Choice quote:
"The more subtle but less obvious dilemma is of a student who may room
with a
person who is an American student ... in a sensitive area," said Harpel,
whose
organization represents 213 public universities in every state in the
country.
http://www.taipeitimes.com/news/2002/05/02/sto
VME is so complex that I seriously doubt someone would ever be able to
reverse engineer it. And if they did, they would find no weaknesses. And
because it is one of a kind, the 25 year technology patent will protect any
attempts to copy it. Given what I know about the company and the algorit
"Major Variola (ret)" forwarded:
> The issue arose in October when Bush directed the government to
> prohibit certain international students from receiving "education and
> training in sensitive areas" involving the "development and use of
> weapons of mass destruction."
The most horrific techn
it would turn out to be just like this...
May 1, 2002 Washington, DC -- The Information Technology Industry Council
(ITI) and the Information Technology Association of America (ITAA)
submitted joint comments today to the Defense Acquisition Regulations
Council (DAR Council) requesting clarific
According to "The Progressive," which I assume is the same outfit that
published the H-bomb plans, a bunch of activists were blocked from
traveling to D.C. for a protest march. More than just a couple, in fact.
This looks like exactly the kind of abuse of power we all knew the
"watch lists" an
On Thursday, May 2, 2002, at 07:50 AM, Trei, Peter wrote:
> I've been looking into switching to DirecTV, since my local cable
> monopoly (ATT Broadband) has such lousy service (their response
> to the sat-tv threat is not to improve their service, but to broadcast
> FUD about satellite's expense,
What an dumbass Feinstein is, the House and the Senate vote in a
draconian bill with zero forethought and she has the goddamned gall to
say we should not rush to judgement.
http://www.thehill.com/050102/patriot.shtm
I think were in a very difficult time where our national security is
threaten
Steve Furlong wrote:
>US tanks don't have built-in locks as in private autos. They have heavy
>wire loops or bars and are locked with ordinary (if rather heavy-duty)
>padlocks.
Speaking of securing military vehicles... I understand that most US fighter
jets are not equipped with self-starters. T
On Wed, 1 May 2002, Tim May wrote:
> According to "The Progressive," which I assume is the same outfit that
> published the H-bomb plans, a bunch of activists were blocked from
yup. I was there :-)
> traveling to D.C. for a protest march. More than just a couple, in fact.
> This looks like
>From Tim:
: These kids and activists were by no stretch of the imagination likely to
: be carrying hijacking tools...and even if they were suspected to be
: doing so, physical searches would resolve the issue.
:
: Fuck these fascists. Fuck them dead.Fuck them all dead. Fuck Washington
: with a
> [EMAIL PROTECTED][SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> > Nothing. I think that's correct. The only problem is broadcasting the
> > keys is not simple. The latest systems change keys frequently-- as
> > often as every 20 or 30 seconds I seem to remember. If you change the
> > channel, you need a new k
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