In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, on 07/22/00
at 08:09 PM, Meyer Wolfsheim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>I feel that, if we as individuals are going to demand that our privacy be
>put back into our own hands (where it definately belongs), we need to
>recognize that this is a two way street. Decendants of CIA agents have
>just as much right to keep the identities and activities of their
>ancestors private as I have the right to keep my whereabouts private. (I
>have, on mailing lists previously, revealed the state I live in. I would,
>however, become quite annoyed if my address, phone number, SSN, or other
>such information were released to the public either through email or
>other means (such as court documents).
>I'm not making any definate decisions here. I am not taking a stand on
>the issue of Cryptome posting people's identities. I see that as symptom
>of something worse (intelligence agencies that cannot manage their
>secrets). I am just offering this as a gentle reminder that we are
>playing with real peoples' lives here, and there are potential
>consequences. Let's recognize them. Let's also not be hypocritical.
--
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William H. Geiger III http://www.openpgp.net
Geiger Consulting
Data Security & Cryptology Consulting
Programming, Networking, Analysis
PGP for OS/2: http://www.openpgp.net/pgp.html
E-Secure: http://www.openpgp.net/esecure.html
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