On Sun, 11 Apr 2004, Riad S. Wahby wrote:
2. Was tim may being filtered from minder, or is he
just gone now ?
I talked to him a little bit after lne went down; he said he wasn't
interested in posting to the list any more. Quite unfortunate, in my
view. Apparently he's still to be found
J.A. Terranson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unfortunate? I don't know. Tim's gone a little whacko over the last few
years, and it doesn't look like his meds are doing crap for him:
[snip]
It's true, Tim does seem to harbor an awful lot of anger towards
certain groups, but while I don't agree
I wasn't paying attention when the lne node went away,
and was a bit lost in my CP mailing list subscription
for a few months...
I subscribed to minder, but it was a _joke_ in terms
of spam and bounces and all sorts of lameness in my
cypherpunks folder _and_ my inbox. Further, I noticed
I was no
Joe Schmoe [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1. any comments on this level of spam and bounces,
etc., I saw from minder - does al-qeada use a more
LNE-like processor ?
Well, as the list maintainer I see a lot of bounces c, but (unless
something is seriously wrong with my setup) no one else does.
2.
The source is almost as interesting as the quote.
-- Forwarded message --
Date: 11 Apr 2004 03:41:48 +
From: Paul Vixie [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Lazy network operators
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Sean Donelan) writes:
Should anonymous use of the
It's a tree
No, it's not a tree
I thought we were sort of an autonomous collective!
Watery marketers lobbing Powerpoints is no basis for a form of architecture
Network engineers spend a lot of time making sure that their networks, and
the Internet, are not trees. Multiple peering and
At 08:52 PM 4/10/2004, R. A. Hettinga wrote:
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/8403065.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp
Posted on Sat, Apr. 10, 2004
Spy agency launches recruiting campaign
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The highly secretive National Security Agency is
On Sat, Apr 10, 2004 at 10:33:39AM -0700, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
Thanks for the distinction, however it still makes CC folks slaves of
the
State. Suppose Joe Badcredit finds a blank application and applies?
The State then uses violence to coerce the CC into non-consensual
transactions.
Major Variola (ret) (2004-04-11 16:42Z) wrote:
Blacknet is a robust archive for words, immune to force
(by State or private actors), but merely words.
With all due respect to the principle of freedom of speech and all that,
I think that cypherpunks, and people in general, give far too little
Tim regularly and thoroughly jumped up my ass about my various ideological
impurities
Well, this was fairly annoying and I think made it harder to dig out the
gold from Tim May's poop. And in a way, this was self-defeating from a
topple-the-state point of view.
My point was (and sometimes is)
On Sun, 11 Apr 2004, Riad S. Wahby wrote:
The part I find unfortunate is that, along with his less tactful
points, gone are his insightful ones.
This is the point I was trying to make (by reposting his latest insight).
We all have those ghosts we'd like to see dead. Hell, I've got more than
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At 3:37 AM -0400 4/11/04, Riad S. Wahby wrote:
Apparently he's still to be found posting on various Usenet groups.
RAH knows more about this than I do.
Obviously, Tim was on usenet long before he, Eric Hughes and John
Gilmore started this list on
Jim Dixon wrote:
The term is used because most or all trees in the region where the English
language originated are shaped just like that: they have a single trunk
which forks into branches which may themselves fork and so on. These
branches do not connect back to one another.
I believe the real
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/3611227.stm
File-sharing to bypass censorship
By Tracey Logan
BBC Go Digital presenter
The net could be humming with news, rather pop, swappers
By the year 2010, file-sharers could be swapping news rather than music,
eliminating censorship of any kind.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/8403065.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp
Posted on Sat, Apr. 10, 2004
Spy agency launches recruiting campaign
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The highly secretive National Security Agency is looking to
hire 7,500 workers over the next five
On Saturday 2004 April 10 12:12, Eugen Leitl wrote:
Should I stick with Linux (there's /dev/random and VPN support in
current kernels for the C3 Padlock engine, right?) with SELinux or
try OpenBSD for a firewall type machine with hardware crypto support?
For a firewall, I'd recommend OpenBSD
Justin writes:
With all due respect to the principle of freedom of speech and all that,
I think that cypherpunks, and people in general, give far too little
respect to words, as if words are a vague, unimportant, and remote link
in the chain of causation of acts or failure-to-acts. I don't
Eric Cordian wrote...
Can I be the list's new Crusty Retired
Engineer now?
Why, did you retire recently?
-TD
From: Eric Cordian [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: On Needing Killing
Date: Sun, 11 Apr 2004 12:58:50 -0700 (PDT)
Justin writes:
With all due respect to the
Eugen Leitl pastes:
File-sharing to bypass censorship
By Tracey Logan
BBC Go Digital presenter
If there's material that everyone agrees is wicked, like child pornography,
then it's possible to track it down and close it down
Ross Anderson, Cambridge University
I think the problem here
Harmon Seaver (2004-04-11 20:05Z) wrote:
This is insane -- on what basis, under what Constitutional authority,
does the state get to decide that the christer marriage vows are
sacred and legal, and a pagan or indig taking to wife isn't?
This is one nation under God (the Christian God), or
On Sun, Apr 11, 2004 at 12:41:03PM -0700, Eric Cordian wrote:
As those who flog the Sex Abuse Agenda are well aware, 90% of successful
propaganda is owning the vocabulary. I am reminded of the changing of the
term statutory rape to child rape a few years ago, which I am sure we
will all
Justin wrote:
This is one nation under God (the Christian God), or haven't you
noticed? If the Christian Right thinks God doesn't like something, it's
not Constitutionally protected.
Even worse, I've once heard a coworker explain to me why Bush doesn't give
a rats ass about the environment:
At 12:58 PM -0700 4/11/04, Eric Cordian wrote:
So - what happened to Tim? Can I be the list's new Crusty Retired
Engineer now?
Crusty retired pervert is more like it.
..and, no, I don't want to know what the crust is made of...
:-/
Cheers,
RAH
--
-
R. A. Hettinga mailto:
Anybody heard of this before, or know how it's done?
And Mr Tanaka has good reason to be wary. He and his three friends are
illegally selling phone cards that have been altered so they can be re-used.
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/671844D1-95C9-4BEF-903C-155B2E948C59.htm
--
Harmon
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