

Cyberspace Communications is a member-owned corporation, and all policy 
decisions are made after discussion in an open forum.  The discussion about 
joining this suit is accessible at 
   http://www.cyberspace.org/cgi-bin/bt/peek:coop:98
For more information on Grex, visit www.cyberspace.org or call Mary Remmers at 
(734) ###-####.
scg
response 73 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 19 19:07 UTC 1999

Just a technicality here, but I'm under the impression that we're a
"membership based non-profit corporation," or something like that, and are
not actually owned by the membership or by anybody else.
aruba
response 74 of 316: Mark Unseen   Jun 19 21:50 UTC 1999

Hmmm; I suppose that makes sense.  The articles of incorporation say that
"The corporation is organized on a membership basis" and that no part of its
net earnings shall be distributed to its members.  SO it's true that the
members don't own CCI in the same way that stockholders own, say, Exxon.  But
is it true that *no one* owns CCI?

Anyway, I'll change it.
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