FW: Lovely Mom cheating

2004-10-10 Thread Grandeur U. Cuing





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2004-10-10 Thread elisabeth jacobs
Helping our courts.

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I'm in something of a hurry myself, but now I've mixed up with this thing
I'll see it through. The President touched a bell and gave an order to his
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Then he turned to Rob and said, wonderingly: You are a boy! That's true, Mr



**AccSent PIN**

2004-10-10 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]




PIN: 132-638Acct: 1391427Expires: 3:01:01 PM GMTIP: 61.6.93.185---Explanation:The security settings on e-gold account 1391427 require new PIN entrywhen a change in computer and/or location is detected.If you did not attempt to login to e-gold account 1291588 at9/6/04 2:46:01 PM GMT, this suggests that somebody besides you knows thepassphrase to your e-gold account due to poor security practices onyour part!  In that case you should immediately take the followingsteps in the following order:1.  Login to your e-gold accountIf the one-time PIN is still active (see above), your successfullogin will deactivate it.2.  Change the passphrase on your e-gold accountUse e-gold's Secure Randomized Keypad (SRK) in case your computer is infected with a keystroke logger or virus.3.  Read and implement the security recommendations published on thee-gold website.Don't p!
 ut this step off, or you risk compr
omising your new passphraseas well!*  For your security, never access the e-gold website via hypertext links in e-mail!*---Please do not reply to this automatically generated email message.

	



**AccSent PIN**

2004-10-10 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]




PIN: 132-638Acct: 1391427Expires: 3:01:01 PM GMTIP: 61.6.93.185---Explanation:The security settings on e-gold account 1391427 require new PIN entrywhen a change in computer and/or location is detected.If you did not attempt to login to e-gold account 1291588 at9/6/04 2:46:01 PM GMT, this suggests that somebody besides you knows thepassphrase to your e-gold account due to poor security practices onyour part!  In that case you should immediately take the followingsteps in the following order:1.  Login to your e-gold accountIf the one-time PIN is still active (see above), your successfullogin will deactivate it.2.  Change the passphrase on your e-gold accountUse e-gold's Secure Randomized Keypad (SRK) in case your computer is infected with a keystroke logger or virus.3.  Read and implement the security recommendations published on thee-gold website.Don't p!
 ut this step off, or you risk compr
omising your new passphraseas well!*  For your security, never access the e-gold website via hypertext links in e-mail!*---Please do not reply to this automatically generated email message.

	



[no subject]

2004-10-10 Thread Gwen Boucher

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E-Commerce Sites Make Great Laboratory For Today's Economists

2004-10-10 Thread R.A. Hettinga


The Wall Street Journal


 October 11, 2004

 PORTALS
 By LEE GOMES


E-Commerce Sites
 Make Great Laboratory
 For Today's Economists
October 11, 2004

Calling them eBayologists doesn't sound quite right; Amazonists is even
worse. There may not be a good name for them, but for a growing number of
academics trying to test ivory-tower theories in the real world, the big
online commerce sites are the new place to be.

Especially for economists, Web sites and their untold millions of
interactions are perfect real-world laboratories. For instance, a
fast-growing specialty in economics is "auction theory," which, as the name
suggests, tries to tease out the basic patterns by which auctions operate.
Before eBay, an aspiring auction theorist didn't have much data to work
with. As a result, many of them spent time sifting and resifting through a
limited set of data on government wireless spectrum auctions of the 1990s
for their auction insights.

But now, with eBay and the rest, there are more data than even the most
dedicated graduate student would know what to do with. EBay itself even
helps with this, supplying anonymized data to university researchers under
special arrangement.

What exactly are economists learning? Frankly, the conclusions aren't the
sort that would cause a layperson's jaw to drop; many are the sort that
only a microeconomist would love.

For instance, one of the cardinal rules of eBay involves the importance of
a seller's reputation, or the rating given the person by those who have
done business with him or her.

Luis M.B. Cabral, an economist at NYU's business school, says that for an
economist, it wouldn't have been immediately obvious that the eBay ranking
would be important -- partly because reputations on eBay, unlike those in
the real world, are essentially anonymous.

But not only is reputation important, Prof. Cabral found, but it affects
the prices sellers can charge and the amount of merchandise they can move.
In one study, he looked at what happens to sellers with perfect ratings who
receive their first piece of negative feedback.

Not only did they begin selling less, but they entered a kind of downward
spiral, with fewer sales and a declining reputation. "It really makes a
huge difference," Prof. Cabral says.

Another academic foray into the online world ended up confirming the power
of brand names. Conventional wisdom among most American economists would be
that prices on Web sites should be essentially the same. After all,
Internet users all have "perfect information" about what everyone is
charging, and they face few, if any, "switching costs" in moving from one
supplier to the next.

But Judith A. Chevalier, an economist at the University of Chicago business
school, looked at price differences between Amazon and Barnes & Noble and
found that Amazon was consistently able to charge more. And in a separate
study, she found that Amazon's customer-written reviews of books do indeed
affect sales, with negative reviews having more of an impact than positive
ones. Prof. Chevalier theorized that prospective shoppers may suspect
positive reviews are some sort of shill for the author but don't bring
comparable skepticism to negative notices.

Even with all the interest by researchers, some of the questions posed by
the e-commerce sites remain unresolved. One of them involves the usefulness
of "sniping," which occurs when a prospective buyer in an auction doesn't
get involved in the bidding until the last minute, and then makes an offer
the others don't have time to top.

The practice works only on eBay-style auctions, which have fixed time
limits. There are many eBay users who swear by the practice. In fact, there
are even a number of services that will snipe for you automatically.

David Reiley, a University of Arizona economist, says that for certain
kinds of auction items -- including standardized electronic gear with many
different bidders -- studies suggest that snipers don't do better than
anyone else, either in their success rate in winning their items or in the
price they end up paying.

But he says there may be other kinds of merchandise, such as those with
fewer bidders or prices that aren't easy to determine, where buyers should,
in fact, snipe. Even that could change, he notes, if everyone sniped. It is
currently unclear how many people on eBay engage in the practice.

Not all of the work being done online by economists is theoretical, and
savvy eBay traders would be wise to acquaint themselves with some of the
literature. Lucking Reiley, for instance, along with a colleague, Rama
Katkar, wanted to find out if it was better to publicly set a minimum bid
for an item or to use an eBay feature called a "secret reserve," which
rejects bids below a certain dollar amount without telling bidders what the
minimum is.

By comparing 50 pairs of identical items, one with the secret minimum and
one without, the econo

Re: [Full-Disclosure] WWII cryptography: the dark side (fwd)

2004-10-10 Thread J.A. Terranson


-- Forwarded message --
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2004 21:57:15 +0200
From: Christian Leber <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Full-Disclosure] WWII cryptography: the dark side

On Sun, Oct 10, 2004 at 07:52:20PM +0200, Feher Tamas wrote:
>(in german only or bablefish, sorry):

I bablefished it and corrected the worst errors:

---
Secret code TELWA cracked: Nazi decoder developed computer forerunner

23. September 2004

Hanover - the decoder Reinhold Weber decoded the US
secret code TELWA in the Second World War and built a decoding machine
to crack M-209-Nachrichten. This was now revealed by Klaus Schmeh, author
at the InterNet magazine Telepolis

That German decoding specialists decoded in the the Second World War
secret code of the allied was even not well known by experts until a few
years ago. According to report of the former president of the Federal
Office for security in the information technology (BSI), Dr Otto
Leiberichm the Germans in the Second World War cracked the US coding
machine M-209.
These remarks served the Telepolis author Klaus Schmeh as
important source of information, when he worked on his book
'Die Welt der geheimen Zeichen - Die faszinierende Geschichte der Verschlüsselung'
('The world of the secret signs - the fascinating history of encryption).
When he published excerpts of this book with Telepolis first, this led to a
small sensation: A 84 year old man from Frankfurt contacted him and reported
that he was in WWII involved in the crackong of the mentioned US coding machine M-209.

The 1920 in Austria born Reinold Weber, which had spent six years of
his childhood in the USA, was drawn in 1941 to the armed forces. Due to
excellent knowledge of the english language he was first trained as a message
interpreter and later as decoder. Inserted in the decoding unit
FNAST5, he succeeded to decode the TELWA messages from US radiograms
and decipher also machine keys. In this time Weber and his
colleagues cracked the codes of the US coding machine M-209 and intercepted
explosive information. Thus there were again and again hints referring to
forthcoming bombardments of German cities, which were announced usually
about six to eight weeks before execution in radiograms. What counter
measures the German military did with the help of these information,
weber however never experienced.

In April 1944 Weber had the idea to build a machine which should
automate a part of the laborious deciphering computations. The company
Hollerith, late IBM, was positive in an evaluation, explained however
the building of such a machine takes about two years. Thus Weber with a
colleague made itself alone to the work. They created a machine, which
consisted of two boxes: one in the size of a desk, which contained the
relays and the four turning rollers, as well as a further box with 80 x
80 x 40 cm edge length. Latter box contained 26 times 16 bulb sockets,
with which by bulbs the letters of the relative attitude could be
copied. Thus Webers and his colleague wrote an interesting piece of
technology history, because their construction had already many thing in common
with a computer with their binary logic. The computer was still
not at all invented at this time, if one refrains from the British
machine Colossus likewise developed for decoding, which developed about
at the same time.

In the middle of September 1944 Weber could prove the strength of its computer
forerunner for the first time: During a night duty he
determined with his machine - without the support of his
colleagues - an M209 key. Which would have meant one week work without machine
assistance for a three-team at least, he created within approximately
seven hours. At the beginning of of 1945, weber had landed over several
detours in Salzburg, wanted to use his decoding machine again. However
the necessary radio engineering was missing. The equipment proved as
useless. Its superior instructed to destroy the machine. With pickel,
hatchet, hammer and stahlsaege Weber scrapped thereupon the equipment,
whose construction had employed him several months long.

Thus a historically extremely interesting computer forerunner
disappeared again from the scene. Until today this equipment in no
source of literature is mentioned to computer history.
---

Here is the complete Telepolis article (german):
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/inhalt/co/18371/1.html


Christian Leber

-- 
  "Omnis enim res, quae dando non deficit, dum habetur et non datur,
   nondum habetur, quomodo habenda est."   (Aurelius Augustinus)
  Translation: 

___
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html



Indymedia Seizures Initiated In Europe (fwd from brian-slashdotnews@hyperreal.org)

2004-10-10 Thread Eugen Leitl
- Forwarded message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] -

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: 10 Oct 2004 19:26:02 -
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Indymedia Seizures Initiated In Europe
User-Agent: SlashdotNewsScooper/0.0.3

Link: http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/10/10/1716256
Posted by: timothy, on 2004-10-10 17:18:00

   from the fbi-just-along-for-the-ride dept.
   [1]daveschroeder writes "According to [2]this Indymedia.org article
   and [3]AFP report, the request to seize Indymedia servers hosted by a
   U.S. company in the UK (covered in this [4]previous slashdot story)
   originated from government agencies in Italy and Switzerland, not the
   United States. Because Indymedia's hosting company, Rackspace.com, is
   a U.S. company, the FBI coordinated the request and accompanied UK
   Metropolitan Police on the seizure under the auspices of the [5]Mutual
   Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), an international legal treaty, but,
   according to an FBI spokesman, 'It is not an FBI operation. Through
   [MLAT], the subpoena was on behalf of a third country.'" Read on below
   for more.

   daveschroeder continues: "Rackspace's statement reads, 'In the present
   matter regarding Indymedia, Rackspace Managed Hosting, a U.S. based
   company with offices in London, is acting in compliance with a court
   order pursuant to a Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty (MLAT), which
   establishes procedures for countries to assist each other in
   investigations such as international terrorism, kidnapping and money
   laundering. Rackspace responded to a Commissioner's subpoena, duly
   issued under Title 28, United States Code, Section 1782 in an
   investigation that did not arise in the United States. Rackspace is
   acting as a good corporate citizen and is cooperating with
   international law enforcement authorities. The court prohibits
   Rackspace from commenting further on this matter.'"

References

   1. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
   2. http://www.indymedia.org/en/2004/10/112047.shtml
   3. 
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=1509&ncid=738&e=6&u=/afp/20041008/tc_afp/us_internet_justice
   4. http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/10/07/204217&tid=153
   5. http://travel.state.gov/law/mlat.html

- End forwarded message -
-- 
Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
__
ICBM: 48.07078, 11.61144http://www.leitl.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A  7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
http://moleculardevices.org http://nanomachines.net


pgpHLp7QFp6ln.pgp
Description: PGP signature


[i2p] 0.4.1.2 is available (fwd from jrandom@i2p.net)

2004-10-10 Thread Eugen Leitl
- Forwarded message from jrandom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -

From: jrandom <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2004 07:57:17 -0700
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [i2p] 0.4.1.2 is available

-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1

Hi everyone,

We've got a new 0.4.1.2 release out and about with a bunch of
bugfixes, tools to help monitor the health of your node, reduce
memory churn, and help cut down on the per-hop message processing
time.  I don't expect any sort of revolutionary performance
improvements with this, but I do hope it'll make the latency a bit
smoother.  Upgrading is highly recommended.

The full list of whats been added since 0.4.1.1 is up and available
at http://dev.i2p.net/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/i2p/history.txt?rev=HEAD

Its all backwards compatible, and duck has been helping me test out
these updates as they've been made (as well as gather truckloads of
stats to help identify the bottlenecks on his fairly active router).

As always, the goods are up @ http://www.i2p.net/download

=jr

SHA1(i2p.tar.bz2)= 455b936f0b49ee58ab50739e7b00a482678b9291
SHA1(i2p_0_4_1_2.tar.bz2)= 124ce2e680f8a194d573edc9e688c6ab1f085d05
SHA1(i2pupdate.zip)= e6f140f9a4ccdb59e3784510c9bff5d336dafca4
SHA1(install.jar)= 5a92ffdac4edce942faa2f8fa3b9c468f646a6db

-BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-
Version: PGP 8.1

iQA/AwUBQWlNgBpxS9rYd+OGEQJcBQCghZVED/5eHT3L8mEwIiRM34jS9hwAoJ8O
hdm6AaL62BKroSQHNfFuXzNH
=oKAI
-END PGP SIGNATURE-
___
i2p mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://i2p.dnsalias.net/mailman/listinfo/i2p

- End forwarded message -
-- 
Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
__
ICBM: 48.07078, 11.61144http://www.leitl.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A  7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
http://moleculardevices.org http://nanomachines.net


pgpOgCynQvVEr.pgp
Description: PGP signature


work

2004-10-10 Thread Brooklyn Deherrera

The citizens of each state shall be entitled to all privileges and immunities of citizens in the several states? 







discontinue

Who calls himself Canadian calls himself French; and, little communicative as Ned Land was, I must admit that he took a certain liking for me!! 



Fw: Shy Girly Ejaculation video

2004-10-10 Thread Procreation B. Homeric





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