Re: Hullabo

2002-12-22 Thread Sarad AV
--- Tim May [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Arise the masses,how he did that-I have no clue.How ever he did that in the 1940's when the only method of mass communication was radio(british controlled) and new paper(again british controlled).To bring together a

re:constant encryped stream

2002-12-22 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 03:07 AM 12/21/02 -0800, Sarad AV wrote: Don't encrypt,post it by snail mail.I remember reading this in pgp's help document. It addresses why we glue over our envelope and seal it.It ofcourse is concealing(for the govt) and privacy (for the user).The govt. never asks letters not to be glued and

Re: Policing Bioterror Research

2002-12-22 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sat, 21 Dec 2002, Tim May wrote: (By the way, Eugene, I had to snip out a vast chunk of included text from you message. Please include only URLs for very long pieces. If not, I'll have to killfile you as I have done with other serial posters.) I usually do that. I made an exception in

Re: How robust is SpeakFreely?

2002-12-22 Thread Eugen Leitl
As an user of SpeakFreely (7.2 on Windows, stillcan't get my USB headset to work properly with SF 7.3 on Linux) I've got the following three items on my wish list. (Hey, I wasn't naughty this year. Honest). 1) built-in PKI support, with fallback to clear. Right now it uses some obscure PGP

Make antibiotic resistant pathogens at home! (Re: Policing Bioterror Research)

2002-12-22 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 07:07 PM 12/21/02 +0100, Eugen Leitl wrote: http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2002/1217/1 Moreover, prior approval from the Department of Health and Human Services will be needed for experiments that might make a select agent more toxic or more resistant to known drugs, as well

Re: Policing Bioterror Research

2002-12-22 Thread An Metet
On Sat, 21 Dec 2002 21:22:17 -0800, you wrote: On Saturday, December 21, 2002, at 10:07 AM, Eugen Leitl wrote: http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2002/1217/1 Policing Bioterror Research One of science's hottest fields is now becoming one of its most heavily regulated, too.