>A trivial point, barely worth making time for, but folks ought not to
>think that brainwashing via t.v. has _anything_ substantively causal to
>do with the sad state we are in today.
It's amusing that Mr. May thinks that anyone gives a fuck if he (Mr. May) filters
him/her out for whatever reas
From: "Tyler Durden" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Also, some would argue that microsoft does use forms of coercion to get
> ultimately use their products.
Quite similar to the people who try and argue that Napoleon was a horse,
right?
> will be some slight pressure on 'Soft to get the prices back up to
On Wed, 8 Jan 2003, Nomen Nescio wrote:
> It's amusing that Mr. May thinks that anyone gives a fuck if he (Mr. May) filters
>him/her out for whatever reason and considers worthwhile/effective effort to explain
>that reason at length every time, and yet doesn't consider that similar and far more
"I think you're drifting here from my original point, which that it is in no
way illegal, or even immoral, to run free software on hardware that you own,
and to pick any locks on the hardware you own, which would preclude you from
doing so."
Amen, brudda. So will the cops eventually bust down m
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 10:46 AM, Igor Chudov wrote:
> A nice article, although I was under impression that basically the
> remailer network was no longer operable. Wanted to send some joke stuff
> through them and was unable to do so due to lack of working remailers.
According to http:/
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/28749.html
The entertainment lobby has failed to persuade a Norwegian court to convict
a teenager for creating a utility for playing back DVDs on his own computer.
Jon Lech Johansen has been acquitted of all charges in a trial that tested
the legality of the
> Eric Cordian[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] wrote:
>
[...]
> Ignoring for the moment that The Neo Project had zero chance of factoring
> a 2048 bit key using publicly available algorithms, their caving under
> imagined legal pressure strikes me as a really bad precedent.
>
[...]
The N
Tim writes:
> Given that x86 boxes without Windows installed can now be had for about
> the price of an XBox, and given that the graphics chip in the Xbox is
> not used by any of the Linux server uses (so far as I know), the main
> value of hacking the Xbox is for cuteness, to show that it can
at Tuesday, January 07, 2003 1:14 AM, Michael Motyka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
was seen to say:
> financial resources,
> other than those that pass through verified identity
> gatekeepers;
That's an odd way to spell "Campaign Fund Contributing Corporations"
Dear John A. Grossman, MA AAG:
You might also subpeona the masters of
http://216.239.53.100/search?q=cache:NW6ZES17aTcC:cryptome.org/sec-con.htm+&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
You might also ponder the words of the First Fellatrix:
I think people have not quite gotten their hands around the
speed at which info
It was written...
"Commonwealth before said GRAND JURY in the matter of Commonwealth v. John
Doe, and bring with him/her all logs recording the I.P. addresses and/or
users who visited "http://cryptome.org/sec-con.htm"; between 11/7/02
00:00:00 GMT and 11/14/02 23:59:59 GMT. If no such log exis
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 10:37 AM, Eric Cordian wrote:
It is said that Microsoft loses money on every one sold, and the box
would
certainly make a lovely Linux box or Web Server providing you could run
something other than Microsoft-signed binaries on it.
Given that x86 boxes without Win
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 10:46 AM, Igor Chudov wrote:
A nice article, although I was under impression that basically the
remailer network was no longer operable. Wanted to send some joke stuff
through them and was unable to do so due to lack of working remailers.
igor
First, please d
On Tuesday, January 7, 2003, at 02:04 AM, Bill Stewart wrote:
At 12:42 AM 01/07/2003 -0800, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
At 05:14 PM 1/6/03 -0800, Michael Motyka wrote:
>
>BTW, I think I read somewhere that when the water gets too hot the
frog just leaves.
>
>It was in print, it must be true.
P
Slashdot is reporting that The Neo Project, a distributed computing
effort, has ceased trying to factor Microsoft's Xbox binary signing key,
due to "legal reasons," and the fact that many of their current
participants don't want to be soiled by association with something having
a nefarious reputati
Time:Jan. 14, 2003
Second Tuesday of each month
7:00 - 9:00 pm (or later)
Location:Central Market HEB Cafe
38th and N. Lamar
Weather permitting we meet in the un-covered tables.
Michael Motyka writes
>BTW, I think I read somewhere that when the water gets too hot the frog just
leaves. It was in print, it must be true
At 12:42 AM 01/07/2003 -0800, Major Variola (ret) wrote:
At 05:14 PM 1/6/03 -0800, Michael Motyka wrote:
>
>BTW, I think I read somewhere that when the water gets too hot the frog
just leaves.
>
>It was in print, it must be true.
Perhaps it is. But if you put a TV in the pot with the frog, he g
On Sunday, January 5, 2003, at 11:33 PM, Anonymous wrote:
Blah wrote quite an excellent post. In fact, I've met few physics PhDs
which would have been able to respond so well. So needless to say, my
curiosity is peaked concerning who Blah is in "the real
Or even piqued.
world".
Weirder st
>BTW, I think I read somewhere that when the water gets too hot the frog just
>leaves.
Like someone already mentioned, all that is needed for the total collapse of the US
government is that 90+% of sheeple abstains from TV and newspapers for 30 consecutive
days (externally induced psychosis ne
Somebody said,
> Frankly, if using my card saves me $10 on a roast,
> it's hard for me not to think it's a good exchange..
Hogwash. It's not saving customers anything at all.
Same gimmick as credit cards. Take away a percentage
from noncard-holders and give it to the cardholders.
What economic
Anybody know the TI chip used in Ford 2002 and newer
immobilizers? I've found a white paper on TI's web
site that describes their challenge/response system,
but nobody at Ford customer service has a clue what
I'm talking about.
Ford calls it "securilock", but the Ilco tester at
my local hardware
At 05:14 PM 1/6/03 -0800, Michael Motyka wrote:
>
>BTW, I think I read somewhere that when the water gets too hot the frog
just leaves.
>
>It was in print, it must be true.
Perhaps it is. But if you put a TV in the pot with the frog, he gets
distracted...
Date: Sat, 4 Jan 2003 04:12:41 -0500 (EST)
From: Michael J. Freedman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Tarzan code
Hi everybody,
So tonight I threw up a tarball of Tarzan's code, after finally updating
it against new releases of its dependencies. It's released under the GPL.
http:
-- Forwarded message --
Date: Mon, 6 Jan 2003 12:39:24 -0800 (PST)
From: Bram Cohen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [p2p-hackers] p2p-hackers meeting, this upcoming sunday
usual time, usual place
when: second sunday, this time it's the 12th, 3pm till whenever we
People,
Please don't quote a long article and then bottom-post a few comments.
Or top-post a few comments. In fact, the best idea is to only quote
enough to remind other readers what you are commenting on.
It's not a matter of bandwidth, it's a matter of relevance and
consideration.
I plan to
An Metet <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote :
>>
>> On Saturday, December 21, 2002, at 10:07 AM, Eugen Leitl wrote:
>>
>> http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2002/1217/1
>>
>> Policing Bioterror Research
>>
>> One of science's hottest fields is now becoming one of its most heavily
>> regulate
On Tue, 24 Dec 2002, Anonymous wrote:
> (unrelated, I noticed that there is no un-crippled free version of PGP
> for windows XP any more - 8.0 beta expired)
What about PGP 8.0 Freeware? That isn't "crippled". (It doesn't include
automatic email plugins, which many think are a bad idea anyway, and
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