EDITOR Erin Gibson OPINION EDITOR Cliff Hicks EDITORIAL BOARD Nancy Christensen Brad Davis Sam McKewon Jeff Randall Bret Schulte Our VIEW Web of deceit Internet shoppers need to be wary of scams With the rise of users on the Internet, more and more people are shopping at home. While it <>nce seemed that QVC was destined to take over America’s shopping habits, the Internet has rapidly become America’s shopping center of choice. Consumers are going digital for dozens of reasons - convenience, accessibility and, most of all, the ability to get away from the crowds. But every brave new world has a few brave new criminals. Credit card companies are adver tising about how easy it is to shop at home. They advertise how much time a person saves shopping at home, pointing out people can avoid the mall, avoid the lines and get what they want from a La-Z-Boy, while they sip a beer with one hand and peruse the wares with their mouse in the other. Is it safe, though? Internet crime has risen 24 per cent, CNN’s Web site reported Sunday. The criminals are out there - the question is how to avoid them and stay protected. More often than not, the crimi nals aren’t high-tech hijackers, com mandeering credit card numbers by splicing into connections. They aren’t digital code monkeys who can peel open encryption with their teeth. They aren’t using their pro gramming skills to find new ways to “acquire” money. They’re into the tactics of old. Like those who commit mail order fraud, these criminals are peo ple who are reliant on trust. They say they’ve got great deals. They say they’ve got hot items. Send them a check, they say. Trust them, they say. It’s also the last thing they say before they vanish into the ether of the Internet. All it takes to stay safe on the Internet is a little common sense. Don’t send checks to unreliable sources, especially P.O. boxes. While a lot of legitimate Internet business es work out of P.O. boxes, they are also the most common place to get short-changed. Sending credit card numbers through the Web should be done only through encrypted sources. They aren’t impossible to break, but they’re better than noth ing. In the end, it’s a simply question of reason. Any deal that sounds too good to be true usually is, whether it be by mail or by Web. Better to be cautious than to be taken. EtttorM Policy Unsigned editorials are the opinions of the Fall 1998 Daily Nebraskan. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, its employees, its student body or the Unwereity of Nebraska Board of Regents. A column is solely the opinion of its author. The Board of Regents serves as pubfisher of the Daily Nebraskan; policy is set by the Daily Nebraskan Editorial Board. The UNL Publications Board, established by the regents, supervises the production of the paper. 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E-mail: letters@unlinfo.unl.edu. , f' TtJP M _ Mook’s VIEW H|- •*# m H Si I Looking back True history learned by study of all viewpoints GRAHAM EVAN JOHNSON is a graduate student in German and environmental social studies and a Daily Nebraskan columnist Never forget that we are here today because of our ancestors. Some of our ancestors lived here for hundreds, maybe thousands, of years before any other human had walked these plains. These ancestors were virtually annihilated by many later-generation European Americans. The Anglo-Americans destroyed the buffalo, decimated the multitudes of different tribal societies and forced the remaining few to abandon their heritage. Many of the later-generation European Americans also harnessed the blood and sweat of enslaved races of people. The African Americans, Mexican and Latino Americans and the Asian Americans built up, excavat ed and sustained the agricultural and industrial machine of die United States over the last 150 years. Other ancestors continued to arrive for one reason or another over the past 100 years, and now we have all oi us. Colonization, genocide and slav ery aren’t unique to this country - they have happened many times in many different countries during many differ ent decades, some more recent than others. But this column isn’t about colo nization, genocide or slavery specifi cally - rather, it is about understanding and respecting the past, so that progress can be made in the present for the future. Many times, the topics of the past are brought up only to explain when and where something happened, but few times do we understand why or how historical events happened and how they were perceived by the losers. Much of the secondary education al system in the United States seems to concern itself with covering up the truth of the past by socializing youths under a blanket of “democratic” pride and Anglo-national heritage. I find much more prick and •i . national heritage in knowing that the inhabitants of this country have a big ger variety of ethnic, religious and tra ditional backgrounds than anywhere in the world. However, I think the overwhelm ing differences force many in power to perpetuate the “melting pot” mentali ty, without really examining critical times in the history of this land. And this can lead to severe problems. Usually a thorough history is not obtained in part because winners write history, and the losers’ perspectives are lost. Another reason is that by evading the depth of certain issues, it is easy to pacify the masses without stepping on any toes or instigating any uprising in historically marginalized groups of people. Well, times have changed, and die past must become a useful tool for those who are forging a future. Only a thorough understanding of past histo ries can allow individuals to reckon with past activities and pursue a better future. For ©cample, the Germany of today is much different than die Nazi Germany that threatened Europe with military takeover and exterminated almost an entire ethnic population. One reason is because Germany was completely bombed into rubble, and the elders still remember those incred ibly horrible times. ^vnuuici icitsuu is uiai me yuuuis spend two full years studying the dynamics that created the second world war; the society before and dur ing Nazi Germany, the extremely terri ble events that took place during the war and the rebuilding afterward We need to recognize and under stand the good and die bad of our national history as well, so that it may be reconciled and progress. I believe that many of today’s problems are a carryover from improperly reconciling past events. For example, we need to under stand the American Indian societies and destruction of them and why, to this day, reservations are impoverished with a variety of social problems such as alcoholism and illiteracy. We need to understand the slave trade, “liberation” of Africans in the United States, the civil rights move ment and why members of the black population are still impoverished by poverty, discrimination, violence and ill health. We need to understand the social movements of the 1960s and the key figures who preached nonviolence and understanding but nevertheless were ■t- • '• - ' systematically assassinated. We need to know why we still haven’t learned the truth about those assassinations. There are ways to break the barri ers of past ignorance and pursue a bet ter future. The most important issue is that die schools and all individuals must internalize the truths and situa tions in our history. We also must understand the many other viewpoints than the Anglo-American. Another important way we can dismantle some of the barriers we find with rectifying the past is by partici pating in cross-cultural events that bring a better understanding through experience. Such opportunities as liv ing in other countries or enjoying festi vals like the UNTIE Pow-Wow very effectively destroy stereotypes and develop appreciation. While I became incredibly enlight ened about certain American Indian traditions at the powwow, I was com pletely disappointed that, in a universi ty that has almost 20,000 individuals within its community, there were maybe only 50 people present who weren’t of Native American descent Does this fact represent a general disinterest and apathy by the majority of Lincoln’s “academic” community? Or does it perhaps express a fear of the unknown and a misunderstanding by individuals who had no part in creat ing a history that they can not recon cile, but can do something about the piCKUI.' Reality is sometimes a difficult pill to swallow, bait it is far more important to take the medicine than to let the wounds continue to fester, becoming increasingly swollen and irritated. The past is not something to for get, ever. Past situations need to be respected for what they were and the circumstances that surrounded them. Then situations can be can be under stood and properly rectified, so that the future does not drown in a sea of discontent, misunderstanding, igno rance, prejudice inequality and injus tice. Apologies are a token, not a sym bol. The great spirit is within us all, for we are the living descendants and society of all of our ancestors. Let us learn deeply from the histories of humanity, so that we may use these useful keys and open the doors to the nation’s pillar of strength. There we wall find that prosperity and equality for the future are embed ded in understanding what has already happened.