[liberationtech] Revised Liberationtech Mailing List Guidelines
Katrin Verclas
katrin at mobileactive.org
Fri Aug 3 13:08:50 PDT 2012
Looks like the mobileactive.org discussion list guidelines. Verbatim, in fact, until #6. Which I will, in turn, appropriate... :)
Katrin
On Aug 3, 2012, at 3:07 PM, Yosem Companys wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> We have revised the Liberationtech mailing list guidelines to restrict the sending of attachments to avoid viruses and spyware (#6 below).
>
> A big thanks to Brian Conley and Nathan of Guardian Project for helping compose the text.
>
> Best,
>
> Yosem
>
>
>
> *****
>
> Moderation Guidelines:
>
> We've had an influx of super-interesting people join the Liberationtech mailing list. That would be... YOU!!! We are up to 1,500 members and counting. You're an amazing bunch of researchers, practitioners, and journalists. You all have a passion for and an interest in how research and design of information and communication technologies (ICTs) can be used to promote democracy, human rights, development, governance, and other social goods (for more, please see: http://liberationtechnology.stanford.edu/docs/about_libtech/). Liberationtech is focused on fostering discussion and exchanging information about how we can best achieve these ends. Sticking to this focus will make the list useful to all.
>
> A few reminders on how to use this list:
>
> 1. Liberationtech is YOUR list. Use it to ask advice on strategic or technical questions, offer advice on questions raised, share interesting resources or articles, or post jobs, internships, grant announcements, CFPs, or RFPs. Any member of the group can post to the list. So if you have anything interesting to share, a question you are puzzling over, or something you learned in your work, please feel free to draw on the community!
>
> 2. Liberationtech is NOT a list for selling, marketing, or advertising products (or services), so please refrain from doing so. Product questions and reviews are fine. Hard sells are not.
>
> 3. Please keep discussions constructive and civil. All topics, in so far as they relate to Liberationtech as defined above, are fine. Be aware, however, that there are people from many different countries and cultures on this list, so please be considerate of these cultural and national differences when you contribute. We have a zero-tolerance policy for anyone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages to our community.
>
> 4. And a few obvious things: Remember to use a good subject line when you post; keep "me too" messages to a minimum; if you read this list via a digest, delete extraneous messages when responding and explain (or avoid) technical terms or industry-specific jargon so that everyone can understand what you mean.
>
> 5. The Liberationtech mailing list archives are private to the extent that only list members can access these archives. But please keep in mind that anyone who requests to sign up as a list member is accepted. As with any other mailing list, please note that we cannot guarantee that members won't forward information without our knowledge. As an institution, however, we don't forward any information you post without your consent except for publicly-available links to resources, articles, events, jobs, internships, grants, CFPs, and RFPs, which we may from time to time send without attribution via Twitter or Facebook.
>
> 6. Please don't send attachments to the Liberationtech mailing list. Online activists, and certainly Liberationtech list members are likely targets of internet attacks, such as viruses and spyware. One of the most common way of these attacks are through email sent pretending to be from someone it’s not really from, or that looks identical to a real email you’ve seen but has a virus in the attachment. Remember that all these emails will look and sound genuine. Opening these attachments received through your inbox is similar to inviting a spy into your computer. At downloading and opening these attachment files on your computer, you let the spy:
>
> a) Steal documents and information from your system
> b) Start the camera to watch around you
> c) Start the microphone to listen to you
> d) ...and many more
>
> Liberationtech recommends, if you don’t recognize the sender or the email address, don’t confirm by replying to that email with attachment. See https://tibetaction.net/detach-from-attachments/ for more information about why you should refrain from sending or opening attachments from senders you don't know. If you are expecting an email with attachment from someone, make sure to confirm or reconfirm before downloading. It’s always better to confirm through text message or phone call for people you know. The best thing to do when receiving an attachment with your email is to IGNORE IT. Start getting used to not only NOT OPENING ATTACHMENTS, but also NOT SENDING ONE. Any sharing that needs to be done can use public Google Docs or Dropbox links.
>
> More generally, please take the necessary security and privacy precautions such as using pseudonyms, fake email addresses, https, and anonymizer software especially if you intend to discuss items of a sensitive nature. Two particularly robust applications are https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere & https://www.torproject.org/.
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>
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>
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>
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Katrin Verclas
MobileActive.org
katrin at mobileactive.org
skype/twitter: katrinskaya
(347) 281-7191
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