Jim Choate wrote:
>
> On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, F. Marc de Piolenc wrote:
>
> > Elementary - fair is whatever the parties in interest agree to. Period.
>
> 'agree' is synonymous with 'free' in this case. All you're doing is
> playing word games and hand waving.
>
> What does it mean to 'agree'?
http://slashdot.org/science/01/10/23/2215256.shtml
--
--
The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.
Edmund Burke (1784)
The Armadillo Group
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Paul Krugman, Economic Columnist, New York Times, 24 October 2001:
At worst, war bonds will offer a lower return than ordinary bonds.
And if some people buy them nonetheless, what will they finance?
Here's where that tax bill enters the picture. The remarkable thing
about the 'stimulus' packag
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Shit, so much for ordering mushroom spores by mail!
> > Hopefully UPS and fedex won't follow suit.
> >
> Another option might be for each package to be dropped into a poly bag,
> heat sealed and rinsed before being handled by staff.
>
> Our society has, for all pra
>The really weird thing about this whole anthrax scene is that all
>the spores seem to be of the Ames variety, which is a militarized anthrax
>developed in Ames, Iowa. It really seems suspicious to me that these are of
>domestic origin -- bin Ladin or whoever would be in all likelihood be using
>a
Cpunks, what are your ideas on this:
. What would be an acceptable way for the U.S. government to handle the
current problem of terrorists in the U.S. in order to "catch" the ones
already here and to prevent future attacks (acknowledged, they will do what
they are prepared to do, given their min
>Besides, the Taliban don't dance.
When the B-52's are performing even the Taliban develop rhythm.
> > > > vnconfig -ck svnd0 diskimage
>
> I don't have a BSD system around to check -
> what does this approach do?
It creates an loop encrypted loopback FS.
> > > Anyway, for an OS which prides itself on built-in crypto,
> > > why do we have to mess around with loopback? ...
> >Can you describ
At 01:38 PM 10/23/2001 +1000, zem wrote:
>On 23 Oct 2001, Dr. Evil wrote:
> > > vnconfig -ck svnd0 diskimage
I don't have a BSD system around to check -
what does this approach do?
> > Anyway, for an OS which prides itself on built-in crypto,
> > why do we have to mess around with loopback? ...
The military's rules of engagement are very explicit... Anyone giving an
order to break those rules are themselves committing a crime.. The integrity
to stand up and say its wrong is what has been taught in the military over
the past few years as "Moral Courage"... I am not saying the rules don't
http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel01/102301.htm
At 04:23 AM 10/23/2001 -0700, Karsten M. Self wrote:
>Irradiation equipment is being considered for mail processing, heard
>both over NPR's Morning Edition, and referenced in a story posted to
>Yahoo!: http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/ksat/20011022/lo/932238_1.html
>...
Adds new meaning to a "glo
Well at least you got the UNDERPAID part right...
Jon Beets
- Original Message -
From: "Nomen Nescio" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 23, 2001 3:21 PM
Subject: Re: Cypherpunks idiot list
> Of course I know how to use a killfile! I killfiled all yo
C'punks,
Penn suggests reading Joseph Dunniger if you want to know how magic works.
One of Dunninger's books listed on Amazon.com is, Dunninger's Complete
Encyclopedia of Magic.
S a n d y
http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns1440
Uses a known carrier through a randomizing media so that only the
source and dest will have the same randomization performed on their
signal.
--
"It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once."
on Tue, Oct 23, 2001 at 08:31:38AM -0700, David Honig ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> At 04:23 AM 10/23/01 -0700, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> >Any pointers on packaging for photographic and/or magnetic media through
> >mail to survive irradiation equipment? How about the magstrips on all
> >those credi
Harmon Seaver <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>StarOffice is a lot better. Opensource, for one thing (although I
> know the Mac version was dropped and the OS X version not quite ready yet,
> but the linux version rocks), and doesn't get macroviri in any version.
> Again, why would you use some
On Sat, 20 Oct 2001, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> on Sat, Oct 20, 2001 at 12:56:02PM -0700, Giovanna Imbesi ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> > Last night my friend and I stopped at a Venice club/bar. At the door
> > they were doing the normal ID check, but then took my driver's license
> > and swiped it
On Tuesday, October 23, 2001, at 04:02 PM, Harmon Seaver wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
>> Our society has, for all practical purposes, endless vulnerabilities.
>> If
>> as each vulnerability is exploited we plan on taking drastic steps to
>> secure it from future exploitation, the costs wi
So what's wrong with lne.com -- majordomo responds to info
cypherpunks, but nothing's coming thru since last night, and nothing on
inet.com either except from toad and ssz?
--
Harmon Seaver, MLIS
CyberShamanix
Work 920-203-9633
Home 920-233-5820
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.cybershamanix.com/
> Tim May[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
>
> One minute spent searching on "anthrax ames" will disabuse the clueful
> of the mistakes made above.
>
> The Ames strain is _not_ "militarized anthrax."
>
> --Tim May
>
>From what I heard yesterday, the 'Ames strain' was, until 1996, mailed
to research
It 's always refreshing when someone posts something truly funny.
The "idiots list" ranks right up there with Nixon's enemies list -
except it's not as long...
--
john noerenberg
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
While the belief we
At 07:24 AM 10/24/01 -0500, Jim Choate wrote:
Holographic Sonar Cryptography
Its no more 'cryptography' than the plans to use
small number of quanta to communicate 'securely'
between satellites, or using pressurized conduits
for your cables. As 'secure' or 'untappable' fnord
communications it i
At 12:23 PM 10/24/01 +0100, Ken Brown wrote:
>>
>> Our society has, for all practical purposes, endless vulnerabilities. If
>> as each vulnerability is exploited we plan on taking drastic steps to
>> secure it from future exploitation, the costs will be staggering and the
>> list of unsecured ite
At 09:31 AM 10/23/01 -0700, Bill Stewart wrote:
>Unexposed photographic film could have a real problem with this,
>depending on quite what they're using.
Enough rads to sterilize? Forget film.
Interesting consequences for the evolution of radiation-resistant strains,
of course.
Except in kansas
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On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 11:05 AM, David Honig wrote:
> At 10:32 AM 10/24/01 -0700, Tim May wrote:
>> On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 10:14 AM, Sampo Syreeni wrote:
>>
>>> On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, David Honig wrote:
>>>
Enough rads to sterilize? Forget film.
>>>
>>> What do you sup
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Tim May wrote:
I don't have time to respond in depth to the points Tim makes here, so I
have snipped a lot of them. I intend to come back and comment in more
detail later.
Largely, I am in agreement. However, in the paragraphs I've quoted below,
Tim touches on a counter-argu
On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, Eric Murray wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 22, 2001 at 08:44:09AM -0700, Tim May wrote:
>
> > "Sure, unions are good" is not at all obvious to me. Why do you claim
> > this?
> >
> > Most labor unions are simply rent-seeking clubs designed to cement the
> > status quo. Teacher's un
At 10:11 AM 10/24/01 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>David Honig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote :
>>
>>Personally I'd prefer a non-colonial foreign policy that doesn't generate
>>such antipathy.
>>
>>The message of the WTC is this: regular ole' non-mil sheeple *are* held
>>responsible for
>>the acti
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 11:33 AM, Meyer Wolfsheim wrote:
> Largely, I am in agreement. However, in the paragraphs I've quoted
> below,
> Tim touches on a counter-argument and dismisses it. I'll like to expand
> upon that a bit.
I didn't "dismiss" it. In fact, I wrote more about this i
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 12:01 PM, David Honig wrote:
Many excellent points...
...
> If you look up "Schelling points" you find Tim's
> http://www.inet-
> one.com/cypherpunks/dir.1996.07.25-1996.07.31/msg00032.html
> metaphor about interfering with another family because you disapprov
Original Message
Subject: [biofuel] VW presents new synthetic fuel strategy
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2001 18:29:19 +0900
From: Keith Addison <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.news24.co.za/News24/Wheels24/News/0,3999,2-15-47_1083848,00.html
21/09/2001 14:38 - (SA)
>* * * * * MEDIA ADVISORY * * * * *
>
>NEWS FROM THE OFFICE OF THE DEMOCRATIC LEADER
>
>__
>
>FOR IMMEDIATE
>RELEASE: House Democratic
>Leader Richard A. Gephardt
>Wednesday, October 23,
>2001
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On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 10:34:11AM -0700, Gabriel Rocha wrote:
> http://washington.bcentral.com/washington/stories/2001/10/22/focus1.html
>
> George Mason U. adopts a free-market philosophy to an unusual degree
I skimmed the article, and it seems decent, but entirely anticlimatic.
Any instituti
available to comment.
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/htx/nm/20011024/ts/attack_newjersey_detainee_dc_1.html
Flies all green and buzzin',
in this dungeon of despair.
Prisoners grumble and piss their clothes,
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Tim May wrote:
> I didn't "dismiss" it. In fact, I wrote more about this issue, which I
> haven't seen brought up by anyone else here, than 95% of all posts to
> Cypherpunks have in their entire amount of original material!
My apologies. Dismiss was not the correct word.
I
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Tim May wrote:
>Federalizing or socializing the costs of security is like federalizing
>or socializing flood insurance: it takes the efficiencies of the market
>away and creates distortions.
A bare one objection to comprehensive market based security: a market
needs private
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Tim wrote:
>And my meta-Schelling point was actually that the concept of a
>Schelling point is itself a Schelling point: many people, even
>animals, come to the independent conclusion that figuring out where
>the Schelling points are is a good sur
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, (na) mshoe wrote:
> I first want you to know I understand what you do but
Great! Could you please explain it to *US* then? I [seriously] doubt
that most of us know what it is we do here!
> I need to ask you to please remove the post from
> http://www.inet-one.com/cypherp
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, Jim Choate wrote:
> What does it mean to 'agree'?
or, more to the point, what does "is" mean?
--
Yours,
J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
If Governments really want us to behave like civilized human beings, they
should give serious consideration towards setting a better
[What's with the Subject line?
=?iso-8859-1?Q?Re:_MATT_DRUDGE_//_DRUDGE_REPORT_2001=AE?=]
> Two hovering police choppers waited for people to come
> to the roof, rescue hoists ready, but none made it past the
> locked doors -- a couple of the doorbangers cellphoned
> home to scream bloody murde
Frog wrote:
>Not a plausible claim, to anyone who recalls the situation at the
>top of the WTC on those days. The incredible heat and smoke from
>an entire jetliner full of fuel a hundred feet below would make
>helicopter operations impossible. Trying to land on the roof under
>those circumstan
Dear Friend Mitch Shoemaker
82 north iron st.
Bloomsburg pa,17815
Hey Mitch baby, what's wrong, your ENVELOPE STUFFING JOB getting a bit
intense?
Allergies to your new latex gloves?
We'll remember that when we're buggering you in hell, spammer.
THANKS TO
showed signs of gingivitis, according to the
> county medical examiner. He was treated with an antibiotic
> between Oct. 1 and Oct. 6.
>
> Representatives of the FBI and the Immigration and
> Naturalization Service were not immediately available to comment.
>
David Honig wrote:
> Personally I'd prefer a non-colonial foreign policy that doesn't generate
> such antipathy.
And if you believe that WTC had anything to do with US foreign policy,
or that we would cease being targets if we e.g. dropped suppport for
Israel, you are living in a dream world and
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, F. Marc de Piolenc wrote:
> Jim Choate wrote:
> >
> > On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, F. Marc de Piolenc wrote:
> >
> > > Elementary - fair is whatever the parties in interest agree to. Period.
> >
> > 'agree' is synonymous with 'free' in this case. All you're doing is
> > playing w
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Karsten M. Self wrote:
> Read your Aesop: the thief needs no excuse.
Read "Green River Anthology", we are what our environment makes of us.
That's the 'nature' aspect just in case you're confused. You can't have
one without the other (contrary to your claim).
No mand is
Lucky wrote:
> It would have been more impressive had
> Copperfield revealed the numbers he
> predicted an hour /before/ the drawing...
Yes, but that would have required REAL magic (or time travel).
Incidentally, Penn sent a further reading suggestion on the subject of
"mentalism." The book is
> I don't understand why one would pay $1000 for a Starium device when
> comparable devices are available in the market place for less than half
Do you have any references for those? I'm in the market for a voice
encryptor system. Are these devices really comparable in terms of
ease of use?
>
"Dr. Evil" wrote:
>
> > I don't understand why one would pay $1000 for a Starium device when
> > comparable devices are available in the market place for less than half
>
> Do you have any references for those? ...
>
> > of that. The design goal for the new Starium boxes was sub-$100 retail.
>
Title: New Page 1
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Pictures of the Daschle, Brokaw, and NY Post anthrax letters + their
envelopes.
http://www.fbi.gov/pressrel/pressrel01/102301.htm
On 24 Oct 2001, Dr. Evil wrote:
> No, it has nothing to do with speed. Machines are plenty fast. This
> is just a kludgy way to do this, and the last time I tried it, I got
> kernel panics within a day or so of uptime. Not acceptable,
> obviously.
2.7 had problems. It's worked reliably for m
> http://www.tccsecure.com/csd4100.htm - no price
Great, no price and uses the world-famous DACE algorithm from Bell
Labs. Next!
> http://www.thespystore.com/telefax.htm - $249
One unit is a "scrambler" which boasts "52,488 code combinations!"
The other uses "rolling code scrambling", which I
Excellent. Thank you for delivering the entire article, rather than a
link (I usually get to your likns BTW, but they do sit _way_ down on the
list).
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Jim Choate wrote:
> Date: Wed, 24 Oct 2001 18:37:54 -0500 (CDT)
> From: Jim Choate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, Bill Stewart wrote:
> At 01:38 PM 10/23/2001 +1000, zem wrote:
> >On 23 Oct 2001, Dr. Evil wrote:
> > > > vnconfig -ck svnd0 diskimage
>
> I don't have a BSD system around to check -
> what does this approach do?
Create a loopback device. "-k" means encrypt - cipher is blow
on Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 07:12:13PM -0700, John Young ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> These procedures were described in exquisite detail during
> the USA v. bin Laden et al trial earlier this year:
>
> http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ubl-dt.htm
>
> Use the search on Cryptome to find the transcripts desc
The Ames Strain of Anthrax wasn't "developed" in Ames, It was "discovered".
It was naturally occurring strain that was resistant to the anti-biotics
that were used to treat Anthrax at the time.
It is very commonly used in the study and research of bacteria, and up to a
few years ago could be eas
"Dr. Evil" wrote:
> So, I checked all the URLs you gave me, and none of them, except the
> STU, use real encryption, and the STUs are either not available, or
> they are backdoored.
>
> Starium is competing with STUs.
...
> > And others in the over-US$1000 range.
>
> Right, so Starium is price-c
The DC Metro is one of the nicer subways systems in the country.
And for both NYC and DC, the subway definitely beats most other
transportation methods - neither city could support even the
parking needs for their residents or workers if everyone drove,
and busses aren't managed in a way that they
> We probably need to define the product category we're discussing. I was
> listing devices which prevent casual interception, and which Joe Average
> might conceivably buy. The Starium is obviously more robust than that,
> and consequently more expensive.
Right, exactly. When Starium was first
Make "Green River Anthology" into "Spoon River Anthology", it'll make more
sense.
--
The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.
Edmund Burke (1784
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1275-210-7632187-1.html?tag=bt_bh
--
--
The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.
Edmund Burke (1784)
The Arma
This entire view misses the(!) one most important component of Unix's (and
Linux's) success, they were first.
There was NO credible competition. The same thing can be said for Apache
and BIND and many other apps. It isn't that they were the best, they were
simply the first - and get to reap mark
Noted without comment: this stamps.com press release hit the wires earlier
today...
--XJ
Stamps.com Technology Helps Improve Mail Security
Internal Task Force to Focus on Further Utilization of Internet Postage Security
SANTA MONICA, Calif. - October 24, 2001 - Stamps.c
>> > I don't understand why one would pay $1000 for a Starium device when
>> > comparable devices are available in the market place for less than half
According to some news I encountered, Microsoft's latest 'consumer'
OS fnord "XP" includes an audio/visual live 'chat' app.
Ignoring for the mome
>The bill is not perfect. I am sorry that, for example, we excluded
> making it a crime to smuggle over $10,000 interstate. We included it
> for overseas, but it was not included for interstate. Nevertheless,
> this is an excellent bill.
Can someone clarify the definition, in this context, of
http://www.tfriend.com/hypothesis.html
--
--
The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion.
Edmund Burke (1784)
The Armadillo Group ,:://
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 02:17 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 23 Oct 2001, (na) mshoe wrote:
I first want you to know I understand what you do but
Great! Could you please explain it to *US* then? I [seriously] doubt
that most of us know what it is we do here!
I need to ask yo
--
> David Honig wrote:
>
> > No one forces a farmer to the city to look for an industrial job.
On 22 Oct 2001, at 12:21, Ken Brown wrote:
> In general, no. But it happens now and again. Governments
certainly did
> in (say) the old Soviet Union
I do not think so.
Lenin surrounded the citi
I happened to hear from Lee Caplin of Starium today. They've
apparently (I'm looking at Lee's email message while typing this, but
I don't wish to speak for them) abandoned plans to sell the
bump-in-a-wire device. Now they're thinking of marketing a small
RJ11'd cryptophone an executive would carr
On Thu, Oct 25, 2001 at 01:31:34AM -, Dr. Evil wrote:
> Right, so Starium is price-competitive, easier to use, and possibly
> more secure. Oh, and they will sell to anyone who has money, unlike
> the STU sellers, I assume.
Right. I have a pair of Starium betas. They work. I'd recommend them.
K-S has the right of it. The only drama left before the Senate votes
on the "anti-terrorism" wiretap bill Thursday is whether the final vote
on this ever-growing, 400KB bill will be 99-1 (Feingold) or 100-1.
Two weeks ago, the House approved (http://www.politechbot.com/p-02654.html)
the bill by
The bill has been in flux, and nobody has had time to read it in detail.
You can scroll through it yerself:
http://www.politechbot.com/docs/usa.act.final.102401.html
``(b) Domestic Coin and Currency Transactions Involving
Nonfinancial Trades or Businesses.--No person shall, for the
> On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, somebody wrote:
>
> >Federalizing or socializing the costs of security is like federalizing
> >or socializing flood insurance: it takes the efficiencies of the market
> >away and creates distortions.
It has two advantages over a strict free market model however. The fist
Declan McCullagh wrote:
> When you have 99-1 votes in the Senate
> (http://www.politechbot.com/p-02651.html), can anyone seriously say
> that either the Democrats or Republicans can be trusted to preserve
> our privacy and follow the demands of the Constitution?
No. Nor have the mass of national
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, Declan McCullagh wrote:
> Right. I have a pair of Starium betas. They work. I'd recommend them.
>
> But the problem is that the purchaseable product doesn't exist. I went
> down to Carmel a few months ago and checked out the company. I love
> the ideas and the tech, but I wou
Did you read the page carefully? See:
NOW TAKING PRE-ORDERS FOR DELIVERY IN DECEMBER 2001/JANUARY 2002
Very Limited Quantity Available
That said, I'm surprised to see the units advertised. As I said in
another message, Starium's chairman (I think that's his current title)
indicated to me today t
Parochial issues like privacy, maybe?
-Declan
---
News Advisory
For immediate
release Contact:
Jeff Lungren
October 24,
2001
202-225-2492
House Passes Anti-terrorism Legislation
Sensenbenner Urges Senate Action Today
WASHINGTON, D.C.
FORMER INS GUARD AT FEDERAL DETENTION FACILITY
PLEADS GUILTY TO SEXUAL ACT WITH FEMALE DETAINEE MIAMI, FL. --
The Public Integrity Section of the Justice Department announced today that
Clarence Parker, a former guard at the Krome Service Processing Center
(Krome) in Miami, Florida, pled guilty
> I happened to hear from Lee Caplin of Starium today. They've
> apparently (I'm looking at Lee's email message while typing this,
> but I don't wish to speak for them) abandoned plans to sell the
> bump-in-a-wire device. Now they're thinking of marketing a small
> RJ11'd cryptophone an executive
An armed uprising won't transpire, but a time will come
when people will run away from cities.
Even if you disagree with prophecy, I very much doubt that you truly
believe that there is men and women in great numbers that will fight.
After spending 26 years on this planet, it will not be a surpri
on Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 09:53:35PM -0500, Jim Choate ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> This entire view misses the(!) one most important component of Unix's (and
> Linux's) success, they were first.
Not hardly.
I wasn't keeping notes when K&R were designing their gaming platform,
but history seems to
on Thu, Oct 25, 2001 at 12:44:48AM -0400, Declan McCullagh ([EMAIL PROTECTED])
wrote:
> Parochial issues like privacy, maybe?
>
> -Declan
>
> ---
>
> News Advisory
> For immediate
> release Contact:
> Jeff Lungren
> October 24,
> 2001
> 202
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On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 09:44 PM, Declan McCullagh wrote:
> Parochial issues like privacy, maybe?
>
"Frankly, even before 9/11 I thought privacy was, like, rilly, rilly
scary and all! It scares me to think about what people are doing under
the cloak of "privacy." So, like, I'm happy
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 09:23 PM, Steve Furlong wrote:
> Declan McCullagh wrote:
>
>> When you have 99-1 votes in the Senate
>> (http://www.politechbot.com/p-02651.html), can anyone seriously say
>> that either the Democrats or Republicans can be trusted to preserve
>> our privacy and
At 10:21 PM 10/23/01 +0200, Nomen Nescio wrote:
> Of course I know how to use a killfile! I killfiled all you idiots
>long ago, but your names and trivial ideas keep getting quoted by
>all the important people, AND I JUST CAN'T STAND IT ANYMORE!.
Then kill yourself and be done with it. If th
This debate is one of my favorites: security and the role of market
forces. I regret not having the time/energy to tighten and polish this
essay below. Some paragraphs are almost note-like. If you can handle
John Young, you can handle this.
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 04:23 AM, Ken Bro
David Honig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote :
>
>Personally I'd prefer a non-colonial foreign policy that doesn't generate
>such antipathy.
>
>The message of the WTC is this: regular ole' non-mil sheeple *are* held
>responsible for
>the actions of their government. *Even* in the US. What a concept.
Lne.com, at least based on what I saw, sent no outgoing messages from
about 7 pm ET yesterday until 12 noon today.
-Declan
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 09:38:29AM -0500, Harmon Seaver wrote:
> So what's wrong with lne.com -- majordomo responds to info
> cypherpunks, but nothing's coming thru sin
On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, David Honig wrote:
>Enough rads to sterilize? Forget film.
What do you suppose happens to disks and other magnetic media at these
flux levels?
Sampo Syreeni, aka decoy - mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED], tel:+358-50-5756111
student/math+cs/helsinki university, http://www.iki.fi/~d
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 01:17:54PM -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
> Lne.com, at least based on what I saw, sent no outgoing messages from
> about 7 pm ET yesterday until 12 noon today.
We had a sendmail config error, and our network feed had a problem
with some hardware.
Eric
http://washington.bcentral.com/washington/stories/2001/10/22/focus1.html
George Mason U. adopts a free-market philosophy to an unusual degree
Eric Winig Staff Reporter
While the U.S. economy continues to sink, the majority of economists
are scratching their heads, unable to divine
On Wednesday, October 24, 2001, at 10:14 AM, Sampo Syreeni wrote:
> On Wed, 24 Oct 2001, David Honig wrote:
>
>> Enough rads to sterilize? Forget film.
>
> What do you suppose happens to disks and other magnetic media at these
> flux levels?
Nothing. Magnetic oxides and metallic thin films are
You seem to have left out the fact that the single largest player in the
"market" today is the government. The security measures that are now in
place for air travel are IMHO an abuse by regulators that amounts to
using a private actor as a proxy for an illegal search : to whit names,
flight numbe
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