Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-15 Thread Tyler Durden
No, it was I who laid claim to stoopidity. However, as for...
My tentative
analysis of the PR intent prompted me to stop reading the weekly in
question as I have no interest in wasting my time with such unimportant
drivel.  In my case, I feel there are much better things to spend time on
-- as interesting as watching the PR spin might be as viewed from a
cultural-anthropological perspective.
When the intent of the PR is obviously banal (eg, sell movie tickets) then I 
agree that analysis is a waste of time. When there's a suspicious pattern of 
misinformation, the (ultimate) intent of which is unknown, than analysis 
equals consciously understanding that something shifty is afoot. Otherwise, 
one's opinions about the slandered change every so slightly, no matter how 
much we may dismiss such slander on the verbal/conscious level.

I consider it no coincidence too that we had that recent little 
Jew-hater-baiting post from the same remailer. Someone is poking Cypherpunks 
for the fun of it, or as part of their job description.

Remember, tiny impulses at a system's natural frequencies (ie, eigenvalues) 
will eventually cause that system to dis-integrate.

Then again, as none of you are hot chicks I won't necessarily binge-purge if 
Cypherpunks collapses in a fit of Twilight Zone-ish infighting.

-TD

From: Steve Thompson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Steve Thompson
Date: Tue, 14 Dec 2004 20:43:26 -0500 (EST)
Alright.  Time for a little 'fun'.
 --- R.W. (Bob) Erickson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Tyler Durden wrote:

 
  Something occurred to me...it probably occurred to others already but
  I am a stoopid Cypherpunk, don't forget.
I like the nomenclature of AI: it makes for an interesting tool in the
analysis of day-to-day interpersonal relations.  Here, for instance, I am
in the habit of making a mental note of the above as a frame axiom, one
which is intended to influence the state of the fluents that might be said
to accompany this message, or which are intended to be assumed by it.
So, Mr. Erickson here wishes to assert and emphasise that he is a stupid
cypherpunk, a proposition that may or may not conflict with extant
fluents held by readers of Cypherpunks.  Or, put another way, it might
conflict (or be designed to conflict) with frame axioms that Mr. Erickson
knows or suspects to be held by his audience.  Without knowing the
internal mental state of Cypherpunks' subscription base, and without
knowing the frame within which Mr. Erickson is operatiing (either his
'global' frame, or the 'local' frame of convenience that he may have
adopted), it is nearly impossible to infer what he or she is intending by
writing a statement like I am a stoopid Cypherpunk when its banality
might suggest to some that it is blatantly insincere.
There's really nowhere to take this digression, what with the limited
information that is available in context, and so we can only speculate as
to what relation Mr. Erickson's possible stoopidity has to the topic at
hand, which is (if we are to take the message at face value), that he is
concerned with a complaint about a bad eBay sale, which is the
responsibility of someone using the name Steve Thompson, and which was
made to Cypherpunks (a known spook-haven[1]), via an anonymous message
that appears to have been sent through a cypherpunks remailer.
  Anyone think it a TINY bit odd that someone with a fairly mundane
  complaint about bad  computer gear would know to come in on an
  anonymous remailer?
Yes, it is quite odd.
  My first thought was that they had gotten burned by a Steve Thompson
  (maybe the same, maybe not) did a google search and came across
  Cypherpunks and then tossed in a couple of stinky posts.
That condition may satisfy the principle of least hypothesis, which has
much to recommend it, but is it really the likely scenario?
  But it seems a little farfetched to me that such a person would also
  have bothered (by accident) reading about the anonymous remailers and
  then use one.
Without a detailed psychological workup on the person who sent the
message, the question is largely indeterminate.  Perhaps the person making
the complaint was coincidentally familiar with anonymous remailers prior
to their interaction with eBay.
  So...the complainer must have already been aware of remailers and Mr
  Thompson's contribution to Cypherpunks.
I am not sure whether that conclusion is supported by the data available
at this time.
  Kind of interesting.
To someone who is genuinely 'stoopid', perhaps.
  -TD

 Somebody has been experimenting  with reputation cracking
Did you just happen to notice?
I have informally noted a number of messages in which the authors purport
to present information that seeks to damage or modify another's
reputation, using a variety of subtle language- and psychology-oriented
special effects.  Whether one puts stock in the veracity of each instance
is probably a matter of personal preference; expediency and convenience

Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-15 Thread Steve Thompson
Alright.  Time for a little 'fun'.

 --- R.W. (Bob) Erickson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
 Tyler Durden wrote:
 
 
  Something occurred to me...it probably occurred to others already but 
  I am a stoopid Cypherpunk, don't forget.

I like the nomenclature of AI: it makes for an interesting tool in the
analysis of day-to-day interpersonal relations.  Here, for instance, I am
in the habit of making a mental note of the above as a frame axiom, one
which is intended to influence the state of the fluents that might be said
to accompany this message, or which are intended to be assumed by it.

So, Mr. Erickson here wishes to assert and emphasise that he is a stupid
cypherpunk, a proposition that may or may not conflict with extant
fluents held by readers of Cypherpunks.  Or, put another way, it might
conflict (or be designed to conflict) with frame axioms that Mr. Erickson
knows or suspects to be held by his audience.  Without knowing the
internal mental state of Cypherpunks' subscription base, and without
knowing the frame within which Mr. Erickson is operatiing (either his
'global' frame, or the 'local' frame of convenience that he may have
adopted), it is nearly impossible to infer what he or she is intending by
writing a statement like I am a stoopid Cypherpunk when its banality
might suggest to some that it is blatantly insincere.

There's really nowhere to take this digression, what with the limited
information that is available in context, and so we can only speculate as
to what relation Mr. Erickson's possible stoopidity has to the topic at
hand, which is (if we are to take the message at face value), that he is
concerned with a complaint about a bad eBay sale, which is the
responsibility of someone using the name Steve Thompson, and which was
made to Cypherpunks (a known spook-haven[1]), via an anonymous message
that appears to have been sent through a cypherpunks remailer.

  Anyone think it a TINY bit odd that someone with a fairly mundane 
  complaint about bad  computer gear would know to come in on an 
  anonymous remailer?

Yes, it is quite odd.

  My first thought was that they had gotten burned by a Steve Thompson 
  (maybe the same, maybe not) did a google search and came across 
  Cypherpunks and then tossed in a couple of stinky posts.

That condition may satisfy the principle of least hypothesis, which has
much to recommend it, but is it really the likely scenario?

  But it seems a little farfetched to me that such a person would also 
  have bothered (by accident) reading about the anonymous remailers and 
  then use one.

Without a detailed psychological workup on the person who sent the
message, the question is largely indeterminate.  Perhaps the person making
the complaint was coincidentally familiar with anonymous remailers prior
to their interaction with eBay.

  So...the complainer must have already been aware of remailers and Mr 
  Thompson's contribution to Cypherpunks.

I am not sure whether that conclusion is supported by the data available
at this time.

  Kind of interesting.

To someone who is genuinely 'stoopid', perhaps.

  -TD
 
 Somebody has been experimenting  with reputation cracking

Did you just happen to notice?

I have informally noted a number of messages in which the authors purport
to present information that seeks to damage or modify another's
reputation, using a variety of subtle language- and psychology-oriented
special effects.  Whether one puts stock in the veracity of each instance
is probably a matter of personal preference; expediency and convenience in
such a busy environment dictates that for practical reasons one simply
cannot chase down every half-assed assertion merely to verify its
accuracy.

In the print and televised media, the flood of information shovelled at
the reader (or watcher) is such that distortions, omissions, and outright
falsehoods are expected to lodge in the public mind as they accompany a
wealth of otherwise useful information that is of some accuracy.  The
repetition of like falsehoods is carried out over time with the
expectation that it will be reinforced.

A favoirite example of mine is to be found in one of the two local
entertainment weeklies.  Recently it was asserted that `reincarnation is
the new black' in reference to the intended memetic propogation of the
associated frame axioms, and their intended effect on the readers' fluents
vulnerable to modification by the memes in question.  My tentative
analysis of the PR intent prompted me to stop reading the weekly in
question as I have no interest in wasting my time with such unimportant
drivel.  In my case, I feel there are much better things to spend time on
-- as interesting as watching the PR spin might be as viewed from a
cultural-anthropological perspective.


Regards,

Steve
 


[1] Choate, et al.


__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca


Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-15 Thread John Young
One of the earliest lessons learned on cypherpunks is to
post pseudonymously in several disguises, saving one
nym for really trustworthy comments. The credibility of
that No. 1 nym is slowly built by attacking it yourself and
either mounting impressive defenses, bribing others to
defend it, making a fool of yourself when you get your
nyms confused and use the wrong grammar and syntax
and forwardings and remailings and backtrackings and
oops sorry I sent that private mail to the list, and 
coca-cola noseblowing, and indignant unsubbing,
resubbing to send nastygrams to those who pilloried
and ridiculed you while you covertly lurked to see if
anybody gave a damn about your worthless existence
and superficial, apish ideas.

Getting soundly trashed is an honor among net trash
haulers, so pay your dues and shit on yourself from
multitudes of personas, it's what the founders did and
do.

Nobody leaves cypherpunks, nobody gets in. You claim
an identity you a lying ignorant sumbitch addicted to
dingleberries.

None of this applies to real people out there, lost in
impersonation.


Steve Thompson

2004-12-14 Thread Tyler Durden
Something occurred to me...it probably occurred to others already but I am a 
stoopid Cypherpunk, don't forget.

Anyone think it a TINY bit odd that someone with a fairly mundane complaint 
about bad  computer gear would know to come in on an anonymous remailer?

My first thought was that they had gotten burned by a Steve Thompson (maybe 
the same, maybe not) did a google search and came across Cypherpunks and 
then tossed in a couple of stinky posts.

But it seems a little farfetched to me that such a person would also have 
bothered (by accident) reading about the anonymous remailers and then use 
one.

So...the complainer must have already been aware of remailers and Mr 
Thompson's contribution to Cypherpunks.

Kind of interesting.
-TD


Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-14 Thread R.W. (Bob) Erickson
Tyler Durden wrote:
Something occurred to me...it probably occurred to others already but 
I am a stoopid Cypherpunk, don't forget.

Anyone think it a TINY bit odd that someone with a fairly mundane 
complaint about bad  computer gear would know to come in on an 
anonymous remailer?

My first thought was that they had gotten burned by a Steve Thompson 
(maybe the same, maybe not) did a google search and came across 
Cypherpunks and then tossed in a couple of stinky posts.

But it seems a little farfetched to me that such a person would also 
have bothered (by accident) reading about the anonymous remailers and 
then use one.

So...the complainer must have already been aware of remailers and Mr 
Thompson's contribution to Cypherpunks.

Kind of interesting.
-TD
Somebody has been experimenting  with reputation cracking
--bob


Steve Thompson

2004-12-13 Thread Italy Anonymous Remailer
Out of nowhere cometh Steve Thompson, and sayeth he all manner of things. 
But, while his mouth moveth one way, he seemeth to move the other.



http://groups-beta.google.com/groups?q=%22steve+thompson%22start=0hl=ensafe=off;



What hath suddenly attracted our AUK creep?



Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-13 Thread J.A. Terranson

On Sat, 11 Dec 2004, Anonymous via the Cypherpunks Tonga Remailer wrote:

 Out of nowhere cometh Steve Thompson, and sayeth he all manner of
 things.  But, while his mouth moveth one way, he seemeth to move the
 other.

 http://groups-beta.google.com/groups?q=%22steve+thompson%22start=0hl=ensafe=off;

 What hath suddenly attracted our AUK creep?

Who cares?  You got a beef, state it.

-- 
Yours,

J.A. Terranson
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0xBD4A95BF

 Civilization is in a tailspin - everything is backwards, everything is
upside down- doctors destroy health, psychiatrists destroy minds, lawyers
destroy justice, the major media destroy information, governments destroy
freedom and religions destroy spirituality - yet it is claimed to be
healthy, just, informed, free and spiritual. We live in a social system
whose community, wealth, love and life is derived from alienation,
poverty, self-hate and medical murder - yet we tell ourselves that it is
biologically and ecologically sustainable.

The Bush plan to screen whole US population for mental illness clearly
indicates that mental illness starts at the top.

Rev Dr Michael Ellner


Re: Steve Thompson

2004-12-13 Thread Steve Thompson
 --- J.A. Terranson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
 On Sat, 11 Dec 2004, Anonymous via the Cypherpunks Tonga Remailer wrote:
 
  Out of nowhere cometh Steve Thompson, and sayeth he all manner of
  things.  But, while his mouth moveth one way, he seemeth to move the
  other.
 
 

http://groups-beta.google.com/groups?q=%22steve+thompson%22start=0hl=ensafe=off;
 
  What hath suddenly attracted our AUK creep?

AUK denizens have lots and lots of credibility, and even though I don't
sell shit on eBay, I suppose I should be worried about being mistaken for
someone who does.  Perhaps I should be thankful for the warning?
 
 Who cares?  You got a beef, state it.

My detractors are strangely unwilling to state their 'beef' with any
significant degree of specificity.  Rather, they typically prefer to
employ misdirection.  I can't seem to wrap my head around their
motivations, but I do have a tentative hypothesis -- which I will spare
discussing on the list in the spirit of conserving the existing signal to
noise ratio.
 

Regards,

Steve


__ 
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca