> Just to get pedantic, according to Wikipedia [1]:
First, thank you for citing a definition rather than using a loose
handle on a notion. I genuinely appreciate it!
> That seems pretty clear to me that HACIENDA is indeed a surveillance program.
It also means that a newspaper reporting on the o
Hi,
> Name me any piece of non-trivial information which doesn't have the
> potential to be used against someone.
What do you mean by non-trivial?
Regards,
Filip
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On Fri, Aug 22, 2014 at 12:46:38AM +0200, Gabriel Niebler wrote:
> On the contrary, IMO this sort of thing is fully encompassed by the
> word surveillance, at least as far as I have always understood it.
> Otherwise any surveillance camera installed in a public or publicly
> accessible place would
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I'm sorry, I know this is OT for the list, but...
Am 21.08.2014 um 15:54 schrieb Robert J. Hansen:
>> GNU community members and collaborators have discovered
>> threatening details about a five-country government surveillance
>> program codenamed HA
On 8/21/2014 3:35 PM, Johannes Zarl wrote:
> "Compiling a collection of publicly available information" is an
> almost perfect description of the term "surveillance". E.g. a
> surveillance camera does exactly that: it collects publicly available
> information.
So does the phone book, Wikipedia, an
On Thursday 21 August 2014 11:41:40 Robert J. Hansen wrote:
> If it escalates to an intrusion, then yes, that's definitely
> surveillance in my book. Compiling a collection of publicly available
> information is not.
"Compiling a collection of publicly available information" is an almost
perfect
Can anyone tell me how to remove myself from this list?
Sure. Read any of the emails that get posted to this list.
Particularly, please note:
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Hello,
Can anyone tell me how to remove myself from this list? I tried sending an
email to the email listed on the site, but I haven't gotten a response and
still get the emails.
Thanks,
Shannon
-Original Message-
From: Gnupg-users [mailto:gnupg-users-bounces+scrader=carrollu...
I'm not happy with that definition/understanding of "surveillance". It's
not just about "reporting on what colors people's houses are" - it's
more about someone going to every door, trying to open it, and noting
what kind of door and lock there is. Then, comes back with a key, opens
the door, inst
Robert J. Hansen:
[snip]
> Also note that, contrary to the FSF's press release, this isn't
> government surveillance. It isn't even surveillance in the usual sense
> of the word. If you run a public service like HTTP, how is it
> "surveillance" for someone, anyone, to say "the server sixdemonbag.
Hello!
The GNU project is pleased to announce the availability of Libgcrypt
version 1.6.2. This is a maintenance release to fix problems found in
the recently released versions.
Libgcrypt is a general purpose library of cryptographic building blocks.
It does not provide any implementation of Ope
GNU community members and collaborators have discovered threatening
details about a five-country government surveillance program
codenamed HACIENDA. The good news? Those same hackers have already
worked out a free software countermeasure to thwart the program.
A little late to the party. This s
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- Original Message
Subject:GNU hackers discover HACIENDA government surveillance and give
us a way to fight back
Date: Wed, 20 Aug 2014 18:02:21 -0400
From: Free Software Foundation
Reply-To: Free Software Found
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