ble for review.
Surprisingly, I'm not the only one that feels this way.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cts is thus advancing the cause of anonymity in
cyberspace.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
OpenOffice can read Excel spreadsheets, and I would assume it can
save the changes back to them as well.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
antee that
the computers have direct Internet access; it's likely everything is
funneled through proxies.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
bably need to reboot the machine and
you then have maybe 15-20 minutes before a librarian notices you. Now,
the Harris County libraries might be different; I have not gone to one.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ur library card and possible
criminal prosecution if caught. Needless to say, I haven't tried. The
best you could do from Houston libraries would be a proxy accessed via
HTTPS. At one time you could telnet, but that has long since passed.
Other public libraries? Who knows.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
s you camp out in the Starbucks parking lot. Not that
middleman is not useful, mind you (this applies to both Tor and
Mixmaster).
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
lain English?
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Science for that matter)? Was I frozen for that long?
This is actually a release announcement for Tor 0.1.0.0-rc6 that was not
labeled as such, posted through the randseed Mixmaster remailer.
To the schmuck that posted the original: make it clearer next time, with
a clear subject line.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
*BANG* [EMAIL PROTECTED] NO TERRIER"
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
#x27;re a lot more trustworthy than
some US-based corporations.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
think they are
that dishonest, especially after some of the crap the US government has
pulled in the last few years.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
nel, which
when added to the rest of the existing GNU OS, written by Richard
Stallman among others, allowed a completely free operating system.
Please don't continue to spread the misconception that Linus Torvalds
wrote the entire (GNU) operating system.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ally don't trust Microsoft at all. They had their chance to keep
my trust, and they blew it, big time.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
gly tell the truth.
In other words, NGSCB/Palladium/etc doesn't give you an advantage in the
least when you step onto a playing field tilting heavily in Microsoft's
direction.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
;t it possible to emulate the TCPA chip in software, using one's own
RSA key, and thus signing whatever you damn well please with it instead
of whatever the chip wants to sign? So in reality, as far as remote
attestation goes, it's only as secure as the software driver used to
talk to
On Sat, 2005-01-08 at 13:20 -0800, John Young wrote:
> Here are photos of the Taser in manufacture, sale, training,
> promo, and accidental misfire:
>
>
> http://cryptome.org/taser-eyeball.htm
This came up 404 as of a few minutes ago.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[Note, I'm on the list, and I don't need two copies of every message in
this thread]
On Tue, 2004-12-21 at 06:34 -0600, J.A. Terranson wrote:
> On Mon, 20 Dec 2004, Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
>
> > Agreed, if you want
>
>
> And this, ladies and g
quot; back in the days when
DSL and cable modem connections were not as ubitiquous (yes I know
satellite is also an option but it's $DEITY-awful slow and only usable
for the most basic of needs). However, regulation of the Internet such
that couriers would be the only feasible way to move large amounts of
data around (burned to CD or DVD as the case may be) is not a joking
matter in the least.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
On Sun, 2004-12-19 at 12:01 -0600, J.A. Terranson wrote:
> On Sun, 19 Dec 2004, Shawn K. Quinn wrote:
>
> > He may not have a choice.
>
> Bullshit. 100% bullshit. Unless you are trying to cover a lot of
> lake, flying is an option, not a requirement. Driving sucks - I do
> it some more.
This is downright insensitive. (Mr. Monahan, if you actually get to read
this, Terranson does *not* represent the views of all of us in the
least.) I really have a good mind to archive this and send it back to
you when your wife gets pregnant and something similar happens to you.
And again, he likely didn't continue to fly because he wanted to. See #2
above.
--
Shawn K. Quinn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Just today, I started getting multiple copies of each message. Am I the
only person this is happening to?
--
Shawn K. Quinn
On Tuesday 2004 April 13 17:26, sunder wrote:
> Pete Capelli wrote:
> > Since when is there a guarantee of privacy in email??
>
> Since PhilZ wrote PGP?
But then, only if you use PGP (or GnuPG or what have you).
--
Shawn K. Quinn
I'd recommend OpenBSD over just about anything else.
Unless of course, there is hardware you need to use that isn't
supported under OpenBSD.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
to record a grossly inaccurate peak speed,
and thus, the only version of the story we can give full credibility to
is the defense's version. If I were on that jury, I'd still vote for a
conviction. Matos is a scofflaw and deserves exactly what he is
getting.
--
Shawn K. Quinn
here goes your privacy.
Granted, yes, it's a violation of laws like the ECPA (in the US) to do
so, but when there are potentially dozens of people who could have
divulged a message, how does one know who to prosecute?
--
Shawn K. Quinn
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