I have little interest in debating with someone who believes in
criminalizing the publication and distribution (and also, apparently, the
purchasing) of scientific and technical information.
One might as well debate the merits of concealed carry .40 caliber vs. 9mm
handguns with a Handgun Cont
On Sunday, November 18, 2001, at 02:16 PM, Faustine wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
> declan wrote:
>> Not so with digital cash. It also suffers from deployment problems, of
>> course, but far more substantial regulatory ones. You need two
>> consenting users -- and a tie-
On Sunday, November 18, 2001, at 10:37 PM, CDR Anonymizer wrote:
> At 08:29 PM 11/18/01 -0800, CDR Anonymizer wrote:
>> Because they could.
>
> This goes beyond gratuitous demonstration of power and ability,
> there is an economic reason behind it all.
> What is / their / economic reason?
On Thu, Nov 22, 2001 at 01:17:44PM -0800, Petro wrote:
> When was the last time you worked a Customer Support line for a web
> site that did CC transactions?
>
> End users care about, and insist on security. They don't know JS
> about it, they don't begin to understand it, but they
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
And now, for a special thanksgiving message from a closet Objectivist-
libertarian in the Bush administration... :)
***
The generosity of capitalism
The US is the world's biggest giver because its ethos of individualism
encourages humanitarianism
At 11:35 AM 11/22/01 -0800, John Young wrote:
Do caves
>serve as acoustic resonators to emit recorded whispers up
>ventilating shafts?
Their waveguide, not resonance, properties might be of interest,
if their CO2 emissions -whether speaking or silent- were not so telling.
Unless Osama's got a *b
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On Monday, November 19, 2001, at 12:55 PM, Tim May wrote:
> On Monday, November 19, 2001, at 12:36 PM, Faustine wrote:
<...>
>> This applied as well to _new_ banks. This meant that neither the
>> customer (Joe Sixpack) nor the branch manager had to be "convinced" or
>> "sold" on the importanc
On Monday, November 19, 2001, at 01:47 PM, Sandy Sandfort wrote:
> Ken Brown quoted Tim May (I think) saying:
>
>>> A way too expensive way to spread mere
>>> radiological terror, which could be done
>>> much more cheaply and easily by taking
>>> spent fuel rods and blowing them up, or
>>> just b
On Monday, November 19, 2001, at 01:48 PM, Roy M. Silvernail wrote:
> On 19 Nov 2001, at 19:43, Ken Brown wrote:
>
>> Much too 1990s. These times suit more loyal-sounding names.
>> "Programmers Rally Against Terrorism"?
>
> I wonder how many non-Brits will get this...
A few.
--
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On Wed, Nov 21, 2001 at 08:46:18PM -0800, Petro wrote:
> > Not necessarily. It is argued both that Libertarians are
> > chicken-shit anarchists (afraid to take the last step) or
> > that Anarchists are just extreme Libertarians.
On 22 Nov 2001, at 12:36, Mark Henderson wrote:
> As far a
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On Tuesday, November 20, 2001, at 01:45 PM, Lou Poppler wrote:
> On Mon, 22 Oct 2001, Tim May wrote:
> : On Monday, October 22, 2001, at 11:05 PM, Harmon Seaver wrote:
> : > Ish! I'm getting bummed with NS, but wouldn't use IE on a bet.
> Why
> : > use a
> : > virus magnet?
> : The virii ar
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On Wed, 21 Nov 2001, Petro wrote:
> On Saturday, November 17, 2001, at 07:36 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > (in my perfectly humble hate-group inspired opinion :-). It's also
> > great
> > fun watching Jeff and company pretend to be even dumber than your
> > average
> > @home luser.
>
>
Right out of a Monty Python piece...
http://www.portal.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2001/06/30/ngerb30.xml
MI5's secret plan to recruit gerbils as spycatchers
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Suppose we won the war but lost our freedom
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ONE evening in August 1942, as Adolf Hitler took dinner with his
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G
Eugene Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For archives see:
> http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
A quick Google found the following:
http://www.kscourts.org/ca10/cases/2001/07/99-3355.htm
--
Riad Wahby
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
MIT VI-2/A 2002
"efforts are better spent developing the technologies and markets in such a
way that maybe Joe Sixpack will someday follow. "
Tim wrote.
Technologies like quantum computing could be to late/impossible/to
expensive.Markets seem more promising even in freeloaders heaven,the
web,plenty will pay f
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On Wed, Nov 21, 2001 at 11:51:04PM -0500, dmolnar wrote:
| Declan's comment on operating a physical remailer for suitably valuable
| cargo, plus some of Tim's recent comments about integration, made me think
| of the question in the subject line. So far I see at least three possible
| answers.
|
[ Charset ISO-8859-1 unsupported, converting... ]
> Whoops ! Yes I meant Douglas Adams ( My punishment: To be damned to heck and
> forced to listen to Vogon Poetry).
>
> -Neil
You have certainly come to the right place for it.
--
Julian Assange|If you want to build a ship, don't drum u
On Mon, Nov 19, 2001 at 11:46:45AM -0800, Tim May wrote:
| On Monday, November 19, 2001, at 10:29 AM, Adam Shostack wrote:
| > | 6. The failure to get true digital money. Call it what you like,
| > | "digital cash" or "ecash" or even one of Hettinga's pet names, but the
| > | fact is that for both
Time Magazine, November 26, 2001:
Denning's pioneering a new field she calls geo-encryption.
Working with industry, Denning has developed a way to keep
information undecipherable until it reaches its location, as
determined by GPS satellites. Move studios, for example,
have been afraid to release
Nobody is saying that free expression includes inciting a riot or
soliciting murder. But it does generally include the right to write a book
(and read it) without being targeted by the government. What you wrote that
raised eyebrows was this:
>I sure hope that the government is investigating a
Google shows one "geo-encryption" patented by CoinCard,
which may or may not be a component of Denning's geo-crypto.
Because CoinCard is a Canadian company, its geo-encryption
may have nothing to do with Denning's.
CoinCard uses a system composed of a swipe card and passive
card reader to decryp
On 22 Nov 2001, at 11:06, John Young wrote:
> Time Magazine, November 26, 2001:
>
> Denning's pioneering a new field she calls geo-encryption.
> Working with industry, Denning has developed a way to keep
> information undecipherable until it reaches its location, as
> determined by GPS satellite
--
On 21 Nov 2001, at 23:26, Ryan Lackey wrote:
> Bob Hettinga wrote:
>
> > Quoting "Blanc <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>":
>
> > > But sometimes it seems like it will be a Cold Day in
> > > Hell before that happens.
>
> > > (Ryan, would you make this your next project?
> > > We'd all appreciate it *e
--
On 21 Nov 2001, at 2:02, R. A. Hettinga wrote:
> This is nothing new for long-time subscribers to this list.
> As Eric Hughes kept saying when I first got here in 1994,
> it is immediate and final settlement that attracts the
> capital and payment system markets to cryptographic
> protocols
At 11:06 AM -0800 11/22/01, John Young wrote:
>Time Magazine, November 26, 2001:
This is a fascinating idea, but problematic. The simplest approach
is easy to spoof. Let's say that you encrypt the data with the GPS coordinates
X. The software takes GPS coordinates from a GPS receiver and tries
to
On Thu, 22 Nov 2001, Roy M. Silvernail wrote:
> Using a GPS coordinate set as keying material? Hope it's just
Given that a GPS receiver gets ephemeris data, almanach data and
pseudorandom code from each currently visible sat it has probably to do
with the latter. Consider S/A (which may or may
At 11:06 AM 11/22/2001 -0800, you wrote:
>Time Magazine, November 26, 2001:
>
>Denning's pioneering a new field she calls geo-encryption.
>Working with industry, Denning has developed a way to keep
>information undecipherable until it reaches its location, as
>determined by GPS satellites. Move st
No Thumbprint, No Rental Car
Dollar Rent A Car is currently making customers give a thumbprint before
they give them the keys, another example of biometrics being used for ID
purposes.
http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,48552,00.html
On Thu, 22 Nov 2001, Eugene Leitl wrote:
> Given that a GPS receiver gets ephemeris data, almanach data and
> pseudorandom code from each currently visible sat it has probably to do
> with the latter. Consider S/A (which may or may not be switched off now, I
> haven't checked): if you've got a se
--
On 21 Nov 2001, at 16:37, Blanc wrote:
> But what I anticipate would happen at that point is another
> Afghanistan, with ten thousand bloomin' territories full of
> prickly warring tribes and war lords.
>
> The first thing which happens after a power vaccuum is
> created is that another
[I've played around with an expensive version from another vendor. It appeared to
function (my dual mode CDMA PCS phone quickly became inopperative). Range was limited
due to low power output (about 12wm). The circuits are very simple and the addition
of an inexpensive 10-12db power amp stag
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