Re: Sealand rant (pragmas)

2000-06-18 Thread Bill Stewart
At 01:10 PM 6/12/00 -0400, David Honig wrote: My suggestion is that disk farms like Sealand must make themselves too useful to nuke, and must mix the useful (shielding) stuff unseparably from the rest. Because sovereignty/rifle-shot-across-the-bow games won't last, but some fascist jihad won't

Re: Musings on the Economics of ZKS

2000-06-18 Thread David Honig
At 02:25 PM 6/17/00 -0400, Tim May wrote: problems. It's easy enough for me to buy a 20-pound sack of cat food when I need it. Ditto for fertilizer. Internet startups like Pet.com and Garden.com will have a tough row to hoe, I think. --Tim May The net provides more options than meatspace for

Re: Musings on the Economics of ZKS

2000-06-18 Thread Tim May
At 11:29 AM -0400 6/18/00, David Honig wrote: At 02:25 PM 6/17/00 -0400, Tim May wrote: problems. It's easy enough for me to buy a 20-pound sack of cat food when I need it. Ditto for fertilizer. Internet startups like Pet.com and Garden.com will have a tough row to hoe, I think. --Tim May The

Re: Cpunk Havenco's Weapon Choices

2000-06-18 Thread Steve Schear
Might this qualify? http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:www.scnusa.com/sealand-legal.htm At 01:15 AM 6/18/00 -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote: At 20:52 6/17/2000 -0400, petro wrote: From the ruling, no, but from http://www.sealandgov.com/history.html: Right. We've all read this.

Improve your flexibility!

2000-06-18 Thread nickiw26
Are you suffering from sore feet, heel pain, or tight calves? Do you find it difficult to take the first couple of steps in the morning without pain? If you are suffering from any of these symptoms then, the FootFlex Performance Stretching Device (PSD) could be just what you need! Lower

Re: losing laptops, opsec

2000-06-18 Thread David Lesher
{encrypt laptops..} To some extent it may be because publicly available crypto algorithms aren't NSA-approved for military use, so there's no COTS code, though there may be NSA-built similar products. At the recent NetSec show in S.F. a vendor was showing latops (Toshiba and IBM, I