was the last to hear about the Modern Technique of the Pistol.
David Neilson
response which is performed automatically. Because of that I
couldn't possibly fire too soon during a high speed presentation. To shoot
myself during my draw I would literally have to slow down and do it
intentionally.
Keep your powder dry,
David Neilson
On Thursday 10 January 2002 10:51 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Legal hassle depends on where you live. Most places,
provided the burglar is inside, no problem. If lives long
enough to get outside, drag the body back inside, and rinse
away the blood. Police will not be interested in
or serious bodily injury; and
~ ~ (2) use of the device is reasonable under all the circumstances as the
actor reasonably believes them to be when he installs the device.
David Neilson
On Friday 11 January 2002 08:31 pm, Jim Choate wrote:
You simply can't go around shooting people you lure onto your
property in Texas.
I certainly never said anything like that. If you are going to put words in
my mouth then you don't need me to carry on. Knock yourself out.
David
of a pledge of allegiance is individual
liberty. As Ben Franklin said, Where liberty dwells, there is my
country.
David Neilson
This will be the best security for maintaining our liberties. A
nation of well-informed men who have been taught to know and prize
the rights which God has given them cannot
Individuals.
David Neilson,
Gun-toting Anarchist
from being funded for more than
two years.
Maintaining a permanent standing army by renewing its funding every
two years is simply more treasonous bullshit from the fecal matter
infesting Washington D.C.
David Neilson
UNSUBSCRIBE bmm AT THE BOTTOM
---
Dear Subscriber/Member,
You don't need to spend hundreds of dollars on a DVD burner
to backup your DVD's!
DVD Professional is the most technologically advanced
method of DVD reproduction ever
this distributing collective blame and laying blanket guilt
trips on all Americans for the sins of previous generations or the
screw-ups of our betters gives me gas.
David Neilson
zones unarmed?
Why would any sane parent allow them to do so?
David Neilson
Here's a link to an interesting article about the US plan to
control the world's oil supply. It points put the hazard of
inviting the wolves to watch your henhouse for you.
http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2003/10/ma_273_01.html
David Neilson
On Sunday 09 March 2003 18:16, you wrote:
On Sunday 09 March 2003 10:31 am, david wrote:
Neither you nor anyone else has the right to force me or any
other individual to subsidize your welfare.
This device, if forced on individuals by a government entity,
would violate fourth amendment
Below is the result of your feedback form. It was submitted by
David ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) on Wednesday, May 15, 2002 at 22:56:14
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Title: The money was subsidized to nothing when I made up a stupid sentence.
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At 12:27 PM 3/21/00 -0500, Tom Vogt wrote:
just wouldn't call it privacy, or better: the equivalent of privacy in
german ("Privatsphäre").
What is sphäre?
At 05:52 AM 4/5/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
get real. while there are no guns involved, and thus the word "force"
might be debatable, the amount of choice available to a) end-users and
b) resellers is far from what it would be in a theoretical free market.
News flash: the universe doesn't owe you
At 07:50 AM 4/5/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
Microsoft for years has done everything they can do eliminate or delay
competition.
So who doesn't? Eat or be eaten. Responsibility is to
investors.
The sole intent is to reduce the actual number of options
available to the consumer.
The sole
At 04:48 PM 4/6/00 +0200, Tom Vogt wrote:
David Honig wrote:
I don't think MS ever used violence, or the threat of it.
Ergo, it ain't nobody's business what they do.
if you are a company, then going bancrupt is the equivalence of dying.
You are confusing meat-violence with abstract metaphors
At 04:23 PM 4/18/00 -0400, Patrick Henry wrote:
and it might be possible for someone to lift a latent fingerprint from
your work area and make a rubber finger. The device supposedly has some
type of "live finger" detector though.
This would be a great project for the lab-inclined folks when
At 02:41 PM 4/19/00 -0400, ericm wrote:
A finger can change, so perhaps the key can be encrypted with multiple
"near matches" and those copies also stored.
A fingerprint is 20 points in 2-D, apparently with 16 bits of resolution.
This is a 40-dimensional space with 16 bits of resolution,
At 05:00 PM 4/19/00 -0400, Patrick Henry wrote:
There are a number of good live-finger detect methods beyond simple
resistance and capacitance that are not easily fooled. Pulse oximetry
is one. There are other extremely good methods which I can't discuss
here since I'm under non-disclosure.
At 01:04 PM 4/25/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
Irrelevant. We're not interested in bacteria, but in humans.
The difference between bacteria and humans is that some humans
think they're different. Meat is meat.
And some of the humans think that, because a few percent has achieved
z.p.g.
At 12:42 PM 4/26/00 -0400, Jim Burnes wrote:
Please, Tom. This is really getting tired. Malthus' theories were disproven
years ago. Technology increases the population carrying capacity of the
planet.
Polynomial vs. exponential growth. Exponential wins every time.
Besides, the genes are
At 02:19 AM 4/27/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
The difference between bacteria and humans is that some humans
think they're different. Meat is meat.
I'm a Christian. These arguments don't hold water to me. Try Tim.
Well, admitting your irrationality is a good start. But we're talking
At 03:35 AM 4/28/00 -0400, Matthew Gaylor wrote:
I can already imagine the cottage industry springing up to send false
signals to the system...
Regards, Matthew Gaylor-
And legislation making that a crime, as well as the civilian interception
of those signals.
At 12:02 PM 4/28/00 -0400, Daniel J. Boone wrote:
Smarter search engine spiders, ones that are persistent and ignore /norobots
and similar flags, may be part of the solution. Such spiders could be
linked to software that can parse and index word processing documents, .pdf
documents, and even
At 12:17 AM 5/8/00 -0400, Bill Stewart wrote:
If I wanted a non-3DES algorithm, I wouldn't use Blowfish -
Bruce Schneier et al. have Twofish out, and while the primary goals
of the redesign are to fit into the AES requirements framework,
rather than to strengthen the algorithm, they may have
At 04:19 PM 5/8/00 -0700, Bill Stewart wrote:
At 09:53 AM 05/08/2000 -0400, David Honig wrote:
You don't mention the longer exposure time of BFish,
though the AES algs get intense scrutiny now;
I probably should have. I figured that most of the learning
that happened with scrutinizing
At 06:55 PM 5/11/00 -0400, Eric Cordian wrote:
Career-wise, are village burning, violating other nations' sovereignty,
bombing to "send a message," and other such military antics on a par with
being a doctor, lawyer, teacher, or research scientist?
Our Congress seems to think so.
No one ever
At 03:25 PM 5/11/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
At 10:03 AM -0700 5/11/00, George Ortega wrote:
Americans had over twenty years to feed the starving children of our
world that
die at a rate of 24,000 every day,
Part of the generation-recombination (birth-death) equation. The poor
breed up to the
At 03:25 AM 5/12/00 -0400, Anonymous wrote:
Recently I saw at comment on slashdot suggesting how to pay for MP3s.
Suppose you know 100,000 people like a particular artist. If they all
aggree to pay $1 upfront for the release of the next album then it is
released. If the artist does their job -
Ignore for a moment the oxymoron "Democratic think tank".. check out
the self-declared 'centrists' pushing for criminalizing
anonymity...
http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/2519/tc/tech_napster_1.html
Think Tank to Take Napster Proposals to Congress
By Sue Zeidler
LOS ANGELES
David Honig [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
At 11:11 PM 5/22/00 -0400, David Marshall wrote:
Go talk to John Travolta. "Battlefield Earth" is making craters in
He's a fucking scientologist (ie, scammer or scammer-pawn) ergo
enemy of freedom and anonymity in particular.
That expl
Chemistry Student Accused of
Blackmailing Internet Company
By Jeffrey Gold
Associated Press Writer
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - A graduate student at Colorado
State University has been arrested and accused of
trying to extort
At 09:32 PM 6/10/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
I'm still at a loss as to just what you actually mean by saying
"crypto makes it all invisible.' The devil is in the details.
Handwaving about crypto making things invisible just won't cut it,
not when a specific model (Sealand) is being looked at.
By
At 07:51 PM 6/11/00 -0400, Lizard wrote:
Which leads me to this question -- so why doesn't Bill just close up
shop? He's got fifty+ billion dollars -- he couldn't spend it all in
his lifetime if he tried. So why doesn't he just pull a John Galt and
say, "Fine. I hereby close down Microsoft.
At 06:34 PM 6/12/00 -0400, David Marshall wrote:
At the press conference, the government just
tells the truth:
Gimme a break. The crater was a 'federal day care center',
at least on the first floor...
When you read about losing laptops in Los Alamos (and London), you have
to wonder: why don't those folks encrypt their drives? They
are somehow thinking physical security is sufficient, and slacking
off otherwise.
I just read that Glover presented at ACM Theory of Comp.
an extension of his quantum search algorithm that works with
problems with multiple solutions. Since decryption may involve
multiple false positives (see DESCrack) this is interesting.
At 10:37 AM 6/14/00 -0400, Lizard wrote:
Governments have nukes. Damn hard to defend against those without
nukes of your own.
But govts can't use those nukes as indiscriminately as they
can black op teams with conventional tools. Nukes mostly
freeze power relationships when (for N=2) 'both'
At 04:12 PM 6/14/00 -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
What makes anyone think Sealand is outside of the UK's jurisdiction after
the government in the 1980s extended their territorial limits to 10 miles?
Sealand is 6-7 miles offshore.
-Declan
The 3 mile limit came from the range of the Guns at
At 06:26 PM 6/14/00 -0400, Jim Choate wrote:
Considering the pictures in Wired and the plans related to nitrogen filled
rooms described in the article a couple of 1/4 lb. blocks of C4 would
resolve the issue nicely. Just blow a couple of good size holes in the
caissons. The North Sea will do the
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
{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
David Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
The technical contact is named Bob Richards [EMAIL PROTECTED].
By the way, Network Solutions says that old Bob's phone number is
212-979-0471. Why don't some of you give them a call and tell him what
you think of his company?
At 03:26 AM 6/20/00 -0400, Bill Stewart wrote:
Not-invented-here is no excuse.
In the crypto world, it used to be a decent excuse, because the
No Such Agency did have a lot more crypto experience than the civilian world,
and lots of people in commercial space kept reinventing the same snake oil.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
(Not to say that Linux doesn't have some advantages, obviously.
The main advantage the Linux has in this regard is that the "average user"
cannot modify system binaries. This makes worms of this sort more
difficult to perpetuate. Unfortunatly, there are
At 11:41 AM 6/29/00 -0400, dmolnar wrote:
biometric identification by typing pattern has shown up in science fiction
from time to time. Now we will see a new kind of superhero : instead of a
Along those lines, your future intelligent paper clip will correlate
your typing patterns with your
Vladimir Vul [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hello David,
Friday, June 30, 2000, 8:15:52 AM, you wrote:
I've replied to some of the spam with threats that I will track
them down and kill them.
Heh. I was thinking more of contacting upstreams and seeing if they will
yank the signal
At 01:47 AM 6/30/00 -0400, Anonymous Sender wrote:
Computers offered if weapons are turned in
Associated Press
OAKLAND [yeah, what a surprise there...]
The city ran a similar program in 1995 and drew about 300 people. Back
then, they were handing out free 286s. Now, they've upgraded to
Maybe they'll find the gene for obedience...
Worried police refuse to give DNA
samples
BY DAVID TAYLOR
http://www.lineone.net/express/00/07/02/news/n0240-d.html
THOUSANDS of police officers have refused to give DNA
samples to a new Home Office database amid concerns
At 02:42 PM 7/4/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Has anyone ever studied how hard it is to wipe a rewritable CD?
1. Put the disk in a sandwich plastic bag and seal it.
2. Put an empty glass into a microwave oven, and bagged CD on the top.
Everyone suggesting uwaving a CD is forgetting
1.
At 12:09 PM 7/4/00 -0400, dmolnar wrote:
Why wouldn't you just shred, melt, and scatter the CD if you want to wipe
the info on it? Trying to nondestructively wipe a hard drive makes some
sense, because you'd like to re-use the space...but CD-Rs are down to
something like $5/CD and you can't
Found an example of insect infowar:
Male cicada broadcasts sound-1. Female ACKS with a
click emitted at a fixed time wrt sound-1. The pair
then switch to another frequency channel, complete another handshake,
and then mate.
"The researchers learned that courting males will give
an
At 01:28 AM 7/5/00 -0400, Secret Squirrel wrote:
That is, unless analog recording equipment is criminalized and
exterminated (illegal possession of a microphone - 5 years. Possession
of a microphone while committing a copyright crime - 10 years.)
All future analog recording gear sold in U$ must
Saw this
07/05 01:07 pm -
Deleted Documents Do Double Duty
on Rogue Web Site Via AP NOT for
Online Use By CECILY BARNES
CNET News.com
on http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/index.htm
But could not get
"Jonathan Fischer" [EMAIL PROTECTED] spams the Cypherpunks
list with:
WTF
Keep asking yourself that. In fact, ask your parents that. Perhaps
they know WTF kind of psychotropic drugs your parents were on to
produce you. It must be some kind of secret family drug cocktail.
"!Dr. Joe Baptista" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I don't get it - it seems like every week someone asks how to build a bomb
here. I'm sure theirs information out there. I can tell you how to build
a small nuclear device in a pipe - but you'll kill yourself doing it -
unless you have the
Dawn Allen [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am currently looking for a home based job..please
email me if you can help me.
thanks
dawn
Yes, Dawn. We at Cypherpunks Triple-X Productions are currently
seeking stars for several of our upcoming releases:
- "Jar Wars Episode I: The Phantom
At 02:14 PM 7/10/00 -0400, Patrick Henry wrote:
This is a true test of the survivability of a minarchist society.
--PH
Heh, I'm waiting for the wave of copies with CDR: prepended to them..
David Honig [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
At 02:14 PM 7/10/00 -0400, Patrick Henry wrote:
This is a true test of the survivability of a minarchist society.
--PH
Heh, I'm waiting for the wave of copies with CDR: prepended to them..
I'm waiting for someone who is...oh, let's say a little
David Marshall [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I'm waiting for someone who is...oh, let's say a little less "morally
constrained"... to every CDR node back at Sparklist.com's contact
Obviously that should read "to point every CDR node..."
At 08:03 PM 7/10/00 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
- the list consists of minarchists. According to an Anarchy Theory FAQ
(http://www2.ucsc.edu/people/mrquiet/internet_lib/Anarchist_Theory_FAQ.html),
minarchists are libertarians who believe government should be limited
to activites that protect
At 10:04 PM 7/10/00 -0400, Greg Newby wrote:
To me, 'free speech' != 'anyone can post to any mailing list.'
And, 'free speech' != 'anyone can speak/post anonymously.'
If the government is not involved, it is NOT a free speech issue.
End of that approach.
Mailing lists are private property. No
"Marcel Popescu" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Any ideas
on LARTing the list hosts into giving us enough info to appropriately LART
the nitwit who is doing this?
I don't know what LART is, but we could RBL them g. We could inform them
first, and them submit a request to RBL to blacklist
At 1:24 AM -0500 7/11/00, Ben Byer wrote:
It isn't "spam." It's a matter of one or more lists being subscribed
to one or more other lists.
Suppose someone signs up the Foobar List to one of the Cypherpunks
lists. (Hint: this has happened.)
Are the CDR operators responsible
"Marcel Popescu" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
However, Marcel, the RBL does sound like a nice idea. I'd suggest
getting the RBL to blacklist them, *then* informing them,
though. Otherwise, they'll probably go whine to the RBL
maintainers. It may be harder to get off of the RBL once on it,
eet.com 10 Jul 2000 p 32
Pinjenburg Securealink [US|Europe] has a
secure crypto module (battery backed ram, ARM, RNG, other stuff?)
keeps secrets on chip; developed for banks, will sell to Compaq.
At 11:56 AM 7/12/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
Can a foreign citizen legally own a gun in the US? [More to the point, I'm
in Georgia.] I've tried looking around the web (NRA, Google...) but nobody
talks about us poor foreigners :) [Even if I manage to remain in the US for
a while, I don't
At 11:22 PM 7/12/00 -0400, negafoo wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
I've noticed that Eudora 4.3 (in paid mode) has developed a habit of
making an internet conection on startup. If I allow the connection to
succeed, some packets are exchanged and then Eudora consumes 100% of my CPU
time
At 12:26 AM 7/14/00 -0400, Declan McCullagh wrote:
(resend)
Michael: Have you forgotten what list you're on?
Unlawful government eavesdropping should not primarily be fought in
Washington. It should be fought with technology. The ACLU and EPIC are
good for defensive battles only, and when it
Tim May [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
At 6:51 PM -0400 7/16/00, David Marshall wrote:
"brat" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
hook me up with some cool stuff
Try altering some acetaminophen (the active ingredient in Tylenol).
Pull the O=C-CH3 off the amine, and then remove the hydr
At 01:07 PM 7/17/00 -0400, Michael Motyka wrote:
Cam you say "patent" at least for https, Oh I'm longing for September 20th
!! (The pessimistic side me predicts that on or around that date the
NSA/RSA
will announce
some sort of legal maneuver to extend or complicate the end of the patent.
At 03:34 AM 7/18/00 -0400, Reese wrote:
Great Book.
Executive summary, please.
Go to amazon
At 02:37 AM 7/18/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
two advantages:
a) more encrypted traffic on the web.
With known plaintext...
b) some people might want to read cypherpunks without the intermediate
parties being aware of the fact (I know companies that monitor e-mail).
If that's a concern, use the
At 10:02 AM 7/18/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
X-Loop: openpgp.net
From: "Tim May" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
That Marcel is so actively "spreading the good word" on the
Cypherpunks list is truly bizarre.
I'm not "spreading the good word", idiot. I was objecting to Jim Choate's
idea that anarchism
At 09:50 AM 7/18/00 -0400, Fisher Mark wrote:
David Honig writes:
You want to overwrite a dozen times with random (each time) data.
I'd be cautious about saying that. Way back when I held a security
clearance, the instructions were:
* Overwrite with patterns 99 times for SECRET materials
At 10:02 AM 7/18/00 -0400, Marcel Popescu wrote:
give a damn about Romania either, whatever that is. [I still have to find
someone able to define "Romania" or "country" in a meaningful way.]
You might start with people who speak romanian, who eat romanian
food, and look like other romanians.
Tuesday July 18 4:55 AM ET
House Fails to Ban Most Internet
Gambling
By Andy Sullivan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The House failed to pass a
bill that would criminalize most forms of Internet gambling,
an industry that has grown explosively in the past several years.
The reason your hard drive was reformatted was because
you received that e-mail.
A spokesperson for USSR Labs told
MSNBC.com that the group has been able to
add malicious code to e-mail headers that
executes as
Haven't these writers ever heard of the Deutsch affair?
Home computers hold corporate secrets too.
COPYCATS LIKELY TO POUNCE
Since sample code exists, Cooper
expects copycats to begin writing malicious
e-mails fairly
u can hire
someone to throw those pieces at members of the list.
Everyone welcome the script kiddie back to the list.
--
David Marshall
Fuckwit Relations
Cypherpunk Industries
At 02:21 PM 7/19/00 -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I am wanting more information on the Diploma deal but the number show on the
web site is disconnected.
http://www.inet-one.com/cypherpunks/dir.2000.01.03-2000.01.09/msg00115.html
Lets hope he doesn't work in WellsFargo *data security*...
At 03:29 AM 7/20/00 -0400, Tim May wrote:
Check out the standard features of Majordomo. The command "who
cypherpunks" has been used since the inception of the list(s).
But most (all?) other nodes have shut off this 'feature'
This came up on [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
At 12:29 AM 7/21/00 -0700, anonymized wrote:
The interesting question (for this list) is, if some border officials
search your hard drive and they encounter encrypted files, what will
they do? My guess would be that they will demand the key and threaten
to
nclusively linked to your
real world identity.
Is Tim really Tim? Are you really Patrick Henry? Am I really David
Marshall? Modulo reputation capital, does it really matter anyway?
ObCode: Nym servers are very well suited to this. Unfortunately, to
really be practical they need a seamless frontend.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Mr Anon did a good job. If Jm and dave don't like the heat get out of the
kitchen.Get a job thats more dangerous like a taxi driver or clerk at 7-11
Or an AOL tech support representative. I hear that they're subjected
to idiocy in quantities far in excess of what is
"Doug and Denna Morgan" [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
DD
No way. This one is just *too* easy.
At 04:39 AM 7/24/00 -0400, Tom Vogt wrote:
David Honig wrote:
there's a difference between this and a database system. almost all laws
on privacy (where such exist) realize that.
Really? What's to stop me from 'gargoyling' (to use a _snow crash_ term):
running a few VCRs on my surroundings
Sunday a note appeared in the LA Times
that the BBC was releasing Monday an interview
with a UK cabinet minister who admits she authorized
the Gerry Adams car bugging last year. (Adams found
the bug) Anyone heard the interview yet?
At 06:03 AM 7/24/00 -1000, Reese wrote:
At 11:20 AM 24/07/00 -0400, David Honig wrote:
At 12:42 AM 7/24/00 -0400, Reese wrote:
Japan may not have the US constitution, but their current constitution
was written by the US government in 1946. The American concepts of
civil rights are most
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