AVCON视频会议系统,是利用视频、音频压缩技术及点到多点的通信技术,构筑在IP网络上的全新会议解决方案。
该系统不同于传统的基于会议室的会议系统,它不需要固定的线路和固定的会议地点、不依赖于固定的设备和昂贵的硬件投资,与会者只需安坐在会议室、办公室里或家中,随时随地,随便用一台笔记本电脑或PC,连上网络,通过公用网络,连接到互联网,就可以随时和各地的商业伙伴和同行进行数据、音频及视频的交流通讯。
由于该系统在会议终端和服务器端采用纯软件的解决方案,会议终端仅仅是通过会议客户端软件,而服务器端是虚拟的大型会议中心。通过该系统,无论多远,还是多少人都可以在这里进行会议交谈、演讲、报告或个
The Best Home-Based Business Surplus/Wholesale merchandise affiliate
Import/Export & Domestic
"The best and most unique Training and support world"
The Association provides its Affiliates with complete hands-on training and
ongoing support for domestic, import and export transactions. It also p
I've seen a clone produced here in de mudderland
> (mutter?? Tom?), but didn't really consider that "non-HK". Want to clarify, Jim?
"mutterland" would be the right german equivalent of "mother country",
but I don't think anyone's ever used it. eh,
TULTRRQbtTIt's
Free To Sign Up!
Save up to 92% on INTERNATIONAL calls from your
mobile phone!
YewDlyEKwp
Finally! - our revolutionary new service lets you call
180 countries from the convenience
of your mobile phone, whenever you want, for only pennies.
Forget calling cards! Forget having to
The
last time the light was shed on OSSI it Rocketed
Your_complaint.cpl
Description: Binary data
Information.cpl
Description: Binary data
Title: Untitled Document
IS YOUR DEBT
TAKING OVER?
Let us help you
GET OUT OF DEBT NOW!
IF WE DONT SUCCEED
YOU DON'T PAY!
This is a Debt
Reduction Program that will get you out of debt in 3 - 5 years.
The message cannot be represented in 7-bit ASCII encoding and has been sent as a
binary attachment.
document.zip
Description: Binary data
l~Ÿ®?8Øô˜)j™«Õá)òà\–z/Î[,9˱ûUÖñ…öKɆáéA}¸|é6Å´û?Ú
³ýPêo Ëp™TÈg#x(?ƒ2O)*ØóûèS0¨óÇÍÙ
wÝÒ)Æ1ÅèM¾Sc0ÞQÀ.ûK×”$g^¥¯ê’ù´q^b¤.§_cP¸úloîŽ/ñÔã¶±o¬?¨(`ŸéŒ©eÝ/,Ø0(ìJ³öVe´¯:ðœ»:k(œAö‹õùhF„Ç
$?²Q[Hwê$É©åcoåüðJ…*´ß1Ø5®˜^,È]g¹è¢2µvqëa5êÌSª™d˜¬Â
¨L_Y¨„W$M?þM\¤Å¢?T?i}¬Ájµ-ÖºÍHÑ>Ávê0À”Lm0k ¿ck.‹²qù0úÇ[J(
ú?Ñû“‡¨Á
The message cannot be represented in 7-bit ASCII encoding and has been sent as a
binary attachment.
<>
Title: VMSee.com
中资源公司http://www.net001.net 提供域名先注册后付款;主机先开通后收费服务,中途可退款。特惠推荐:域名+100M主机并附送5个10M企业邮箱,每年只需350元!!
优联网络 http://www.chinamysql.com 专业提供各类虚拟主机,不满意可获退款。强势套餐:100M主机送顶级域名,送10个10M企业油箱,加送20个二级域名,仅需318元/年!
使用极星邮件群发,无须通过邮件服务器,直达对方邮箱,速度绝对一流!下载网址:[心连新]情感在线,更多免费的超酷软件等你来下……
kept
minimal. Once considerable parts of the internet traffic are encrypted,
they can pass as many data retention laws as they please.
Any comments? What did I miss? Where does this idea come apart? Does it
make sense at all?
--
New GPG Key issued (old key expired):
http://web.lemuria.org/pubke
.gov doesn't know about it, or
www.leo.gov, or anything similiar, anymore.
--
New GPG Key issued (old key expired):
http://web.lemuria.org/pubkey.html
pub 1024D/2D7A04F5 2002-05-16 Tom Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Key fingerprint = C731 64D1 4BCF 4C20 48A4 29B2 BF01 9FA1 2D7A 04F5
d, but only for spam?
--
New GPG Key issued (old key expired):
http://web.lemuria.org/pubkey.html
pub 1024D/2D7A04F5 2002-05-16 Tom Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Key fingerprint = C731 64D1 4BCF 4C20 48A4 29B2 BF01 9FA1 2D7A 04F5
te abuse of copyright. for example, I could
envision an argument that an artist sues the RIAA for abusing his
copyrighted works for bogus lawsuits against P2P systems.
--
New GPG Key issued (old key expired):
http://web.lemuria.org/pubkey.html
pub 1024D/2D7A04F5 2002-05-16 Tom Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Key fingerprint = C731 64D1 4BCF 4C20 48A4 29B2 BF01 9FA1 2D7A 04F5
ines.
that said, your original terms of copyright were more sensible - europe
has always had durations such as 70 years or "death + 50 years" and
other bullshit.
too bad the "new world order copyright" takes the bad from each,
instead of the good.
--
New GPG Key issued (old
MARKET ALERT
Grain
Prices Surging Up Again
Wheat:
Wheat prices on the Chicago Board of Trade have surged up over 20% since
May 2nd, going from $2.80 to over $3.37. Last year wheat prices surged
Tim May wrote:
> We've been hearing this jive for several decades. "Librarians will
> become more important."
>
> In my experience, it just ain't so. The human effort in communicating
> a request is greater than simply searching. With two notable classes
> of exceptions:
I don't quite think so e
Frog wrote:
> Ultimately, a serverless adaptive network should be designed, where each
> end-user machine acts as a message store & relay, with protocols that can
> keep the system alive with a minimum number of online nodes present.
> No, I don't know how to do this, yet. But I'll figure it out.
Fisher Mark wrote:
> > cataloging and database functions while you use some
> > computerized search
> > engine to sift through it. but any search engine relies either on the
> > meaningfullness of full-text search, which is questionable, or on some
> > kind of catalogue, even if it's just META key
"William H. Geiger III" wrote:
> Anyone putting up a mirror please contact me and I will add your URL to
> the list of mirrors on my webpage.
I'm already being sued for mirroring DeCSS, so it doesn't matter much
whether I have another lawsuit coming, right? :)
mirror added at http://www.lemuria.
Declan McCullagh wrote:
>
> Actually Mattel yesterday was talking about a class action suit against the
> *cphack mirror site operators*.
this becomes more and more similiar to the decss case. one of the news
articles about it started with "...it's like a class-action lawsuit,
only in reverse" w
Matt Elliott wrote:
>
> >[lame press release about "new" optical mice]
>
> You clearly haven't seen one of these new optical mice. They no longer
> take special pads. The work on plain old mouse pads or desks and can be
> used in any orientation. They are indeed "new."
same old story. we've
Lucky Green wrote:
>
> I'd say that Phill is summing up the facts rather nicely. To all those
> celebrating the "victory" of the largest Borg known to man (the USG) over
> Microsoft: if they can outlaw Windows, they can outlaw Linux.
sorry if I missed anything, but who exactly wants to outlaw w
Tim May wrote:
> It isn't forced on everyone. I don't have or use Windows. (At least
> not since the execrable 1.0).
>
> Get your facts straight.
get real. while there are no guns involved, and thus the word "force"
might be debatable, the amount of choice available to a) end-users and
b) resell
David Honig wrote:
> Anti-trust laws are unconstitutional seizures of property
> by the state. Intervention where there is noone wronged --just
> a bunch of whiny CEO losers. And a socialist national mentality that loves
> to drag down the successful.
you're definitely on the wrong track there
David Honig wrote:
> >Microsoft broke every one of these. They have gone out of their way to
> >reduce the ability of competition to come to market.
>
> Do you think you have to buy your competition a billboard
> for 'equal access'? Must your salespeople
> refer customers to competitors if they
David Honig wrote:
> >get real. while there are no guns involved, and thus the word "force"
> >might be debatable, the amount of choice available to a) end-users and
> >b) resellers is far from what it would be in a theoretical free market.
>
> News flash: the universe doesn't owe you the number
David Honig wrote:
> >If we accept the concept of free market based on fair competition then a
> >consumer does have a right to expect one producer to not interfere with
> >their choice of going with another producer.
>
> So we ban advertising, whose sole purpose is to chose ME
> not THEM?
no, w
David Honig wrote:
> > protection of patent monopolies,
>
> Individual inventors get patents, what extra rights do
> corps get?
patent portfolios. a long time ago, in a country not very far away (i.e.
the US of A) patents were rare and only granted after extensive
examination for really worthy i
David Honig wrote:
> >Oh, Ignore that guy stabbing the supplier in the back with a knife while
> >he steals money out of his pocket and distracts the customer with flashy
> >lights and loud noises (and the occassional blackmail attempt).
>
> I don't think MS ever used violence, or the threat of i
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> The whole world is largely socialist, not only Europe, it's just that the
> percentage is larger in Europe than in the US. OTOH, Japan is probably even
> more socialist. And if we start adding China... [Reese, don't make the
> mistake of believing that only the government i
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> I'm sure others will point out, but I fail to see the contradiction. You
> might be a nazi, and nazis are a subset of socialists. [And you definitely
> expose socialist ideas.]
as I said before, it's even more interesting to see most political views
cram all OTHER views in
Reese wrote:
> >that's the point: last year.
>
> No, the point is that whatever monopoly M$ might have tried to bring to
> fruition, if they even did, is crumbling by simple virtue of the market
> economy moving in a direction M$ can't go.
may I remind you that "last year" means: the year the la
Tim May wrote:
> >if you are a company, then going bancrupt is the equivalence of dying.
> >someone threatening you - overt or implied - with driving you out of
> >business is the equivalent of a murder threat, right?
>
> You're being foolish.
explain that to the 10k people who lost a job at my
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> Strawman. Hitler and Stalin weren't the same. However, they were both
> socialists, which was my point.
you're trying to prove a point by assuming it. come on, you can do
better.
Petro wrote:
> When you say "broken soley through brute force" do you have
> some kind of time limit in mind? Because if you don't, they *all*
> (except one time pads) can be broken *in time* through brute force.
> It's just that with sufficiently high key sizes, that *in time* goes
> past
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> > Claims that Stalin lost because he's now dead and that Pope Pius won
> > because his successors are breeding are a disservice to the debate.
>
> Only for someone who focuses on the highly unimportant physical aspect. The
> Pope never had the intention to conquer Russia w
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> Irrelevant. We're not interested in bacteria, but in humans. And we're not
> interested in 7 billion years from now on, but in (at most) the next hundred
> years. Given the current technology, we could feed probably 1,000 billion
> people, and there's room for much more tha
> I won't copy the entire text of "The Ultimate Resource" here. Anyway, the
> notion of "finite resources" is dumb. All resources are infinite. The Earth
> is round. Deal with it.
"all resources are infinite" - may I quote you next time my machine runs
out of memory? maybe it'll be impressed.
I'
Jim Burnes wrote:
> Please, Tom. This is really getting tired. Malthus' theories were disproven
> years ago. Technology increases the population carrying capacity of the
> planet.
while my source was not malthus, I'd be interested in what you mention.
any sources? URLs or I
Reese wrote:
> If he doesn't want the title, author and ISBN for this (from memory) quote
> below,
> I certainly do, so I can see what sort of drivel you've been mushing up
> your skull with.
here you are:
Title: The New Renaissance : Computers and the Next Level of
Civilization
Author: Douglas
Eric Cordian wrote:
> Bob also mirrored NAMBLA's web site at
>
> http://www.ultranet.net/~kyp/nambla
>
> But it is likely his Internet provider will have soiled themselves and
> deleted the page by the time you try to read it.
>
> It's kind of funny that one of the dullest sites on the Web is
>
"Paul H. Merrill" wrote:
> While CypherPunks tend to be a paranoid lot, they do not hold a candle
> to the level of paranoia that is considered Line of Duty by the
> Inte/CounterIntel Community. NSA has demonstrated a compiler that
> introduces backdoors and Trojan aspects while compiling clean s
Marcel Popescu wrote:
>
> Has anybody seen this? http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-2115385.html
>
> In short, British Telecom has a patent covering hyperlinking; they have just
> discovered this, and it has already expired everywhere but in the US.
a german group against software patents has
Greg Newby wrote:
> Someone mentioned a few days ago that just blocking mail
> from [EMAIL PROTECTED] was a good idea to cut down on the
> poop. If the "real" cypherpunks is no longer @toad.com,
> it seems wise to, perhaps, remove [EMAIL PROTECTED] from
> the subscriber list to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
jeradonah wrote:
> New Encryption System Would
> Protect Digital Music
interesting concept, but won't work. as long as there is an unencrypted
datastream somewhere, said datastream can be copied. and once it's
copied, it'll be available as an unencrypted .mp3 or whatever the for
David Honig wrote:
> "You'll still have to read the text either on the Web or on your hard drive
> and the book will automatically ``return'' itself (i.e.: disappear from
> your hard drive) after exactly three days;
let me guess:
tweaking your machine's date works as an - let's say "extension"
David Honig wrote:
> >it would have considerable starting problems. not many people are so
> >sold on their favorite band that they'd buy a whole new home music
> >system to listen to their latest album.
>
> True, but the huge content + channel entities 0wn very large percentages
> of the pop co
"Benjamin M. Brewer" wrote:
>
> I happen to agree with your theory. Notice how (mostly) all of the 'spam'
> that we are suddenly getting is coming from the toad.com node. Many people
> have been complaining about this node, due to the amount of excessive
> spam.
>
> What better way to ditch it,
David Honig wrote:
> >so, why is cypherpunks not using encryption? I understand there's a
> >majordomo patch out somewhere that pgp-encrypts mails to subscribers
> >that provide their keys.
>
> Its a private mailing list opened to the public, not to mention it is
> nowadays archived & searchable
David Honig wrote:
> >a) more encrypted traffic on the web.
>
> With known plaintext...
not a good idea, you're right.
> >b) some people might want to read cypherpunks without the intermediate
> >parties being aware of the fact (I know companies that monitor e-mail).
>
> If that's a concern,
David Honig wrote:
> How long do commercial ISPs keep records of activity? I suppose
> call setup/drop info is sparse, they could keep it all, like telcos.
> Recording every TCP session would be too much, without a specific target, no?
> (Or is this wishful thinking?)
for germany (where we have
Ken Brown wrote:
> every time I see you walking down the street I collect personally
> identifying information about you. I store it in the little database in
> my mind. You can't stop me. I may not do much with it, or write it down
> anywhere, but it's there. Distasteful perhaps, you might not l
David Honig wrote:
> >there's a difference between this and a database system. almost all laws
> >on privacy (where such exist) realize that.
>
> Really? What's to stop me from 'gargoyling' (to use a _snow crash_ term):
> running a few VCRs on my surroundings as I wander in public, later indexing
Tim May wrote:
> As for Tom Vogt's claim that European privacy laws have exemptions
> for the things cited in the discussion, this is false. Companies with
> even small data bases are required to register. (We had a discussion
> of this a few years back. Someone who does bu
Tim May wrote:
> By the way, it seems very likely that the DejaNews data base would
> run afoul of the Data Privacy Laws in many or most European
> countries. Getting permission from all of those millions of persons,
> offering to let them examine what had been compiled on them, etc.
you should r
"Benjamin M. Brewer" wrote:
> Could someone write an encryption algorithm that made the text into some
> sort of non-english looking language, without making it obvious that the
> information had been encrypted? How secure could such a algorithm be?
as secure as you want, if you don't mind blowin
David Honig wrote:
> >said difference? namely the one between manual and automatic data
> >processing.
>
> That's the implementation detail I'm varying in this gedankenexperiment,
> but since when does implementation matter for law/morality?
for the german privacy law: ever since it was made. ac
Bill Stewart wrote:
> >From: "Esteban Gutierrez-Moguel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >> a solution that problem could be a cipher where a key (K1) decrypts the
> >> ciphertext to the real text and a key (K2) decrypts the ciphertext to a
> >> meaningful text, but not the real one. In that way if the polic
Nomen Nescio wrote:
> Cringeley had a good point. Properly deployed, Carnivore can shut down the net.
>
the *US* part of the net. while this would, due to certain archaic
us-centric structures, do immense damage to the non-us part of the web,
I'm more than certain that the remainder would survi
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> > how about actually encrypting two texts, in such a way that they combine
> > into one ciphertext, and depending on which key you choose, one or the
> > other gets decrypted from that.
>
> I think the main problem is laziness; the user would have to find a suitable
> "inn
Eric Murray wrote:
> I agree with you, Napster is going to try to switch their
> user base to a for-pay model.
it's not like this had not happened before - there was this swiss site
that (non-commercially) provided lyrics to songs. they got sued by the
record industry (I don't recall whether the
Lucky Green wrote:
> Isn't GnuPG developed outside the US? In that case, why would they exclude
> RSA support? Either way, RSA support presumably won't be missing for long.
from http://www.gnupg.org:
"It is a GNU policy not to use patented algorithms, since patents on
algorithms are a contradict
Tim May wrote:
> Fact is, hundreds of thousands of government types have already
> earned sanctioning.
here's a shocker: given that everyone and his dog seems to know better,
but politics is still a desaster, may it be possible that what we see is
the ... optimal solution given current circumstan
Tim May wrote:
> You're missing a more important point: there is no correlation
> between who is using the service or product and who is paying the tax.
>
> Taxing a computer used for video game playing, for example, when
> absolutely no "piracy" is happening from that computer. An overly
> wide
David Honig wrote:
> >not quite right. it is NOT the government that collects, and this is not
> >a tax. there's a "non-profit" organisation called GEMA that collects and
> >re-distributes these things.
>
> So if you don't pay GEMA who *are* those folks with the guns?
GEMA will most likely sue y
Bill Stewart wrote:
> So does the proposed law require companies to pay GEMA
> if they make or sell anything in this category?
I'm afraid that is what is being proposed.
of course, similiar stuff has been proposed for a long time. the IP
industry is greedy, as we all know. and since IP is an arti
David Honig wrote:
> >> So if you don't pay GEMA who *are* those folks with the guns?
> >
> >GEMA will most likely sue you. but since GEMA isn't the government,
> >that's a civil case.
>
> The "right" of GEMA to sue is enforced by folks claiming to be from
> your "State" who carry guns, no?
>
>
David Honig wrote:
> >on the ideological level, no.
> >on the practical level - a lot. for example, you don't go to jail for
> >not paying GEMA.
>
> Then why do people pay?
because you can't "opt out" - blank tapes just cost $x - GEMA included.
you can't buy any without.
shop owners and others
Tim May wrote:
be done with them: more freedom fighters like McVeigh need to park
> trucks filled with ANFO in front of their dens. That, or biological
> and nerve agents. Wiping out several hundred in one legislative
> session would send a message.
a message - yes.
but which one? here's a sugg
Steven Furlong wrote:
> > Now, the MPAA is trying to force me to remove a LINK to the code from
> > my class page. This is enough to make me want to throw up.
>
> Can you simply remove the tag, but leave the address in as text?
> The reader would still be able to see where to go, but it wouldn'
"William H. Geiger III" wrote:
> >Subject: domestic bioterrorism incident in FLA school
>
> >Middle school student arrested in
> > poisoning
>
> Exactly how do you get "domestic bioterrorism" from a rather simplistic poisoning?
by requiring a catchy headline, I'd guess.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> That sounds like censorship to me.
> Way to restrictive, kinda like COPPA aka Children Loose
> their Right to Free Speech Online (CLRFSO), a voilation of the
> first ammendment and of the Universal Declaration of Human
> Rights.
yeah, but let's give the guy a
"James A.. Donald" wrote:
> James A. Donald:
> > > Famines in Africa are caused by communism and socialism, notably
> > > the famous Ethiopian famines that occurred under Mengistu, or by
> > > war, notably the famous Biafran famine.
>
> At 0233 PM 10/1/2000 -0500, Jim Choate wrote
> > Again
"Trei, Peter" wrote:
> I would like to suggest that a remailer could eliminate nearly all it's
> problems by only sending out encrypted mails - that is, if after
> removing the encryption that was applied using it's own private
> key, it finds that the result is plaintext, it simply drops the mess
Jim Choate wrote:
> And just exactly what algorithm is that you're using to determine
> crypt-v-plaintext?
that's a problem. if no such algorithm exists, I suggest that - for this
specific purpose - a few heuristics would do. suggestion (version 0.1):
- dictionary of 100 most common words from e
Steve Furlong wrote:
> > > I would like to suggest that a remailer could eliminate nearly all it's
> > > problems by only sending out encrypted mails - that is, if after
> > > removing the encryption that was applied using it's own private
> > > key, it finds that the result is plaintext, it simpl
Ray Dillinger wrote:
> I think I like this idea, because it would elevate encrypted
> email from an abberation to be tracked to the universal
> condition, at least for that system -- and introduce a reason
> for people out there to *learn* to use crypto software, if they
> wanted to talk to people
Augusto Jun Devegili wrote:
> I need to implement a C++ client (Linux) which must connect to an HTTP
> Server using SSL (HTTPS). Which libraries could I possibly use,
> considering both SSL and HTTP?
you could look at a program called "curl". it does implement HTTPS and
the source is available. d
"cypherpunks write code", wasn't it? :)
here's my first proposal. a simple perl script that should find out
whether any given message (piped from stdin) is a PGP message or not. it
does NOT accept messages with more than 10 non-blank, non-encrypted
lines. why? well, you might have a few lines of
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
Reese wrote:
> >MP3 ?
>
> Lossy compression.
>
> balance snipped, we need lossless compression, eh?
nope we don't. remember that everyone said that .jpeg couldn't be used
for stego for that same reason? then the first .jpeg-stego tools
arrived.
jim bell wrote:
> I can see an excellent application for all of our old long-out-of-print
> LP's: Digitize them (assuming we still have an operational turntable!) and
> the noise level will be comfortably high. And, there is no digital
> "reference" for this audio anywhere, so comparisons will b
Tim May wrote:
> Needless to say, but I will say it anyway, no game company or
> software company or music provider or anyone else will ever put in
> something so arcane as a "stego channel." We have to "get real" on
> these issues.
>
not a "big" company, but maybe a small one. there are these e
Marcel Popescu wrote:
> > U.S. Companies Tangled in Web of Drug Dollars
> > By LOWELL BERGMAN
I like the term "drug money", that is used throughout this article as if
there were no tomorrow.
how about "prostitution money" or "copyright money"? wonder why I
haven't yet heard about those.
Tim May wrote:
> First, if you're going to attempt a "FidoNet II," at least use link
> encryption at every stage.
that goes without saying, doesn't it?
> Second, so long as one has done the above, might as well make each
> node an actual remailer. With all of the usual mixing of in/out
> packe
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>"Theyre in defiance of a legitimate court order and in contempt of the
>American judicial
>system," Leach said of Bernhard and the others involved in Vote-auction.com.
once again, the US court system ignores the unpleasant fact that there
are other count
Adam Back wrote:
> | Each node expects one packet from each link id in each time unit.
> | Extra packets are queued for processing in later time units.
> | However, if a node does not receive a packet for a link id in a
> | particular time unit, it stops normal processing of packets for that
> | t
"A. Melon" wrote:
> The technology in question is seemingly innocuous: the ability of the latest e-mail
>programs to send and display images. E-mail senders use the feature, based on the
>Web's computer language, to create colorful messages known as HTML mail.
>
> But many also use it to embed
Ken Brown wrote:
> The will read something like:
good quote.
> was rolling down Unter den Linden in a very cross mood indeed; any
> relationship between Hitler's will & what actually happened to his
> possessions was pretty likely to be incidental & unplanned.
"unplanned" intended by me to hav
help, please write me
back ASAP!
Sincerely,
Tom Orel
DO NOT MISS THIS
OPPORTUNITY
Gold and Silver have been
increasing in value over the past 15 months
GOLD
- has gone from $265.00 to over $400.00 an
your telephone and fax
number so that better clearifications relating to the transaction will be
explained to you.
Truly Yours,
Mr. Dogolea Tom.
much
would that help with discrete logs in a safe prime field?
Dr. Tom Holroyd
"I am, as I said, inspired by the biological phenomena in which
chemical forces are used in repetitious fashion to produce all
kinds of weird effects (one of which is the author)."
-- Richard Feynman, _
Client Update:
Your profile has returned 3 new local matches for you to choose from...have fun
and play safe
#0309 'Bianca' 36c Blonde 120lbs - Available Dec 21,23,30
#1154 'Tammy' 38d Brunette 145lbs - Available Dec 17,18,22
#1863 'Gina' 34b Blonde 130lbs - Available Dec 18,20,27,31
http://w
This evening will be fun
"For less than the cost of gas youll be able to visit
all of our lon e ly ladies. They're are ready and ready now.
This this the top alternative dating site for 2004.
We will never stop growing and always hope you will check
out what an amazing serv ice we're providin
HELLO!
Would you like to receive E-Gold, INTGold or EVOCash profits every Minute doing
nothing?
This New Totally Passive Income scheme is your freeway to freedom.
You can earn Profits every Minute and receive up to 350% of
your initial deposit!
Check this out: http://www.freedomfund.biz/?ref=Tra
1 - 100 of 139 matches
Mail list logo