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I wont get this newsletter cypherpunkshow can i unsubcribe?
-Ursprngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Im
Auftrag von Kaane One
Gesendet: Donnerstag, 11. Januar 2001 20:46
An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Betreff: Radius Hacks
Anyone know of any exploitable
a friend of mine was an officer in the german army until very recently
(he decided to get a real job :) ) - give me 24 hours and I'll tell you
exactly what the past and current standard issue weapons are and what
kind of ammo they fire.
current weapon (after the G3) is the G36, obviously an
"Phillip H. Zakas" wrote:
I do agree with you that in general most people are concerned with their own
day-to-day lives and cannot or don't care to understand how decisions made
in Europe or in Washington, DC regarding the internet do, or could, affect
themselves or those they know.
right.
Tim May wrote:
And as relates to Choate's "I was right" point, repeated again
recently, the G3 in use by the German army was most definitely a 7.62
mm, i.e., a .308 Winchester. It was _not_ the 5.56 mm variant, at
least not for wide use. (I say this because quibblers like Choate
like to find
I am a producer for NBC Nightly News in New
York. In 1986, I spent several days in Rosman and nearby Asheville
researching Rosman and shooting it from the ground and the air. The ground
level shooting was mostly fruitless, but I still have video I shot from a
helicopter.
At the time,
Just to add an interesting experience to this thread, I've flown to Bermuda
and to the Cayman Islands (not an attractive place, but great diving). On
the flight to Bermuda the in-flight magazine had several articles discussing
Bermuda's aggressive moves against being a tax haven. Saw the same
At 7:45 AM -0600 1/12/01, Jim Choate wrote:
Go back to the archives and you will find Tim May claiming that ANY HK
rifle with *3 (eg 93 or G3) is a .223 whereas the *1's (eg 91) are .308.
When in fact the '3 means .223' applied ONLY to the '90' (ie 91 or 93)
class weapons. The reality (which Tim
DALNet, a San Diego company that provides Internet
chat networks, contacted the FBI and complained that
several computer users had begun attacks on it. The
hackers caused computers to become disabled and denied
other
At 11:54 AM -0500 1/12/01, John Young wrote:
One of the Tempest FOIA docs NSA released recently
concerns NONSTOP, a term whose definition is classified
as SECRET. About half of the document, NACSEM 5112,
"NONSTOP Evaluation Techniques," has been redacted,
and we'll publish it soon.
From the
Today, Snowhite was turning 18. The 7 Dwarfs always where very educated and
polite with Snowhite. When they go out work at mornign, they promissed a
*huge* surprise. Snowhite was anxious. Suddlently, the door open, and the Seven
Dwarfs enter...
dwarf4you.exe
Title: Antigen found W32/Hybris@m virus
Antigen for Exchange found dwarf4you.exe infected with W32/Hybris@m virus.
The file is currently Deleted. The message, Snowhite and the Seven Dwarfs - The REAL story!, was
sent from Hahaha and was discovered in IMC Queues\Inbound
located at
Are there any good general cryptographic protocols for groups
taking group actions by formal consensus or voting rules?
I'm thinking of a "distributed agent" that is empowered to do
various things but which is activated only by a vote of its
owners. This would be like a "Robo-moderator"
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On Fri, 12 Jan 2001, Ray Dillinger wrote:
Are there any good general cryptographic protocols for groups
taking group actions by formal consensus or voting rules?
There are distributed signing protocols which could go partway towards
meeting this goal. For some details, you can look at
Joel McNamara first told me about NONSTOP and its commonly
associated classified codeword, HIJACK, both somehow related
to Tempest.
When you do a search on either of them you get hundreds
(or 1000s) of hits for the generic terms "non-stop" and "hi-jack"
but few entries for the codewords, and
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