Christopher,

That's a very selective reading and I don't particularly care what you think.  
For the record, this is what was stated:

"Basically, I keep a track of site numbers year-on-year, site availability from 
3rd party monitoring and read comments on forums and chat.  From what I can 
gather, most of these sites were suspected of being honeypots due to their 
tendency to remove anything rape/violence related.  That is, they appeared 
sanitised in some way.  Then all of sudden, they started disappearing.  Some 
were connected with major busts of hosting providers, others without any 
indication what happened."
Mark McCarron - June 25th

If he attempts to insinuate that I was accessing or attempting access illegal 
material again, I will sue him.

He obviously has a problem, not with me, but the discussion about securing Tor 
against intelligence agencies with a global view and the fact that I pointed 
out that Tor appears to be designed to fit into the US intelligence apparatus.  
In short, cleverly designed spyware/malware.

Given that such a modification would only serve to improve Tor, then everyone 
needs to question what Mr Morgan
(Mick) is up to.

Regards,

Mark McCarron

Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2014 16:32:24 -0700
From: cb...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [tor-talk] Illegal Activity As A Metric of Tor Security and 
Anonymity
To: mark.mccar...@live.co.uk

Please do us all a favor and send this only to the relevant subscriber, instead 
of sending them two copies. No one else cares, other than to serve to discredit 
yourself. This is what you said:"I
 have been examining the number of what would normally be deemed as illegal 
sites sites on Tor.  Eliminating the narcotics trade, as these tend to be 
intelligence agency backed enterprises, a serious decline has been noted across 
the board.This would tend to suggest that exposure is common place and users no 
longer feel safe.  In the more serious categories, such as child porn and 
violent sexual material"This is what you have quoted Mick as saying:Interesting 
point. In many, if not most, countries the very act ofaccessing such material 
is illegal. Yet, McCarron, in his post of
 25June, admitted on this public email list that he now had difficultyaccessing 
"the more serious categories, such as child porn andviolent sexual 
material".That strikes me as stupid. Certainly it is not "low key" as you 
say.Mick has not, in my opinion, defamed you. But has pointed out that in some 
countries accessing "child porn and violent sexual material" is illegal, but 
neither did you say that you had actually accessed any of those sites - what 
you said is that you had "been examining the number" of sites like that that 
existed.
I see an apology in order, but by you, not by Mick.
--Christopher Booth        From: Mark McCarron <mark.mccar...@live.co.uk> To: 
"tor-talk@lists.torproject.org" <tor-talk@lists.torproject.org>; 
"m...@rlogin.net" <m...@rlogin.net>  Sent: Monday, June 30, 2014 2:14 PM 
Subject: Re: [tor-talk] Illegal Activity As A Metric of Tor Security and 
Anonymity   Mick,I would be very careful what you claim in your emails.  I have 
the capability of suing you into oblivion, that email constitutes defamation.  
Nothing like that was ever said, either retract it or I will take you for 
everything that you've got.Your choice.Regards,Mark McCarronDate: Mon, 30 Jun 
2014 18:11:50 +0100From: mbm@rlogin.netTo: 
tor-talk@lists.torproject.orgSubject: Re: [tor-talk] Illegal Activity As A 
Metric of Tor Security and AnonymityOn Mon, 30 Jun 2014 10:05:06 
-0400...@t-3.net allegedly wrote:> > I have a hard time believing that you've 
been effectively tracking so > much 'child porn, rape, snuff videos' content 
that you can > conclusively say that all such content has sudd
 enly disappeared from > Tor. My knowledge about the way that kind of content 
works is, that> no one person would be able to access much of it unless they 
were a > creator/trader of the stuff. Such a person would be trying to be > 
low-key about it out of fear for themselves, not posting in this list > and 
seeming to admit to having been tracking that content. So -
 - not > a match, for whatever reason. Interesting point. In many, if not most, 
countries the very act ofaccessing such material is illegal. Yet, McCarron, in 
his post of 25June, admitted on this public email list that he now had 
difficultyaccessing "the more serious categories, such as child porn andviolent 
sexual material". That strikes me as stupid. Certainly it is not "low key" as 
you say. Mick  
---------------------------------------------------------------------  Mick 
Morgan gpg fingerprint: FC23 3338 F664 5E66 876B  72C0 0A1F E60B 5BAD D312 
http://baldric.net 
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