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Except for the addition of this comment and changes to the layout and navigation links, the content of this page was last updated on 5 August 1996.
Creating an Online Civil Liberties OrganisationThis advice is constantly under revision. Please send any comments to:Michael Baker <mbaker@pobox.com> PO Box 5, Flaxley SA 5153, Australia. Phone +618 8388 8439 This is based on "Creating an Online Civil Liberties Organisation" which first appeared in FidoNews 11-24, 13 Jun 1994 I first wrote this in January 1994, updated it for Fidonews and have now revised it in the light of my experience of the foundation of Electronic Frontiers Australia over the past two years. This article is about setting up organisations which will promote the use of, and protect the rights or freedoms of users of electronic communications. First some general background. The opportunities, the threats and what to do about itNetworks like FidoNet and the Internet with their online conferences and virtual communities and email have opened up a new medium for the exchange of ideas and information. With the continuing fall in cost and increase in power and capabilities of computers and networking technology, these empowering and rapidly expanding media are becoming more and more accessible, and more and more vital. So far users of such technology have been able to utilize it's capacity for "many-to-many" communication, in which anyone can be a creator and distributor as well as a reader or consumer, with very few restrictions on what they say, or who they say it to. It is as if each person has access to their own printing press.So the opportunities are there talk to anyone and listen to what anyone wishes to announce. However there are those who have a tendency to oppose such opportunities. In Australia we call such people wowsers. {wowser (wou'z3r) n. [Aust. Slang] an extremely puritanical person, esp. a killjoy or teetotaller - Collins Australian Pocket English Dictionary, 5th reprint of first edition, Australian Editor: W.A. Krebs, 1985, William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. Sydney.} Wowsers have allies in the press and government. They tend to want to restrict or control what others can and cannot do, and they often have respectable-sounding reasons for wanting to control others. However if they do achieve their end, then we shall all be the poorer - we shall have lost some of our most cherished and guarded fundamental freedoms - privacy, freedom of expression... etc. There are two basic ways to handle such threats, one is to react to them when they occur. The other is to go out and promote the type of future you want. It is the latter that I favour. By actively promoting what we want we have more chance of setting the agenda. How to set up an online civil liberties organisationIf you want to form an online civil liberties organisation I have these suggestions:
International ContactsSome organisations like EFF already exist or are being formed in several countries. For details see the Online Activism Organizations List.Why not form a local chapter of the EFF?One of the first things I did was to contact EFF. Part of the advice I received was that EFF doesn't have chapters due to the administrative overhead involved. However, their board is encouraging others all over the place to use Electronic Frontier in local organization names, to make this as recognizable as possible and to foster a sense of united purpose.Metaphysical footnoteLet us dwell on what could go right. The more we think of the future we want, the more likely it is to come about, particularly when there are many of us thinking about it. That is not to say that we should ignore dangers and threats. We should be aware of them but not dwell on them. This is just another way of saying that we should go out and say what future we want, rather than just react and fight proposals which will lead to futures we don't want.mbaker@pobox.com last updated 4 August 1996. |
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