People For Internet Responsibility (PFIR) is currently a
global, ad hoc network of individuals who are
concerned about the present and future operations, development, management,
and regulation of the Internet in responsible ways. PFIR is in the
process of incorporating as a nonprofit 501(c)(3) corporation.
The main goal of PFIR is
to provide a resource for individuals around the world to gain an
ability to impact these crucial Internet issues, which will affect
virtually all aspects of our cultures, societies, and lives in the 21st
century. PFIR is nonpartisan, has no political agenda, and does
not engage in lobbying.
PFIR was founded in November, 1999
by Lauren Weinstein
of Vortex Technology in
Woodland Hills, California and
Peter G. Neumann
of SRI International
in Menlo Park, California. Both have decades of continual experience
with the Internet and its ancestor ARPANET, Lauren originally at the UCLA lab
which was the ARPANET's first site, and Peter at the Net's second site,
located at SRI.
Peter is the chairman
of the ACM (Association
for Computing Machinery) Committee on Computers and Public Policy,
and the creator and
moderator of the
ACM
RISKS Forum. Lauren is a member of the
same committee, and he is the creator and moderator of the
PRIVACY Forum.
With the rapid commercialization of the Internet and its World Wide Web,
there are increasing concerns that decisions regarding
these resources are being irresponsibly skewed through the influence
of powerful, vested interests
(in commercial, political, and other categories) whose goals are not
necessarily always aligned with the concerns of individuals and the
people at large. Such incompatibilities have surfaced in areas
including domain name policy,
spam, security, encryption, freedom of speech issues,
privacy, content rating and filtering, and a vast array of other
topics. New ones are sure to come!
While corporate, political, and other related entities most certainly have
important roles to play in Internet issues, it is unwise and unacceptable
for their influences to be effectively the only significant
factors affecting the broad scope of Internet policies.
There are numerous examples. While e-commerce can indeed be a
wonderful tool, it is shortsighted in the extreme for some interests to
treat the incredible creation that is the Internet as little more than a
giant mail-order catalog, with "dot-com" associated hype
on seemingly every ad, billboard and commercial. Protection
of copyrights in a global Internet environment, without abusive monitoring,
is a challenge indeed. The Internet can be a fantastic tool to
encourage the flow of ideas, information, and education, but it can also
be used to track
users' behaviors and invade individuals' privacy in manners
that George Orwell never
imagined in his 1984 world.
Above all, it's critical that reasonable discussion be
encouraged that is
free from the overly polarized "yelling and screaming" that often
characterizes ongoing debates about Internet issues.
It is very important to provide some degree of balance
against those persons or groups who
might attempt to impose their views on the
Internet by edict, without meaningful input
from the people whose lives will ultimately be most affected.
PFIR is a resource for discussion, analysis,
education, and information
regarding
Internet issues, aimed
at providing a forum for all people around the world to
participate in the process of Internet evolution, control,
and use--a forum that is not
controlled by entities with existing major vested financial, political, or
other interests.
This is accomplished
through the PFIR Web site,
the handling of telephone and e-mail queries, and through
digests, workshops, discussion groups,
statements/reports/papers, broadcast/Internet radio and television efforts,
and other venues.
It is hoped that individuals and organizations
who are in agreement with PFIR's
objectives will be interested in helping to underwrite PFIR's efforts.
The best way to get started is to join the PFIR mailing list! Announcements,
position statements and papers, status reports, and moderated digests sent
to this list will keep you abreast of ongoing PFIR activities, issues, and
projects. The frequency of items sent to this list will never exceed one
per day, and currently is much less frequent. There is of course
no charge to join
this mailing list or to receive materials from this list.
Your name and/or e-mail address will be used only for the purposes of
distributing and maintaining the PFIR mailing list. You will not receive
any commercial solicitations or unrelated mailings from PFIR, and the list
will not be made available to any outside parties.
Individual subscriptions to the PFIR mailing list are controlled
through an
automated list handling system
("Majordomo").
All messages to the list handling
system must be in plain text--HTML
cannot be processed.
PLEASE NOTE: Due to the manual administrative
burden created by "challenge-response" anti-spam systems,
no response of any kind will be made to any received e-mail
found to be using such systems. This includes e-mail to the list handling
system or any other addresses. Any subscribed addresses found to be
generating such challenges will be removed from the mailing list and will
be barred from re-subscription. Sorry, but challenge-response is
simply the wrong way to try stop spam!
To subscribe to the PFIR mailing list,
with the FIRST text in the message BODY
subscribe
(or)
subscribe PFIR
Full information regarding controlling your subscription,
including unsubscription instructions, will be returned to
you automatically.
If you wish to set up a local redistribution list for this
material, or have other special e-mail address requests or
subscription problems which
cannot be handled by the automated system, please contact:
with the details. A human will endeavor to be of assistance.
Individuals, organizations, media, etc. who are interested in more
information regarding PFIR or related Internet issues
are invited to contact:
Phone or E-mail:
Lauren Weinstein
TEL: +1 (818) 225-2800
PFIR c/o Peter G. Neumann
TEL: +1 (650) 859-2375
Thank you very much. Be seeing you!
Access to WHOIS Data
(16-Jun-2004)
VeriSign/NSI "Site Finder" and Domain Abuse
(16-Sep-2003)
Overcoming ICANN: Forging Better Paths for the Internet
(18-Mar-2002)
Terrorism, Civil Liberties, and the Internet
(23-Sep-2001)
Top-Level Domain "Ghettoization" Proposals
(9-Mar-2001)
The Coming Electoral Blackout?
(20-Jan-2001)
Proposal for a
Representative Global Internet Policy Organization
(6-Dec-2000)
Government Interception of Internet Data
(7-Sep-2000)
Internet Hoaxes and Misinformation
(28-Aug-2000)
Internet Policies, Regulations, and Control
(23-Jul-2000)
Electronic Signatures and Documents
(Updated 1-Jul-2000)
Content Control and Ratings (18-Mar-2000)
Spam (11-Mar-2000)
Hacking (5-Mar-2000)
Internet Voting (26-Feb-2000)
Legislating Internet
Security (12-Feb-2000)
Recent Internet Denial
of Service Attacks (9-Feb-2000)
What is PFIR?
Who organized PFIR?
Why was PFIR formed?
What does PFIR do?
PFIR Funding
How can I stay informed about or become involved with PFIR?
please send an e-mail
message to the address:
(the "Subject:" field doesn't matter) of:
PFIR Contact Information
lauren@PFIR.ORG
Principal Scientist
Computer Science Lab
SRI International EL-243
333 Ravenswood Ave
Menlo Park, CA 94025-3493 USA
neumann@PFIR.ORG