Ray Dillinger wrote:
On Sat, 7 Jul 2001, Sampo Syreeni wrote:
>the protection afforded by Black Blocs is quite thin (just indict them under
>organized crime or gang laws),
> The similar clothing is enough to charge with gang membership and invoke
> RICO. Also, the 'black bloc' tactic h
Faustine FUDed:
>And IMHO the best way to achieve anonymity in meatspace? A great place to
>start would be by not deliberately engaging in "possibly illegal operations
>on the street in an environment full of police". You're doomed before you
>ever get started. But I could be wrong. Don't say I
I've some friends who have, for a long time, complained about
being surveilled, specifically phone tapped and/or house bugged.
At first I thought it was just paranoia, but recent events have
made me think otherwise. i
One thing that happens almost invariably is that when groups
meet at the
bob said:
>You need a spectrum analyzer, which shows you signal strength vs.
>frequency.
>
>And you need to worry about intermittent ('burst') bugs.
>
>And WTF is an 'infinity' transmitter?
Umm, all the stuff being sold for counter surveillance are frequency
counters of one sort or another.
Thanks a lot -- that's a great help. And no, we weren't looking for rf
from the infinity tranmitter, I knew they run on the phone line, but we were
looking for other bugs.
And I'm also aware of the great number of telemarketer autodialers (used
to have one myself with a hardwired voice ma
Bear saith:
>
>Right. Between all the "offender databases" and "surveillance
>for your (cough) protection" and so on, anyone who's got a
>record winds up so completely frozen out of normal society that
>it becomes impossible for them to get by without continuing as
>a part of criminal society
Those 3 things you mentioned violate the First on at least two counts,
free speech and press,
and also the "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of
religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof" part --- the obscenity and kid porn
stuff is pure Judeo-Christian
bigo
From: "HTML Goodies to Go" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
X-Mailer: ListManager Web Interface
Subject: Goodies To Go #139: Steganography
Burns is a computer science professor. No wonder students' heads are so
often fucked up.
# # #
Amusing, Aimee -- or is it "Amusing Aimee"? But the real discussion
was about protected speech, was it not? You previously posted a piece on
"842" as if that were an actual statute forbidding the "teaching" of info
on explosives and bombs. Where is that law, actually?
This case is about so
Faustine wrote:
> I think you mainly have your bloomers in a bunch because I told your
> anonymous ass-kiss toady to get a spine.
Why Faustine, you sound jealous! I'm flattered you hold my views in
such high regard.
I like Tim's posts for several reasons. They are to the point and
often cut th
In another message Tim wrote:
>On Sunday, August 26, 2001, at 12:11 AM, Reese wrote:
>> It's easy to stay on topic, or on a topic, it's another thing to be
>> appropriate. Tim is good, but easy improvement is within reach, as
>> you sort of noted.
>
> Fuck off. I'll take constructive criticism fr
> I know this suggestion has been made before, probably by myself, but it
> seems the remailer programmers may be missing a good opportunity in not
> pursuing the inclusion of remailer code in the popular Gnutella cleints
> (e.g., LimeWire). They advertise they are looking for new "content
> comm
At 12:38 PM 9/4/2001 -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
>In the next five years or so, I would not be suprised to see a call
>for federal licensing of remailers. Some of the more mainstream
>remailer operators might even go along with it, eventually, calling
>for a "voluntary-mandatory" code of conduc
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> Anonymity allows people to evade laws. Governments don't like that.
> Read the archives.
It would be nice to see at least one example of something nasty that
could be done with an anonymous remailer in the next few years where
you couldn't get the same effect at the co
Tim May writes:
> > It would be nice to see at least one example of something nasty that
> > could be done with an anonymous remailer in the next few years where
> > you couldn't get the same effect at the corner phone booth or dropping a
> > letter in a public mailbox.
>
> Are you dense, or just
John Young takes a courageous stand:
> I propose that all anonymizers adopt a code of practice that
> any sale to officials of anonymizers or their use be disclosed
> to the public (I suggested this to ZKS early on when first
> meetings with the feds to explain the technology were being
> some
Tim May writes:
> I often talk about "re-commenters" (hyphen added to emphasize the
> "commenter" part). If I get mail, or letters, or e-mail, and then pass
> it along to my friends or others, WHERE IN THE FIRST does it say I need
> permission from government?
You're absolutely right, no law c
New credit-card technology uses
sound waves to enforce security
By Jathon Sapsford
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
August 14 Ñ An Israeli start-up has created a bit of gadgetry that uses sound waves to
address some of the biggest issues of e-commerce: fraud, privacy and convenience TO
DEMONSTRATE, Ala
BERLIN (Reuters) - The German cabinet Wednesday unveiled a draft bill to conform to a
European Union initiative on developing a standard for electronic signatures in
Internet commerce.
The move follows EU approval of a directive on electronic commerce last year which
required member states to
BOSTON (AP) -- Internet privacy advocates raised concerns Tuesday about a technology
firm that is quietly tracking the information consumers are getting from
pharmaceutical companies' Web sites.
By using tiny computer files such as ``cookies,'' Pharmatrak can track people's
movement throughou
(08/18/00, 6:30 p.m. ET) By Ron Copeland, InformationWeek
Scientists at the University of Geneva are collaborating with the Swiss Ministry of
Posts and Telecommunications on an experiment that uses quantum computers to run an
unbreakable encryption algorithm.
Cryptography could, in fact, be
By Reuters
August 23, 2000 12:36 PM PT
URL: http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2618909,00.html?chkpt=zdhpnews01
U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno said on Wednesday that details for a planned review
of the FBI's controversial Carnivore program designed to capture e-mail messages for
c
By Christina Lamb, Diplomatic Correspondent
TENS of thousands of Chinese troops and prisoners forced to work as security guards
have been moved into Sudan.
They have been sent in preparation for a big offensive against southern rebels to try
to bring to an end one of Africa's longest-running c
State police infiltrated protest groups, documents
show
Search-warrant affidavits reveal an undercover operation
aimed at activists in Philadelphia for the GOP convention.
By Linda K. Harris,, Craig R. McCoy and Thomas Ginsberg
http://www.vsia.com/
has a new paper on IP protection/detection
for cores.
Table of Contents
VSIA IP Protection DWG 1
Scope 1
Introduction 1
Overview: Security Schemes 2
Deterrents 3
Patents 4
Copyright 4
Trade Secrets 4
Governing Law 4
Protection Mechanisms 5
Encryption 5
Hardware Protection 5
So when is APster coming out, which lets
you trade lists of deserving people?
Tuesday September 12 5:11 AM ET
Abortion Web Site Verdict Appealed
By WILLIAM McCALL, Associated Press Writer
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Anti-abortion activists are
asking a federal appeals court to
Sep 12, 2000 - 07:27 PM
Visa USA to Launch Smart Card in
the U.S.
The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) - After success with its smart card in
Europe and Japan, Visa is aiming squarely at the U.S.
market with an upgraded vers
Lieberman: Entertainment Must
Police Itself or Else
By Kalpana Srinivasan
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Joe Lieberman decried a
"culture of carnage" surrounding Americas young
people and told a Senate commit
Middle school student arrested in
poisoning
Wednesday, 13 September 2000 0:18 (ET)
Middle school student arrested in poisoning
Middle school student arrested in poisoning
JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Sept. 12 (UPI) -- A 15-year-old Jacksonville, Fla.,
boy was arrested Tuesday for allegedly putt
The authors of FlasKMPEG have come across a program called
FlasKMPEG DeCSS.
We want to express very clearly that such program or any other
derived from the original is no way related with the official
FlasKMPEG project in any way. FlasKMPEG sources are available
under the GPL license and it
"contained proprietary
information that could be valuable to foreign governments."
Kinda interesting statement about a
telecoms machine. Foreign
govts?
PC with Corporate Secrets
Disappears
Qualcomm Chiefs Laptop Taken from Podium
Sept. 18, 2000
Funny, the article doesnt say
how the pirates subverted the
encryption in order to make copies.
Oh, you dont have to.
Listening, Kaplan?
RIAA Behind More "CD-Pirate" Busts 09-18-00
GARLAND, TEXAS, U.S.A., 2000 SEP 18 (NB) -- By Steven Bonisteel, Newsbytes.
The music industry announced what
Friday September 22 05:15 PM EDT
COPA panel wants billions more for
cops
By Ben Charny, ZDNet News
Also on the wish list: government-backed porn-filter testing,
education programs and immunity for porn sites that follow
the rules.
Spend
>You know, I hope it passes. No, I havent taken leave of my senses.
>Ive just had it up to here with gradualism. Im really reaching the
>point of morbid curiosity to see exactly what the sheeple will tolerate.
>
>The United States is sick. Intoxicated on its own power, it has a
>serious case
>By the time the coherent radiation (needed to make an image) passes
Were not talking holograms, Jimmy-boy
from the clueless dept:
Why would I want a PDA-phone hybrid?
Why do I have the uneasy feeling the newly announced
Motorola/Palm product, due in 2002, may end up combining
everything Palm knows about cell phones with everything
The label "digital signature" for
nonrefutable cryptostrong sigs
is going down in flames. A DTMF
pulse counts as a signature Oct 2.
Tuesday September 26 09:15 PM EDT
E-signatures for 30 million laptops
By Ben Charny, ZDNet News
"Because the school accepts no government aid and prohibits its students from doing
the same, it
has the right to discriminate on the basis of religion."
from a story http://www.newsday.com/ap/text/national/ap170.htm
about a college for home-schoolers.
Re: why govt subsidized arenas
have to be
I've just been doing a bit of research on admissibility of pre- and
post-arrest silence of an accused in the US. In light of RIP, I dug
through some info on the UK's Miranda equivalent:
In the UK, Home Office guidelines for police formerly called for a warning
upon arrest, "You do not have to sa
Monday September 25 9:03 PM ET
Ex-FBI Computer Informant Pleads
Guilty to Hacking
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - A man who officials said once
was a confidential FBI (news - web sites) source on computer
Tim May wimps out:
> Normally I vote Libertarian. This year I may vote for Bush as a vote
> for who will do me, us, and the Constitution the lesser damage of the
> two. (All voting is about bang for the buck, about effectiveness of a
> vote...an election is not about "voting for the best man,
By David Raikow, Sm@rt Partner
November 20, 2000 5:31 AM PT
URL:
Speaking at a London press conference earlier this month, Microsoft VP for IT
Infrastructure and Hosting Jim Ewel announced that the upcoming Windows release known
as "Whistler" will include a range of new security options, includ
NYT Article
By AMY HARMON
It was during a recent job search that Donald Bell gave in to the temptation to bug
his own e-mail. Mr. Bell, 55, had e-mailed dozens of rsums to prospective employers
and received scant response. Naturally he wondered: was he being rejected, or had his
messages go
Sep 8, 2000 - 09:55 AM
Man Who Scored Too High on Police
Test Loses Federal Appeal
The Associated Press
NEW LONDON, Conn. (AP) - A man whose bid to become a
police officer was rejected after he scored too high on an
intell
What's up with the mixmaster list from publius.net?
Why are half the remailers down, have the dead remailers been compromised?
I'm down to using just five remailers if I want to get my message thru!
Is there a better list?
Can I make my own lists?
This is the list of reliable mixmasters.
Last up
Why was Jon Malkovich never charged with 'Threatening the life of a
serving POTUS' for his role in In The Line Of Fire? Clint Eastwood
_specifically_ told him in response to a telephone threat that "[Y]ou
could go to jail for saying that, even if you don't really mean it".
I thought there was
Does anyone know the law regarding duplication of out of print
books/other works?
E.g. Stephen King withdrew his book 'Rage' (support your neighborhood
second-hand bookstore) about a schoolkid who holds his class hostage
at gunpoint, shortly after the Littleton shootings. King _does not_
want
take me to UR leader, i need his
permission 2 ask the list a question
need password in order to own/root
constitution so i can slip in
/bin/laden/findme.pl
if U can do this 4 me it would B 3l33t
any suggestions?
>but in all candor, dont ya think
>that if a guy is there who SHOULDNT
>be there, he wouldnt be there
>after a decent timeframe of investigation?
>
>notwithstanding other manners of recent
>injustices of justice, i.e., Mitnick et al,
>in this day and age, with '1000' under the
>microscope, doncha
Tim May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>A report on this "strange coincidence" is at
>http://www.marsearthconnection.com/attack3a.html#foundation
>
>Color me skeptical, though, as there is nothing particularly odd about
>"the foundation" being the name of a group. The U.S. media translation
>into
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Thu, 15 Nov 2001 17:46:02 -0800
From: Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Free Sklyarov mailing list <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [free-sklyarov] OT: [[EMAIL PROTECTED]: Mail Delivery Status
Notification]
--DocE+STaALJfprDB
Content-Type: te
On Wed, 12 Dec 2001, Eugene Leitl wrote:
> More drama unfolds.
>
> -- Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
> __
> ICBMTO: N48 04'14.8'' E11 36'41.2'' http://www.leitl.org
> 57F9CFD3: ED90 0433 EB74 E4A9 537F CFF5 86E7 629B 57F9 CFD3
>
>
On Mon, 17 Dec 2001, Trei, Peter wrote:
> Modulo the recent discussion of how some remailers
> treat traffic from other known remailers differently than
> mail from unknown addresses, remailers don't need to
> know about each other.
What about remixing? There are other reasons for remailers to k
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,49141,00.html
Incredible. Abso-fucking-lutely incredible. After telling us all about
the poor little child pornographer, Larry Benedict, and how the mean
old police are out to get him, Declan finally lets the other shoe drop
in part 5 of this 5-part ser
Ryan Lackey writes:
> 1) We don't yet *have* an electronic cash system with sufficient volume to
> cover this -- you'd want a general-use electronic cash system where
> purposes like this were a small part, otherwise the billing records
> show all remailer users.
It's largely a myth that the set
> There is a HUGE unknown about the actual number of remailer users. Many
> otherwis e intelligent discussions hinge on this number being small
> or big.
>
> Unreliable as it will be, could you please provide an estimate of monthly
> number of human-generated messages that enter your system (exclu
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Major Variola ret) writes:
> Tuesday January 08 09:52 PM EST
> http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/abc/20020108/ts/olympicprotesters020108_1.html
>
> Olympics Officials Keep Eyes on Protesters
>
> By Geraldine Sealey ABCNEWS.com
>
> Security plan for terrorists and protesters.
>
>
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Major Variola ret) writes:
> But did they have a military-trained dolphin?
>
> --
>
> Locals: Falun Gong Hijacks China City's TV Airwaves
> Thu Mar 7, 6:42 AM ET
>
> By Jeremy Page
>
> BEIJING (Reuters) - Defiant members of the banned Falun Gong (news -
> web sites) spir
Marc Perkel, sysadmin at the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San
Francisco, has been arrested by LA police department.
A political activist, civil libertarian and member of both Rep and Dem
parties, Perkel runs the overthrowthegovernment.org and hosts the Bartcop
[political humor] web sites. H
Compliments of the Anonymous Reformatter...
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Major Variola ret) writes:
>
>http://latimes.com/news/local/la-18985mar15.story?coll=la%2Dheadlines%2Dcalifornia
>
> Privacy of Calls Affirmed
> Ruling: Court defines confidential phone conversations broadly, making
> lawsuits
On Mon, 25 Mar 2002 05:12:41 +1100, matthew X wrote:
> "First we kill all the lawyers." Shakespeare.henry the something.
Falling into camp "I resemble that remark," here's a bit of history on one
of the worlds' most common epithets against the legal profession. While
this remark has been reduce
[Sorry for duplicates if this comes out multiple
times, suspect am experiencing unreliability.]
This is a response to Paul Holman's article on the
DBS list. Either RAH is intentionally not forwarding
the message below or his address is undeliverable
to a few remailers. Not like RAH to not f
> Here's a real question: if you could build a special purpose machine
> to do 1024 bit RSA keys (that is, factor a 1024 bit number), how much
> would that help with discrete logs in a safe prime field?
Solving discrete logs via NFS is structurally similar to factoring.
You start off with a facto
I have added Choate's header stripping cpunks address (I won't lie and
call it an anonymizer) to my killfile, as 95% of all traffic through it
has been spam previously. Apparently, Jimbo left a mailto: link on a
website somewhere, and it got harvested.
Now, Mr. CACL is evading my killfiles by
Peter Trei writes:
> Speaking for myself and a few friends and relations, we'd
> be perfectly happy to use them, if they were available.
A good place to get Sacagawea dollars is from the stamp machine at your
local post office. Put in a $20 bill and buy as small an amount of
stamps as you can, a
Tim May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thursday, April 11, 2002, at 06:59 AM, Mike Rosing wrote:
> > But the reason we have AC today is because Tesla requested no
> > royalties on his motor/generator. Something for Brands to think
> > about.
>
> No, we have AC because AC works better than DC i
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