ing them the last day they may return
the book without forfeiting the deposit. They can charge a fee for this
service and use it as a new revenue source.
Steve
ation
for legal business purposes, which of course there are.
Steve
Quick, before they change it: search Google using the term "failure"
(without the quotes)
On 10/4/05, gwen hastings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Troll Mode on:
> TOR was originally developed as a result of CIA/NRL funding:)
...
> BTW running TOR makes you very visible that you are running tor even as
> a client.. its quite a noisy protocol
Well, of course that "feature" is built in. Th
On 9/28/05, Roy M. Silvernail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A Wikiwhiner wrote
> > I have valid although perhaps unpopular
> > contributions to make, and not only is my freedom to express myself
> > limited, the quality of the material on Wikipedia suffers due to the
> > absence of my perspective.
At 09:14 AM 9/20/2005, Tyler Durden wrote:
Very interesting CPunks reading, for a variety of reasons.
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,68894,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1
Of course, the fact that Lucent has been in shit shape financially must
have nothing to do with what is effectively a
On 9/19/05, R.A. Hettinga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 2:29 PM -0400 9/19/05, Steve Furlong wrote:
> >What does George Bushitler stand to gain from this machine?
>
> There you go again...
Just to be clear, that's what I'd expect the current wave of j-school
grad
On 9/16/05, R.A. Hettinga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Time travel aside (okay, innumeracy aside, some state-school philosophy
> majors can't count, either...), if I'm a reporter, this is "new
> journalism", since most of the missive is about *wonderful* *ME*...
Never mind the numbers. How does th
On 9/19/05, James A. Donald <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> like Ben and Jerry's rainforest crunch, where by buying
> overpriced and extra fattening icecream, you were
> supposedly saving the rainforest and preserving
> indigenous cultures .
--shrug-- It's better than directly contributing to most "c
On 9/9/05, Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone have a recent working email address? Does
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] still work?
You might try sending email to that address. If you don't get a
response, either it's not a good address or he thinks you're an idiot.
(Or he's dead, but he was
etail.jsp?id=81907
Steve
On 8/23/05, R.A. Hettinga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>
> At 1:39 PM -0400 8/23/05, Trei, Peter wrote:
>
> >"I [want] a new drug..."
>
> I would request the irony-impaired actually look up the lyrics of this paen
> to endogenous ero-endorphins, written by a dr
upply, I must succumb to temptation
> and
> question whether the Stalinst model of a demand economy (servicing an
> endless war on terror) hasn't been looked at by folks such as Wolfowitz,
> Cheney and so on.
Suckkumb all you want.
Regards,
Steve
__
Find your next car at http://autos.yahoo.ca
one privy to the GUID->meatspace map. Without
> access
> to the map, the tag still identifies its carrier as a U.S passport
> holder.
> Integrating this aspect into munitions is left as an exercise for the
> reader.
>
> > The only way I see it making a difference is
--- "J.A. Terranson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Aug 2005, Steve Thompson wrote:
>
> > --- Tyler Durden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > pretend you hate. But there is an up-side: you're too fucking stupid
> to
> > be of
People working with early versions of the forthcoming Intel-based
MacOS X operating system have discovered that Apple's new kernel
makes use of Intel's Trusted Computing hardware. If this "feature"
appears in a commercial, shipping version of Apple's OS, they'll lose
me as a customer -- I've used
d you hate. But there is an up-side: you're too fucking stupid to
be of permanent use to the 'Stazi', and so you can anticpate outliving
your usefulness eventually.
Regards,
Steve
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
urther bad-faith back-and-forth on your part would
be superfluous to the task of proving that you won't be serious when you
reply to my messages.
Regards,
Steve
__
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Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around
http://mail.yahoo.com
uot; that we're responding correctly. In other
>
> words, as stupid as Canadians can be, Americans are often far stupider.
> And
> more belligerent, too, which is why we're in this mess.
I think you would better serve yourself if you were employed doing
something prod
ds, everyone here in NYC knows that we've given up a lot for the
sake of the appearence of security, but no one seems to give a damn.
The term 'securisimilitude' (from verisimilitude) comes to mind.
Steve
--- John Kelsey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >From: Tyler Durden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Sent: Jul 23, 2005 9:17 PM
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Re: Well, they got what they want...
>
> ...
> >Saw a local security expert on the news, and he stated the
> >obvious: Rand
--- Tyler Durden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> >From: Steve Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: Re: Well, they got what they want...
> >Date: Sat, 23 Jul 2005 16:01:30 -0400 (EDT)
> >
> >--- Tyler Durden <
to be favoured by the Usual
Suspects.
> OK, OK...so the police are deterrents against a few lone crazy
> copycats, who don't have enough sense to enter away from police
> line-of-site. But it sure seems damned silly to be giving up
> constitutional protection for the
ct to be
called the "Lost Liberty Hotel." The hotel would include a museum on "the
loss of freedom in America." A spokesman insists "this is not a prank."
Perhaps not. "
Steve
ce of paper to those in power.
Lenny Bruce was certainly right when he said.. "In the halls of justice,
the only justice is in the halls."
Steve
On 6/24/05, J.A. Terranson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> http://www.masnet.org/news.asp?id=2560
>
> Italian Judge Orders 13 CIA Agents Arrested Over Kidnapping
John Marshall has made his decision. Now let him enforce it.
--
There are no bad teachers, only defective children.
gure.
Not surprising at all. The Bush camp's court agenda is spearheaded by
members of the Federalist Society which wants to roll back many of the SC's
decisions of the early-mid 20th century (esp. the Social Security Act and
the expansion of the Commerce Clause during FDR's reign).
Steve
gure.
Not surprising at all. The Bush camp's court agenda is spearheaded by
members of the Federalist Society which wants to roll back many of the SC's
decisions of the early-mid 20th century (esp. the Social Security Act and
the expansion of the Commerce Clause during FDR's reign).
Steve
people, and
(b) that they have no actual interest in my affairs. Both assertions are
quite false, but proving it is another matter -- and difficult too, given
the ignorance and stupidity currently in fashion at the moment.
But I don't mean to provoke an off-topic discussion in this
bber hoses, they're probably going to kill you anyways.
Hoses leave marks, of course, and if there's one thing a spook hates, it
is leaving evidence of his or her passage. Unless his or her mission is
about leaving visible traces, of course.
Regards,
Steve
___
--- "A.Melon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- Steve Thompson scribbled:
> > --- Tyler Durden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[incinerating the evidence]
> > > What's wrong with this idea?
>
> The Alabama hillbilly remains free to harass you the next
ahead of time so they
won't inconvenience your criminal activities.
Regards,
Steve
__
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ou'll need a faraday cage and colliding pulse mode-locked dye laser for
>
> quantum encryption" bullshit actually detracts from Cypherpunkly
> notionsit makes the use of encryption a red flag sticking out of a
> sea
> of unencrypted grey. And then, of course, in
ld.
Personally, I believe that I fail to receive an unknown amount of email
and telephone communications because of cut-out mediated privacy invasions
of the kind that you suggest here. In the trivial case, some asshole
might periodicall
x27; is triggered if you fail to contact your
agent at regular intervals. Miss two appointments and a 'wet worker' is
dispatched
Steve
pot is likely to be
within 10 degrees of horizontal. They are commonly used in commercial TV
and radio broadcast. I think its possible to get 6 or more db gain this
way with a small antenna. 6 db effectively doubles your range.
Steve
The tenuous nature of online anonymity was underlined yesterday, thanks to
the final ruling in the Motley Fool libel case.
Terry Smith, chief executive of city firm Collins Stewart Tullett, won
undisclosed damages from Jeremy Benjamin, a fund manager. Benjamin had
posted what he now accepts as
8:12PM -0800, Steve Schear wrote:
> >Why? BT is designed with zero privacy in mind.
>
> And this was a profound error, IMHO. One of the epiphanies from my
work at
It was a deliberate decision on Bram Cohen's part. BT is a very useful medium
to deliver software updates, movies und
ffer the content or obtain it without likely
identification?
Steve
into
clients or hiding them inside a TOR-like proxy network weren't taken earlier.
Steve
Perhaps I'm missing something but doesn't the use of a proxy strip off
information essential to this exploit? If so, only newbies and lusers will
ID'd.
Steve
"Thank you for using ZipLip's free secure mail service. We appreciate your
patronage and wish to inform you that we will be discontinuing our service
on June 30th, 2005. For various reasons, including new U.S. legislation
which significantly impacts the individual's privacy rights, ZipLip is no
--- Anonymous <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
> Still, if we could achieve mutual respect and freedom in the physical
> world, we would happily pay the price of increased rudeness online.
Speak for yourself.
Reg
nclusion is not so foreign as to be
beyond comprehension, but rather represents a problem that no-one is
willing to deal with -- thus compounding the error.
Since you still aren't bothering to address messages I write in good
faith, I suggest that you should go fuck yourself.
Regards,
Steve
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--- Justin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2005-02-16T13:31:14-0500, Steve Thompson wrote:
> > --- "R.A. Hettinga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > [snip]
> > > Property is like rights. We create it inherently, because we're
> human,
t is certainly an
option, eh?
Regards,
Steve
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--- Justin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2005-02-15T13:23:37-0500, Steve Thompson wrote:
> > --- "James A. Donald" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > [snip]
> > > As governments were created to smash property rights, they are
> > > always
ps you are using the term 'government' in a way that is not
common to most writers of modern American English?
Regards,
Steve
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core matter.
This list is becoming a chore to read. Would someone find out where Tim
May and Detwellier (for a start) are hiding, and please recommend them
back to Cypherpunks? When such as they were active, we could be assured
of lively and entertaining debate. These days, th
lexibility of the existing choices: it's
pretty much either all or nothing. Ultimately, I don't think that simple
black and white choices will suffice for my purposes.
Regards,
Steve
> Simson Garfinkel is a researcher in the field of computer security. He
> is
> the autho
on.
Strategic ignorance is therefore extremely valuable --
particularly to corrupt government and corporate officers.
Regards,
Steve
__
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Ralph Merkle hanging on the wall in your bedroom?
etc.
Face it. You aren't going to get straight answers to questions from
highly technical internet sophisticates, even if you ask politely. They
have better things to do than to justify and explain their ideologies when
in fact such
geson of the
Industry of perpetrating a massive fraud, then I suppose one requires
rock-solid evidence -- which I admit I cannot possibly produce at this
time.
Regards,
Steve
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to fly-by-wire
steering, especially hybrids that don't have an internal combustion engine
running all the time so they can't easily use traditional hydraulic servo
steering.
Steve
fiscated as a part of legitimate intelligence excercises and
operations are generally made available on a first-come, first-
serve basis to employees in good standing. Other benefits include
super-human abilities and powers unavailable to normal human
beings.
All in all, it sounds like a great place to
erit.
Am I making sense here, or is this merely superficially
obfuscated surplus verbiage? You decide. In the meantime
I will further consider, in my few moments of quiet and
solitude, the negative aspects of the current state in which
civil and human rights are sel
ese images should have a lot of spectral energy in the same frequency
bands where Stego would normally show.
Images that ideal for hiding secret messages using stego are those that by
default contain stego with no particular hidden content. A sort of Crowds
approach to stego.
Steve
okWorld, fraud, larceny, perjury, and murder
are merely the tools of the trade.
And don't get me started on about the cartels.
Regards,
Steve
__
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d drug usage would drop if many of those drugs
> were
> legalized and taxed. But God forbid that happen because what would all
> those
> policemen do for a living? Prison workers? Judges?
Well, pot is bad. Duh.
Regards,
Steve
_
--- "Trei, Peter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> > -Original Message-
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Steve Thompson
> > Sent: Tuesday, January 25, 2005 12:13 PM
> > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> &
warmongers who have been entirely subverting my ambitions and
interests for years, simply because they like the challenge.)
And in continuing with the outing, I predict that God was named John by
his parents, and has official carte blanche to fuck up t
ly to you went
unanswered just when I was starting to make some difficult
points. Surely that was an oversight?
Regards,
Steve
__
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tion" simply aren't enough
to undo the damage.
By the way, I really enjoy the drugs used today in the service of official
knowledge acquisition. I sincerely hope that many more people enjoy them
too. And I would be remiss if I failed to remind everyone who is a
classified information.
> A
> department spokesman
>
> confirmed that the memos,
>
> posted at
>
> http://cryptome.org , were
>
> legitimate.
Were legitimate? What happened, did their content expire or something?
Regards,
Steve
__
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca
at their network eavesdropping capabilities
require secrecy and non-disclosure. Sure they can pretend that
the userland tools are super high-tech, but the analysis and
inteception of arbitrary network traffic is not rocket science.
Regards,
Steve
ction that makes it no different to
chemical addiction.
> alas. But slowly people are awakening to the facts.
Mmm-hmmm.
> The world will be a sea of cameras and vision. But
> that needn't be a nightmare, if we can hold the
> watchers accountable by looking BACK.
Well, yes
n model to
their heart's content -- given sufficient motivation, however you might
characterise that...
What's your threat model?
Regards,
Steve
__
Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca
lped to create this beast you are now bitching about, and after it
> bit you, you *continued to fly*, and thereby feed it some more.
These things happen from time to time. The best advice that you could
give to the original author w
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
--- Justin Guyett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2004-12-11T08:10:27-0500, Steve Thompson wrote:
> > [snip]
> > This is what happens when one picks up ideas from people who present
> them
> > second-hand (or at even greater distances from their origin) and who
>
e disk and return the computer" that came out of the Steve
> Jackson
> > case, not that they're always followed;
>
> Actually (at least here in the Midwest), it's copy ("image") the machine
> and provide a copy of that image. The computer and original drive
--- "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
--- "R.W. (Bob) Erickson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Thompson wrote:
> > [take back the night]
>
> Yep, the state fights to preserve its "life"
> while the people suffer their own.
> The mistake of top down thinking
> lies in the inab
--- Justin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 2004-12-10T15:50:22-0500, Steve Thompson wrote:
[snip]
> > state's personality, the state has the right, nay, obligation to
> preserve
> > its identity unchanged. (Isn't this pretty much polysci 101
> material?)
&
--- "R.W. (Bob) Erickson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Thompson wrote:
>
> > --- "R.W. (Bob) Erickson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > [Colouring outside the lines]
> >
> Yes, you have a point there.I guess a better cover would b
think one would be able to buy
half-decent weed from time to time. But no... It's all crap.
Regards,
Steve
__
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h of chronus.
If you go about tapping the peristaltic functions of the general public,
you will definately get in shit. Why, you might even get your hands
dirty.
Regards,
Steve
__
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--- "Roy M. Silvernail" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Thompson wrote:
> > [imagine]
>
> Imagine using observed timing to conclude that your agent provocateur
> operates from geostationary orbit.
That would be a neat trick considering the variety of like
--- "R.W. (Bob) Erickson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Thompson wrote:
> >[assholes]
>
> You tell them, Steve
I believe I just did.
> Insanity is a great cover for an insurectionist!
I suppose it could be, although I am give to belive that resident
--- "J.A. Terranson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> On Thu, 9 Dec 2004, Steve Thompson wrote:
>
>
>
> (STANDING OVATION) (SOUNDS OF MANY HANDS CLAPPING)
>
> Thank you Steve, for that short but entertaining look into the dark
> recesses of our
#x27;t find a hidden terrorist message even if someone shoved
half of it up the ass of Commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli, and the other
half up the ass of Deputy Commissioner Paul Gauvin, and then sent them a
map with clear directions written on it leading directly to the location
of both asshol
the investigative tools and authority to make definitive findings of fact,
and to take corrective action should they find incidents of criminal
liability, but as yet have refused to do so. And *that* is another matter
entirely.
Regards,
Steve
gging
technique.
What makes this odd is that the Wired article makes no mention of Tempest,
only of the possibility of there being a back door, which in the usual
vernacular of computer security, usually implies a method for unauthorised
access or use of the software system in question.
Regards
y of their
intrusive meddling in the commons.
All in the name of science, of course.
Regards,
Steve
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http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=235904&page=1
...Sinicki, who has been job hunting in his wife's native France,
doesn't blame Bush for what he believes is happening in America, but
he doesn't believe Bush will change things for the better, either.
"All these things were going on before Bush
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 10:47, R.A. Hettinga wrote:
> At 10:38 AM -0500 12/8/04, Steve Furlong wrote:
> >anarchist
>
> Bzzt wrong answer.
>
> Must filter that *in*, thankewverramuch...
I know what you mean, but (a) I didn't write what I meant, and (b) I
don't th
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 09:26, R.A. Hettinga wrote:
> At 9:17 AM -0500 12/8/04, John Kelsey wrote:
> > But once in awhile, even amidst the crazy rantings about useless eaters
> >and ovens, he'll toss out something that shows some deep, coherent thought
> >about some issue in a new and fascinating dir
--- Nomen Nescio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve Furlong:
>
> > Random racist ranting is also required. There are some racist
> > assholes currently posting on cpunks, but none have quite the May
> > flavor.
>
> LOL
>
> You can say that again.
--- "privacy.at Anonymous Remailer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Steve Thompson:
>
> > If that's true, then the government couldn't have stolen it.
> > However, I suspect that mainfraim code of any sophistication is
> > rarely released into the
--- "R.A. Hettinga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 10:12 PM -0500 12/6/04, Steve Thompson wrote:
> >But I cannot prove
> >it.
>
> Tee hee...
>
>
This from the guy who took over where Choate left off. Although at least
you include the article tex
ment as
much as anyone, mere talk about sex never really did it for me. But I
confess that I like to watch sometimes.
At any rate, Detweiller is another person entirely. But I cannot prove
it.
Regards,
Steve
__
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--- "R.A. Hettinga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 3:34 PM -0500 12/6/04, Steve Thompson wrote:
> >I rather suspect that
> >the people who 0wn the upstream pipe from my points of access are
> toying
> >with their ability to interpose their data in
On Mon, 2004-12-06 at 17:00, R.A. Hettinga wrote:
> At 3:34 PM -0500 12/6/04, Steve Thompson wrote:
> >I rather suspect that
> >the people who 0wn the upstream pipe from my points of access are toying
> >with their ability to interpose their data in place of quasi-authoritat
--- Steve Thompson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> --- Tyler Durden <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >Bonus question:
> > >
> > >Who is the author of the origin question that inspired the copycats?
>
> > Well, I remember May posting it but I don
--- Neil Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, 2004-12-05 at 20:58 -0500, Steve Thompson wrote:
> >[PROMIS]
> Yes, I have found that puzzling too.
>
> Articles I have read refer to the original version being "in the public
> domain". You'd
x27; May is gettin' a little lonely out there!
I doubt it. May has his gun collection for company.
Regards,
Steve
__
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al
option in that regard) so any information that does leak is bound to be
sketchy, but surely there must be _some_ accurate data available
concerning its nature, especially considering the fact that it has been
under development for two or thre
on:
Who is the author of the origin question that inspired the copycats?
Regards,
Steve
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On Sun, 2004-12-05 at 09:30, R.A. Hettinga wrote:
> At 8:06 AM -0600 12/5/04, Neil Johnson wrote:
> >Where is Tim May when when you need him? :-)
>
> Nah, this is mere Younglish wierdness.
>
> You have to talk about useless eaters to be totally mayified...
Random racist ranting is also required.
On Sat, 2004-12-04 at 20:42, R.W. (Bob) Erickson wrote:
> Bobhood is never a light burden, as I'm sure RAH can attest
Bobbittization would make the burden lighter.
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