On Sunday, August 1, 2021, 10:09:43 PM PDT, professor rat 
<pro2...@yahoo.com.au> wrote:
 
 >Many great inventions were co-discoveries - calculus - evolution by 
 >natural-selections, etc.

>I have to wonder if APster markets isn't another one.  Clearly Mongo knew 
>about them though regarding them as a bug rather than a feature. 
I wasn't aware of the existence of the Cypherpunks list until 
early-mid-February 1995.  I had put Part 1 of my Assassination Politics essay 
on a mail list Digitaliberty, by Bill Frezza, in early February 1995.  Somebody 
(I don't recall who; perhaps I never knew) copied it to Cypherpunks about 
February 14, 1995, and I was invited to CP.    (Bill Frezza soon enough found 
my AP idea 'too hot to handle', and I understood that.)
That record does not seem to reliably exist, however:  A few years ago, I 
discovered that the 1995 archive of Cypherpunks had been enormously 
tampered-with, removing almost all references to me, or "AP", or "assassination 
politics", etc.  This should have been quite obvious to anybody who perused the 
list, at least anybody who remembered some of the list events of 1995.  Looking 
at the archive, there were extended periods (months!) in which no emails 
appeared, presumably because ALL of them were about AP.  
This is the first I've heard about Nick Roberts, and his "Libertarian Jackals". 
 I'll have to contact him...
If, in early January 1995, somebody said to me, "Tim May", I would have 
immediately remembered (only) his very famous (at least among electrical 
engineers!) work, discovering that alpha particles (helium nuclei) seemed to be 
the cause of 'soft errors', data retention errors in dynamic RAMs (DRAMs).  Tim 
May apparently worked at Intel at Santa Clara, California.  When I began 
working at Intel, it was in Aloha, Oregon, at "Aloha 3", an engineering 
facility attached to Fabs 4 and 5.  I never met or communicated with him; 
perhaps he never came to Oregon, and I never went to any other Intel facility 
than those in Aloha or Hillsboro Oregon.  
I later (mid-1995 or 1996) discovered that May and a few others had postulated 
the existence of 'assassination markets', about 1989 and 1990.  But, I didn't 
know about that until 1995.  And, my understanding was, their idea amounted to:
     "Anonymous person A anonymously hires anonymous person B to kill person C".
It was certainly a idea worth discussing.  What I "brought to the party", with 
my AP essay, were two concepts that only later were given these names:
1.  "Crowdfunding".   The idea that instead of only one person hiring to see a 
politican dead, thousands or more such people could pool their money and donate 
to a fund.  Without this idea, it would be extremely unlikely that only one 
person would be willing to donate 'enough' money to see someone else dead, 
especially a prominent politican or government employee.  
2.  "Crowdsourcing".  The idea that instead of hiring ONLY ONE potential 
assassin, in principle everybody in the world would be offered the prize.   One 
big advantage to this is that it would be an enormous advantage to the target 
to know that ONLY ONE person is coming for him.  Rather, why not let him know 
that everyone in the world might be interested in this bounty?  How would he 
protect himself against...everybody?

>Then STIFFS dotcom started sometime in the 1990's. 

>Jim Bell's deathly silence every time they get mentioned is beginning to look 
>suspicious.

I had, and have, nothing against your STIFFS idea.  Nor did I ever object to 
it.  Anything that works, I say.
                Jim Bell

  

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