Any Debian developers listening?
- Forwarded message from Jonas Smedegaard d...@jones.dk -
Date: Thu, 13 Jun 2013 01:28:18 +0200
From: Jonas Smedegaard d...@jones.dk
To: Eugen Leitl eu...@leitl.org, freedombox-disc...@lists.alioth.debian.org
Subject: Re: [Freedombox-discuss] BTNS on
Now we know.
M
From: ottawadissent...@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:ottawadissent...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Steve Kurtz
Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2013 6:48 AM
Subject: [Ottawadissenters] Infinite Romeo: The Secret Government Program to
Manipulate Dating Sites
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 06/13/2013 07:51 AM, michael gurstein wrote:
Now we know?
Kevin Flynn...
Hee hee hee...
- --
The Doctor [412/724/301/703] [ZS]
Developer, Project Byzantium: http://project-byzantium.org/
PGP: 0x807B17C1 / 7960 1CDC 85C9 0B63 8D9F DD89 3BD8
[From Carolina Rossini -- great to have an English translation, so thought
I'd pass it along. 3 ]
Hi all,
Taking in consideration all the recent news, I would like to share with you
the current version of the Brazilian Internet Bill of Rights (Marco Civil)
in English. This is not the same
On Jun 12, 2013, at 4:25 PM, Nico Williams n...@cryptonector.com wrote:
There have been many proposed ways of doing roughly the same thing.
To my knowledge not one has succeeded wildly. RFC5660 has not been
implemented. Lacking IPsec channels one needs something like CGA to
ensure peer
readers of this list may find interesting a brief analysis I've just posted
of the discrepancies between General Alexander's testimony and media
coverage of it--from the actual testimony it appears he did not mean to be
claiming that dozens of terrorists attacks were prevented via collection
of
Reminds me of a recent comment from someone I was
training:
Government information should be public. Personal
information should be private.
Unfortunately, we have it backwards.
On 06/13/2013 12:10 PM, Kyle Maxwell wrote:
Thanks for this. His comments on Guarding Privacy and Civil
Liberties
Dear LibTech,
Brief update from us here at Benetech: we're pretty excited about the direction
Martus is headed. We're working on all kinds of long-desired
functionalities--built-in Tor integration, mobile write-only, translations,
visualizations and onward. We've just released 4.2, with speed
Awesome Collin. Sent from my
Hey guys,
In lieu of the recent NSA leaks, I'm going to transfer my website to a new
provider in either Sweden or Iceland (because well, you never know).
Griffin Boyce suggested I use moln.is, do you guys have any other
suggestion? Any other kind of advice?
Thanks!
--
*Lorenzo
Oh gosh, I just have to ask. Which Burmese fonts?
Dirk Slater
Lead Consultant/Founder
Fabriders
www.fabriders.net
twitter: fabrider
skype: dirkslater
On 13 Jun 2013, at 19:45, kipp.g...@gmail.com wrote:
Awesome Collin.
Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
From: Collin Sullivan
Sent:
Sweden isn't much better when it comes to wiretapping:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FRA_law. Iceland is probably a good choice.
On Thu, Jun 13, 2013 at 2:51 PM, Lorenzo Franceschi Bicchierai
lorenzo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey guys,
In lieu of the recent NSA leaks, I'm going to transfer my
On 13 June 2013 19:51, Lorenzo Franceschi Bicchierai
lorenzo...@gmail.com wrote:
Hey guys,
In lieu of the recent NSA leaks, I'm going to transfer my website to a new
provider in either Sweden or Iceland (because well, you never know). Griffin
Boyce suggested I use moln.is, do you guys have
About Sweden: a person from the Swedish Pirate Party, which has a
bunker data center there, was quoted in a video on Julian Assange
saying that Sweden, in security matters, is the US lapdog.
Best Regards | Cordiales Saludos | Grato,
Andrés L. Pacheco Sanfuentes
a...@acm.org
+1 (817) 271-9619
On
2013-06-13 20:51, Lorenzo Franceschi Bicchierai skrev:
In lieu of the recent NSA leaks, I'm going to transfer my website to a
new provider in either Sweden or Iceland (because well, you never know).
Griffin Boyce suggested I use moln.is http://moln.is, do you guys have
any other suggestion?
On Tue, Jun 11, 2013 at 05:44:38PM -0400, Richard Brooks wrote:
This lead me to start thinking about the possibility
of deploying something like Fidonet as a tool for
getting around Internet blackouts. Has anyone tried
something like that?
Usenet has long since demonstrated the ability to
From: Lydia Lorenz Lada lydial...@gmail.com
[gezipark.nadir.org] We need you: we need people who can translate
from Turkish to English or other languages. If you want to help, send
an email to gezip...@nadir.org
http://gezipark.nadir.org/index_eng.html
--
Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to
Rich Kulawiec writes:
Usenet has long since demonstrated the ability to route around
amazing amounts of damage and flakiness and to maintain communications
over very slow (including sneakernet) links.
Arguably, that sentence describes the normal operational state of the
network on a
From: Eduardo Robles Elvira edu...@wadobo.com
https://agoravoting.com we're currently working in version 3.0 which
will be the first cryptographically secure liquid democracy voting
system. We're going to use the open source library verificatum for
mixnets. Here is a description of the secure
On Jun 13, 2013, at 10:15 PM, Dirk Slater wrote:
Which Burmese fonts?
Zawgyi.
--
Too many emails? Unsubscribe, change to digest, or change password by emailing
moderator at compa...@stanford.edu or changing your settings at
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/liberationtech
From: Mark Rasch mdra...@aol.com
Schrodinger’s Catnip
DISCLAIMER: I know nothing about the NSA surveillance programs other
than what I read in the papers. Thus, my legal analysis of the
program may be completely wrong, since they are highly fact dependent.
The NSA programs to retrieve and
Thank you for forwarding this, Yosem.
For reference, here's the article online:
http://www.raschcyber.com/1/post/2013/06/schrodingers-cat-nip.html
The blog byline credits Mark Rasch and Sophia N. Hannah - and suggests
that the authors are working on an analysis of PRISM, which I hope will
22 matches
Mail list logo