M Taylor [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It appears that TPM is being seriously considered by Copyright Policy Branch
of Canadian Heritage, and has announced a paper by Dr. Ian Kerr and others.
http://www.pch.gc.ca/progs/ac-ca/progs/pda-cpb/pubs/protection/index_e.cfm
It mentions a nice top heavy
--- begin forwarded text
Status: U
Date: Wed, 2 Apr 2003 23:30:12 -0500
To: Clippable [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: R. A. Hettinga [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MPAA's drive for state laws hits bump in Massachusetts
Last paragraph says it all, I think...
Cheers,
RAH
---
At 2:15 PM -0500 4/1/03, Ian Grigg wrote:
Some comments from about a decade ago.
The way it used to work in the Army (that I
was in) within a battalion, is that there was
a little code book, with a sheet for a 6 hour
stretch. Each sheet has a simple matrix for
encoding letters, etc. Everyone had
At 6:16 PM -0800 4/2/03, Seth David Schoen wrote:
Bill Frantz writes:
The http://cryptome.org/usage-logs.htm URL says:
Low resolution data in most cases is intended to be sufficient for
marketing analyses. It may take the form of IP addresses that have been
subjected to a one way hash, to
Could this not use most of the code from the Onion Router itself. I am
assuming that the code was made freely available and someone has a copy if
it?
-- roop
On Thu, 3 Apr 2003, Ben Laurie wrote:
Ben.
[1] FWIW, I'd be willing to work on that, but not
We offer some 27 documents on Citibank PIN cracking banned
by the British High Court on 20 February 2003:
http://cryptome.org/citi-ban.htm
Included are the gagging order, affidavits of defendant cryptographers
and affidavits of Citibank officials and security personnel.
See related message
John Young wrote:
Ben,
Would you care to comment for publication on web logging
described in these two files:
http://cryptome.org/no-logs.htm
http://cryptome.org/usage-logs.htm
Cryptome invites comments from others who know the capabilities
of servers to log or not, and other means for