Author archives

Calendar of International CLE Programs for Lawyers, Law Librarians

From the International Association of Law Libraries, this calendar of upcoming events provides links to topical CLE programs around the world for law librarians/info professionals and attorneys that will take place in 2003-2007, as well as links to past events from 2002. The site is maintained by Lyonette Louis-Jacques, Foreign and International Law Librarian and …

Subjects: Legal Research, Libraries

Freeware Anti-Spam Program

From InfoWorld, a review of an open source anti-spam application that may be useful to a wide user community. “SpamBayes knows spam – Outlook add-in really works to block spam, and it’s free.” For more information, see the SpamBayes website, and this technical background document.

Subjects: E-Mail, Privacy

Total Information Awareness Report Due to Congress

The ACLU published a report on May 16, Total Information Compliance: The TIA’s Burden Under the Wyden Amendment, in anticipation of the required release to Congress tomorrow of a DARPA report detailing the the program’s data mining technology applications, the impact on citizen privacy, and overall project spending.

Subjects: Privacy

Patriot Act Continues to Generate Opposition, Unusual Alliances and Strident Controversy

Ideological foes agree: Privacy rights in danger Surveillance State: “Since September 11, a flood of federal legislation has reduced American freedom without increasing our security.” Calif. Town To ‘Defy’ Patriot Act . “A new city (Arcata) ordinance would impose a fine of $57 on any city department head who voluntarily complies with investigations or arrests …

Subjects: Patriot Act, Privacy

High-Tech Surveillance Not Just Gov’t Work

From the New York Times, Big Brother Is Tracking You. Without a Warrant. “But as cameras (from commercial imaging satellites) take ever-closer aim at domestic targets, the legal, political and ethical issues remain unresolved.” This article also references, Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency.

Subjects: Privacy

CIPA, Net Filtering and the Supreme Court

From Seth Finkelstein’s Infothought blog, this informative posting on Internet software filtering company N2H2’s current 10Q filing which includes the following language: “Free speech and privacy concerns could adversely affect the demand for our Internet filtering solutions.” On a related issue, see my April 10 posting: U.S. District Judge Richard G. Stearns (MA) dismissed a …

Subjects: Censorship, Free Speech, Libraries, Privacy

Penn. State President Spearheads File Sharing Debate

Penn State President Graham Spanier has assumed a high-profile role in attempting to broker an agreement in the escalating battle over student use of networked file sharing applications and the increasingly aggressive entertainment industry response to pursue, identify and punish individuals who they believe are engaged in digital piracy. Mr. Spainer has apparently suggested that …

Subjects: Copyright