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Daily Archives: July 28, 2003

Funding Slashed for E-Gov

House Panel Approves Deep E-Gov Funding Cuts – “The U.S. House Appropriations Committee is calling for only $1 million in 2004 funding for the Electronic Government Act (E-Gov), which invests in inter-agency projects with government-wide applications. The Bush Administration had requested $45 million for the program.” This act “uthorizes funding for improvement of the federal Internet portal, Firstgov.gov, so that on-line government information and services are organized “according to citizen needs, not agency jurisdiction.”

Online Book Piracy in India

Interesting article discussing online book piracy from “South India’s Leading News Site.” With so much focus generated by the RIAA’s increasingly aggressive pursuit of individuals who download and “share” or “pirate” music files, the burgeoning enterprise of downloading books, from the latest best sellers to older but no less popular works, has not been the… Continue Reading

Homeland Security Advisory Council Exempt from Public Disclosure

Despite the efforts of Sen. Robert Byrd (D-WV) to prohibit funds appropriated under H.R. 2555, the Department of Homeland Security Appropriations Act 2004, from being used by any advisory committee (Homeland Security Advisory Council) that has been exempted from the Federal Advisory Committee Act, the amendment was defeated on July 24. (via Secrecy News) Continue Reading

Report Indicates US Online Users Have More Privacy Than Europeans

Enforced Standards Versus Evolution by General Acceptance: A Comparative Study of E-Commerce Privacy Disclosure and Practice in The U.S. and The U.K. “compares U.S. and U.K. e-commerce Web sites’ notice and disclosure practices, their adherence to promises about secondary uses of e-mail addresses, and the state of the market for privacy assurance programs in the… Continue Reading

Can the Battle Against Spam Be Won?

From the Sacramento Bee: “By some estimates, 200 to 300 spammers, sometimes loosely organized into gangs, are responsible for almost 90 percent of spam — unsolicited “junk” e-mail. They play a high-tech cat-and-mouse game and increasingly use overseas servers to inundate AOL, Microsoft Network, EarthLink and other Internet service providers.” Continue Reading

New Website For Researchers on Nuremberg Trials

From Paul Deschner: The Harvard Law School Library has just launched a new website devoted to analysis and digitization of documents relating to the Nuremberg Trials: “Nuremberg Trials Project: A Digital Document Collection” at http://nuremberg.law.harvard.edu. The Library has approximately one million pages of documents relating to the trial of military and political leaders of Nazi… Continue Reading