On Wed, 4 Oct 2000, David Honig wrote:
>This of course regresses the problem to the exit nodes. But it encourages
>more anonymizing infrastructure.
One variation of the original proposal would be to only allow egress to
addresses known to lay in a jurisdiction different from the one in which th
Tom Vogt wrote:
>
> I'm currently looking for a way to get encrypted data via stego to
> people who live in countries where crypto is illegal, and who may be
> watched. so just sending them a large graphic would likely arouse
> suspicion.
>
> the 2 best solutions I've come up with so far are por
> --
>
> Ralf-Philipp Weinmann[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
> On Thu, 5 Oct 2000, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
>
> > On Wed, 4 Oct 2000, David Honig wrote:
> > One variation of the original proposal would be to only allow egress to
> > addresses known to lay in a jurisdiction different fro
On Thu, 5 Oct 2000, Sampo A Syreeni wrote:
> On Wed, 4 Oct 2000, David Honig wrote:
>
> >This of course regresses the problem to the exit nodes. But it encourages
> >more anonymizing infrastructure.
>
> One variation of the original proposal would be to only allow egress to
> addresses known t
At 5:43 AM -0400 10/5/2000, Vin McLellan wrote:
>...
>
>As the basis of an AES conspiracy theory, the two Hitachi
>patents strike me as pretty frail. (Rijndael is clearly a powerful
>and elegant algorithm, fully a peer if not the Obvious Choice among
>the five great cryptographic creati
Has NIST provided other information on the Hitachi patent
and the USG's evaluation of it other than Jim Foti's
inscrutible comments on the discussion forum and
similar inscrutibity in the R2 report?
If this is all there is, it stinks of rancid red herring being
called this year's never-you-mind
I've started a small project, and I'm curious to know if others
think there's any long-term value to it. Dallas Semiconductor
makes a small Java-based computer called the TINI. (Check out
http://www.ibutton.com/TINI for details.) The unit itself is the
size of a memory SIMM and costs $35. The
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X-Loop: openpgp.net
From: "Jim Choate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> I also thought of an example where a famine was averted due to government
> intervention.
>
> The current hurricane in Belize. Had the government not stepped in and
> 'price fixed' the stores would have been depleted and cached by the f
At 2:31 PM +0200 10/5/00, Tom Vogt wrote:
>I'm currently looking for a way to get encrypted data via stego to
>people who live in countries where crypto is illegal, and who may be
>watched. so just sending them a large graphic would likely arouse
>suspicion.
>
>the 2 best solutions I've come up wi
Tim May wrote:
> Music. CDs are rarely restricted...DATs are probably uncommon, though.
MP3 ?
let's mix that with an idea I've been discussing in private mail. here's
a proposal:
set up a service that you can subscribe to. say: www.dailymusic.com -
fill out a profile and we select a random nu
At 08:36 AM 10/5/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
>the problem with porn is that it may be illegal in itself in the same
>countries.
Baby pictures, if there's a plausible interest on the receiving side.
MP3s of apolitical songs.
At 12:30 AM 10/5/2000, Tim May wrote:
> That you would say "beautiful sentiment" to the overall article you
quoted is...scary.
Perhaps I misspoke. What I meant to get across was that the article was
compelling, but I didn't believe it was practicle.
26 megabytes is a bit much, I should have
http://www.cluebot.com/article.pl?sid=00/10/05/1654245&mode=thread
High Court Denies Reporter's Kiddie-Porn Appeal
posted by cicero on Thursday October 05, @11:52AM
from the so-much-for-a-fair-trial dept.
The Supreme Court this week declined to hear an appeal from a
journal
At 10:55 AM 10/5/2000, Marcel Popescu wrote:
>There's no person called "market", therefore it has no "interest". It's a
>decision of the current resource owners - and when demand increases (as in
>the case of a major disaster), they *have to* increase their prices until
>the supply is equal to th
At 11:57 AM -0500 10/5/00, Sean Roach wrote:
>At 12:30 AM 10/5/2000, Tim May wrote:
>
>> That you would say "beautiful sentiment" to the overall article
>>you quoted is...scary.
>
>Perhaps I misspoke. What I meant to get across was that the article
>was compelling, but I didn't believe it was p
Every time a VP candidate during the debate
says "weapons of mass destruction" you have to sip.
David Honig wrote:
>
> Every time a VP candidate during the debate
> says "weapons of mass destruction" you have to sip.
And if they say "for the children" you finish the bottle.
--
Steve Furlong, Computer Condottiere Have GNU, will travel
518-374-4720 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
At 10:02 PM -0400 10/5/00, Steve Furlong wrote:
>David Honig wrote:
>>
>> Every time a VP candidate during the debate
>> says "weapons of mass destruction" you have to sip.
>
>And if they say "for the children" you finish the bottle.
>
I hadn't planned to, but I watched most of the debate tonig
--
James A. Donald:
> > It would take you [Justin Schwartz] years to check five hundred
> > Chomsky citations. His citations are at best obscure and hard to
> > find, at worst impossible to find.
At 09:41 PM 10/5/2000 -0400, snit wrote:
> look, digslug, Justin Schwartz is an oxford-trai
--
James A. Donald:
> > Almost every Chomsky citation that I have checked was at best somewhat
misleading, and at worst a lie.
At 03:31 PM 10/5/2000 -1000, Reese wrote:
> We've already seen how you picked up an extra word in that massacre quote,
> is it safe to assume you've made other e
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