Congratulations, Choate, that makes 35 consecutive off topic
posts. If you weren't such a frigging idiot, I would point out
to you how rude and inconsiderate that you are to persist in
this after having been asked time after time after time to
desist.

I nominate Jim Choate as ASSHOLE OF THE YEAR.




On Thu, 3 May 2001 01:11:08 -0500 (CDT)
Jim Choate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> 
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> Date: Thu, 3 May 2001 01:18:56 -0400
> From: An Metet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: CDR: Peekabooty
> 
> Hackers to unleash anti-censorship tool
> 
> By Will Knight
> ZDNet (UK) 
> April 30, 2001 10:03 AM PT
> 
> A computer hacking group best known for creating tools for hijacking
computer systems is turning its hand to civil disobedience and plans to
release an application that could scupper government and corporate
censorship around the world. 
> 
> The tool--to be called Peekabooty--will be based on peer-to-peer network
technology. This allows data to be distributed directly between computer
systems and has attained fame through the emergence of music-sharing
technologies such as Napster and Gnutella. Peekabooty hosts will cooperate
in a similar way to Gnutella--without a central server--but in this case
will share and distribute controversial Web pages. 
> 
> The group behind the application is the Cult of the Dead Cow, a team of
white hat (non-criminal) computer hackers best known for producing
security tools that exploit weaknesses in Microsoft software. Their
best-known tools are BackOrifice and BackOrifice2000, which allow a
computer hacker to take control of computers running Microsoft operating
systems. 
> 
> A source close to the group said it plans to produce the tool for
circumventing government Internet blocking at Defcon, the world's premiere
computer security conference, to be held in Las Vegas this July. 
> 
> According to the source, Peekabooty will enable those living in
oppressive regimes to access prohibited material through fellow Peekabooty
clients located in more liberal countries. The client grabs the requested
content and sends it back to the original computer in a compacted and
encrypted form that cannot be filtered out using conventional technology.
Because there is no central authority, unlike Napster, it would be more
problematic to control. 
> 
> "[It's] completely distributed and impossible to shut down," said the
source. "Users will be able to request proscribed Web pages with a client
through a distributed server cloud. An intelligent agent will be
dispatched from the server to the Web page, grab the content, zip it down,
take it back to the server, then punt it back to the client." 
> 
> Government control
> Although the Internet is often portrayed as an untamed frontier, a
number of national governments put considerable effort into controlling
what information reaches their citizens through the Web. The Chinese
government blocks access to certain news sources that are thought to be
critical of its policies. It does this by restricting the material that
comes into China at a number of key points. A handful of other Far East
governments operate similar policies. 
> 
> It's not just hard-line governments that control Internet content,
however. More liberal countries operating a policy to restrict what
citizens can access include Australia, which prevents access to
pornographic material; Germany, where Nazi memorabilia is restricted; and
France. A court in France famously ruled that the U.S.-based Internet
company Yahoo must prevent French Web users from viewing Nazi artifacts
available via its auction site. In these countries, access to the Internet
is controlled by making ISPs liable for hosting illegal content. 
> 
> There already exist technologies designed to prevent the authorities
from stopping material reaching individual Internet users. These include
the Freedom Internet browser and Web sites like SafeWeb, although the
Chinese government tries to restrict access to certain services including
SafeWeb. 
> 
> Ian Brown, a computer security researcher at University College London,
believes that Peekabooty could prove a success once restricted material
gets past Chinese Internet border controls and reaches the first host.
Brown adds that the use of this technology, coupled with the growth of
services like SafeWeb may cause the Chinese government to think about
controlling encryption further. 
> 
> Yaman Akdeniz, director of U.K. Internet liberties watchdog Cyber Rights
& Cyber Liberties said that trying to apply different national laws to the
Internet has always proved problematic and governments have often resorted
to blocking access to information. 
> 
> "Different countries have different moral and cultural backgrounds. That
has been a puzzling issue." He said that defeating government censorship
is a positive step towards freedom of information. 
> 
> "Any technology that allows someone to access the Net without government
restrictions is good," he said. "But governments will not like it."
> 
>     ____________________________________________________________________
> 
>                 The solution lies in the heart of humankind.
> 
>                                           Chris Lawson
> 
>        The Armadillo Group       ,::////;::-.          James Choate
>        Austin, Tx               /:'///// ``::>/|/      [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>        www.ssz.com            .',  ||||    `/( e\      512-451-7087
>                            -====~~mm-'`-```-mm --'-
>     --------------------------------------------------------------------
> 
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| Longears and Linux........... nowhere but Texas! |
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