A.M. Rutkowski wrote:
>
> Amusing conjecture.
Conjecture? I'm not sure what you mean, Tony. The authorities for
the list of keywords are:
-- Dr.Nicole Moguilevsky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Universite Libre
de Bruxelles)
-- Lyne Bouyjou <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
-- Philippe Mothe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> (Club
At 02:38 PM 3/15/00 -0500, you wrote:
>
>Maybe some of these have double meanings...but why:
>
>Chicago, tos (terms of service?), .tm, fish and chosen?
They probably habe a fishtank in their office and the
water has turned green and figured it was an e
What a bunch of idiots. Why don't they check for typos? And COBOL.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED][EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.dnso.com
It's about travel on expense accounts to places with good beer. - BKR
On Wed, Mar 15, 2000 at 02:36:22PM -0500, A.M. Rutkowski wrote:
> At 02:17 PM 3/15/2000, Michael Sondow wrote:
> >The following is a list of keywords reputedly in use by the U.S.
>
> Amusing conjecture. How many of them are domain names? :-)
...and old. Or the old "NSA Line-Eater" has evolved
Maybe some of these have double meanings...but why:
Chicago, tos (terms of service?), .tm, fish and chosen?
Interestingly I did have a client with "executive" in his keywords (an
executive search firm) that received an email from someone who told him
his job was to look for illegal things on t
At 02:17 PM 3/15/2000, Michael Sondow wrote:
>The following is a list of keywords reputedly in use by the U.S.
Amusing conjecture. How many of them are domain names? :-)
--tony
The following is a list of keywords reputedly in use by the U.S.
National Security Agency in their covert surveillance system of the
Internet - "Echelon" - for spying on the email of private citizens
around the world. This list was provided by European academics. (The
U.S. Government is being indi