At 04:34 PM 10/28/2002, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
>The e-mails sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] were obtained earlier this month
by first clicking on a link labeled "Check your e-mail in Uruk" on the
homepage of Iraq's state-controlled ISP, Uruklink.net, then guessing the
login name and password -- both
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At 05:15 PM 10/29/2002 -0500, you wrote:
>In any event, not knowing who is an uplink, who is a buffer is very
>niceI wonder if there's some other way to accomplish this.
Perhaps, but it would also make spoofing by LE or their supporters a lot
e
I've submitted a pre-print of my anonymous credential system to the IACR
ePrint server. Thanks to all of you who responded to the questions I posted
here while working on it. I'd love to hear feedback from any and all before I
sumbit it for publication; particularly, I want to make sure I haven'
"Everyone pretty much knows who all is involved, and has to keep in contact
with each other in order to capture video optimally."
Well, I've been wondering how feasible it would be to implement video
transfer in such a way that the "cameras" don't know the "buffers" in
advance. Haven't put pen
> Item: At most Cypherpunks meetings someone is sitting with their laptop
> open, recording notes (or whatever). I usually wonder what they plan to
> do with the notes...not in any paranoid sense, just wondering if
> they'll ever look at the notes again, and why.
Taking notes ???
We're just ch
at Monday, October 28, 2002 9:34 PM, Major Variola (ret) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
was seen to say:
> Did that Wired reporter just admit to a crime? Does it matter that
> the site is overseas? That they're "Evil(tm)"??
nope, hacking into overseas servers is officially not a crime in the
US - after that
> http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,55999,00.html?tw=wn_ascii
>
> Implantable Chip, On Sale Now
> The VeriChip emits a 125-kilohertz radio frequency signal that transmits
> * Controlling access to physical structures, such as government or private
> sector offices or nuclear power plan
Here's a minor digression into something which I occasionally think
about: whether it's useful to take detailed notes at conferences (or
classrooms, for that matter) or just listen intently.
On Tuesday, October 29, 2002, at 07:11 AM, Trei, Peter wrote:
A 6 hour fuel cell would alleviate this p
On Tuesday, October 29, 2002, at 06:19 AM, Mark Szewczul wrote:
on AA, if you look down between the seats, on the
armrest base, there is a little connector there that
gives out 12V and looks remarkably like the cigarette
lighter plug in your car! Use that people..and
pressure your airlines to i
At 10:19 PM 10/28/02 -0500, Dave Emery wrote:
>On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 09:32:48PM -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:
>> Any chance this is the same Dave Emery who does the radio broadcasts?
(I
>> listen from WFMU). If so, man! If a tiny fraction of the stuff you
have
>> said over the years is true, well...
At 10:23 PM 10/28/02 -, Axolotl2 wrote:
>On Sat, 26 Oct 2002 17:59:17 +1300 (NZDT), you wrote:
>>
>
>> >Next in the series:
>> >"FBI warns bouncy castles may be targeted"
>>
>> Nahh, "FBI warns buses may be targeted, leading to late or missed
buses".
>>
>
>The primary targets will likely be pla
At 10:44 PM 10/28/02 -0800, Charles Lucas wrote:
>Goal:
>
>To capture and distribute video in such a fashion that confiscation of
the
>camera and other equipment will not result in confiscation of captured
>video.
I dare you to call your system "E-Jazeera"
on AA, if you look down between the seats, on the
armrest base, there is a little connector there that
gives out 12V and looks remarkably like the cigarette
lighter plug in your car! Use that people..and
pressure your airlines to install more (First class
gets the AC plug to boot), or threaten the
> Mark Szewczul[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>
> on AA, if you look down between the seats, on the
> armrest base, there is a little connector there that
> gives out 12V and looks remarkably like the cigarette
> lighter plug in your car! Use that people..and
> pressure your airlines to install more (F
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Marcel Popescu wrote:
> 3. Put it between brackets:
> [http://www.fuelcelltoday.com/FuelCellToday/IndustryInformation/IndustryInfo
> rmationExternal/NewsDisplayArticle/0,1471,1888,00.html]
>
> Ok, I'm not very sure about the last one... but I read that it works.
Angled brack
From: "Trei, Peter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> (my Microsoft email software will of course mangle the URL:)
>
http://www.fuelcelltoday.com/FuelCellToday/IndustryInformation/IndustryInfor
> mationExternal/NewsDisplayArticle/0,1471,1888,00.html
1. TinyURL: http://tinyurl.com/2a70
2. MakeAShorterLink: ht
I recently had a discussion about this with some local folks...
We dreamed up a scheme something like this:
N number of people with broadcast cameras.
N or less people with receiving "buffer" backpacks.
A few basestations, which could be housed in a local building, or in a
parked vehicle with som
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