868 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
868 lines
43 KiB
Plaintext
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Computer underground Digest Wed May 29, 1997 Volume 9 : Issue 40
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ISSN 1004-042X
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Editor: Jim Thomas (cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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News Editor: Gordon Meyer (gmeyer@sun.soci.niu.edu)
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Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
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Shadow Master: Stanton McCandlish
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Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
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Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
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Ian Dickinson
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Field Agent Extraordinaire: David Smith
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Cu Digest Homepage: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest
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CONTENTS, #9.40 (Wed, May 29, 1997)
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File 1--Fiber Keeps Its Promise - George Gilder Essay
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File 2--FBI arrests alleged hacker-for-profit
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File 3--HACK - Texas Driver's License database on the web
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File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
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CuD ADMINISTRATIVE, EDITORIAL, AND SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION APPEARS IN
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THE CONCLUDING FILE AT THE END OF EACH ISSUE.
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Date: Thu, 22 May 1997 01:04:32 -0400 (EDT)
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From: ptownson@MASSIS.LCS.MIT.EDU(TELECOM Digest Editor)
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Subject: File 1--Fiber Keeps Its Promise - George Gilder Essay
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((MODERATORS' NOTE: For those not familiar with Pat Townson's
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TELECOM DIGEST, it's a an exceptional resource. From the header
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of TcD:
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"TELECOM Digest is an electronic journal devoted mostly but
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not exclusively to telecommunications topics. It is
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circulated anywhere there is email, in addition to various
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telecom forums on a variety of public service systems and
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networks including Compuserve and America On Line. It is also
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gatewayed to Usenet where it appears as the moderated
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newsgroup 'comp.dcom.telecom'. Subscriptions are available to
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qualified organizations and individual readers. Write and tell
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us how you qualify:
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* ptownson@massis.lcs.mit.edu * ======" ))
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=============
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For a few years now, the Telecom Archives has been a repository for
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the several fine articles by George Gilder which have appeared in
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{Forbes}. You can review the entire series by pulling them from the
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archives -- http://telecom-digest.org in the subdirectory devoted
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to Gilder. As in the past, Gordon Jacobson will introduce the latest
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in the series.
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PAT
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Date--Mon, 19 May 1997 19:24:01 -0400
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From--Gordon Jacobson <gaj@portman.com>
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The Telecosm series of articles by George Gilder provides
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some interesting technological and cultural background that helps
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prepare readers to better understand and place in proper perspective
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the events relative to the National Data Super Highway, which are
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unfolding almost daily in the national press. I contacted the author
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and Forbes and as the preface below indicates obtained permission to
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post on the Internet. Please note that the preface to this article
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and all footnotes must be included when cross posting or uploading
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this article.
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The following article, FIBER KEEPS ITS PROMISE, was
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adapted from the February, 1997 Gilder Technology Report
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and was published in Forbes ASAP, April 7, 1997. The
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article was prepared by the author as a review and
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update of important events relating to the bandwidth
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paradigm Gilder has advocatated from the onset of the
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Telecosm series in December of 1993.
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The author has been kind enough to restate his "vision"
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as a preface to this article for those on-line readers
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who are unfamiliar with the series.
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This article may be included in George Gilder's book,
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Telecosm, which will be published in 1997 by Simon &
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Schuster, as a sequel to Microcosm, published in 1989
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and Life After Television published by Norton in 1992.
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Subsequent chapters of Telecosm will be serialized in
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Forbes ASAP.
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THE GILDER VISION:
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Today, communications technologies are unleashing the Internet as
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the definitive force of a new industrial era, rendering the CPU
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peripheral and the net central. This "paradigm shift" is fundamental
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to comprehending the advent of the Telecosm.
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Technological paradigms are neither artificial nor arbitrary:
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they are the governing force in the practical life of human societies
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and economies. Apprehended by scientists, applied and tested by
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engineers, they reflect the profound - and permanent - truths of the
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universe. Accordingly, the laws of the microcosm do not simply give
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way to the laws of the telecosm. The microcosm is a crucial
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foundation of the telecosm, and my work defines and enshrines both.
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Mead's Law and Moore's Law - the laws of the microcosm - no
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longer suffice to predict the future of information technology. Thus
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these laws alone no longer define the future configurations of
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technology and wealth in the new world economy. The microcosmic
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paradigm is giving way to the telecosmic paradigm; the law of the
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microcosm is giving up its supremacy to the law of the telecosm. The
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law of the telecosm ordains that the total communications frequencies
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rise and wavelengths drop, digital performance improves exponentially.
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Bandwidth rises, power usage sinks, antenna size shrinks, interference
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collapses, and error rates plummet. This powerful new paradigm is
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just beginning to be felt. The vision of my work, is to anticipate
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and explain necessary breakthroughs and in the process to offer a
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business, investment, and career "survival map" for a new century that
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is approaching all of us at the speed of light.
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George Gilder - 5/16/97
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FIBER KEEPS ITS PROMISE
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By
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George Gilder
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"Today, I await the death of television, telephony, VCRs,
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and analog cameras with utter confidence as Moore's law
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unfolds." Rupert Murdoch, Ted Turner, John Malone, are
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you listening?"
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Get ready. Bandwidth will triple each year for
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the next 25, creating trillions in new wealth.
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Editor's note: Four years ago, Forbes ASAP published its first issue
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with a stunning prophecy by contributing editor George Gilder. Fiber
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optics, said George, had the potential to carry 25 trillion bits per
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second down a single strand. This represented a ten-thousandfold leap
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in carrying capacity over the 2.5 billion bits "barrier" long assumed
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by most experts in the field. What did George see that others had
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missed? One, a little-recognized (at the time) breakthrough called an
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erbium-doped amplifier, which keeps optical signals pure and strong
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over long distances. The other was a deep technical shift, with roots
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in the 1940s-era work of information theory pioneer Claude Shannon.
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If you believed Shannon, his logic dictated a new messaging scheme
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called wave division multiplexing. Though scorned by the experts four
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years ago, WDM now is emerging as the winner George had prophesied.
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The real winners will be all of us, as the coming world of cheap,
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unlimited bandwidth unfolds and at last fulfills the true potential
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of the information age. Here is George with an update.
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-----------
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IMAGINE THAT IN 1975 YOU KNEW that Moore's law--the Intel
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chairman's projection of the doubling of the number of transistors on
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a microchip every 18 months--would hold for the rest of your lifetime.
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What if you knew that these transistors would run cooler, faster,
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better, and cheaper as they got smaller and were crammed more closely
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together? Suppose you knew the law of the microcosm: that the
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cost-effectiveness of any number of "n" transistors on a single
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silicon sliver would rise by the square of the increase in "n."
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As an investor knowing this Moore's law trajectory, you would
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have been able to predict and exploit a long series of developments:
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the emergence of the PC; its dominance over all other computer form
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factors; the success of companies making chips, disk drives,
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peripherals, and software for this machine. With a slight effort of
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intellect, you could have extended the insight and prophesied the
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digitization of watches, records (CDs), cellular phones, cameras, TVs,
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broadcast satellites, and other devices that can use miniaturized
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computer power. If you did not know precisely when each of these
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benisons would flourish, you would have known that each one was
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essentially inevitable. To calculate approximate dates, you had only
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to guess the product's optimal price of popularization and then match
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its need for mips (millions of instructions per second) of computer
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power with the cost of those mips as defined by Moore's law.
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Merely by using this technique of Moore's law matching--and
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holding to it with unshakable conviction for nearly 20 years--I became
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known as a "futurist." Today I await the death of television,
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telephony, VCRs, and analog cameras with utter confidence as Moore's
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law unfolds. You can tell me about the 98% penetration of TVs in
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American homes, the continuing popularity of couch-potato
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entertainments, the effectiveness of broadcast advertising, and the
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profound and unbridgeable chasm between the office appliance and the
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living-room tube. But I will pay no attention. Just you wait--Jack
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Welch, Ted Turner, Rupert Murdoch, John Malone, and David
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Jennings--the TV will die and you may be too late for the Net.
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It is now 1997, and a stream of dramatic events certifies that
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another law, as powerful and fateful and inexorable as Moore's, is
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gaining a similar sway over the future of technology. It is what I
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have termed the law of the telecosm.
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Its physical base lies in the same quantum realm of eigenstates
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and band gaps that governs the performance of transistors and also
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makes photons leap and lase. But the telecosm reaches beyond
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components to systems, combining the science of the electromagnetic
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spectrum with Claude Shannon's information theory. In essence, as
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frequencies rise and wavelengths drop, digital performance improves
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exponentially. Bandwidth rises, power usage sinks, antenna size
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shrinks, interference collapses, error rates plummet.
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The law of the telecosm ordains that the total bandwidth of
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communications systems will triple every year for the next 25 years.
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As communicators move up-spectrum, they can use bandwidth as a
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substitute for power, memory, and switching. This results in far
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cheaper and more efficient systems. In 1996, the new fiber paradigm
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emerged in full force. Parallel communications in all-optical
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networks became the dominant source of new bandwidth in telecom. Like
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Moore's law, the law of the telecosm will reshape the entire world of
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information technology. It defines the direction of technological
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advance, the vectors of growth, the sweet spots for finance.
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AMERICA'S DARK SECRET
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FOR MORE THAN A DECADE, American companies have been laying
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optical fiber strands at a pace of some 4,000 miles a day, for a total
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of more than 25 million strand miles. Five years ago, the top 10% of
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U.S. homes and businesses were, on average, a thousand households away
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from a fiber node; now they are a hundred households away.
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However, the imperial advance of this technology conceals a dark
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secret, which has led to a pervasive underestimation of the long-term
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impact of photonics. Sixty percent of the fiber remains "dark"
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(unused for communications) and even the leading-edge "lit" fiber is
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being used at less than one ten-thousandth of its intrinsic capacity.
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This problem has prompted leaders in the industry, from Bill Gates and
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Andy Grove to Bob Metcalfe and Mitch Kapor, to underrate drastically
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the impact of fiber optics.
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Restricting the speed and cost-effectiveness of fiber has been an
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electronic bottleneck and a regulatory noose. In order for the signal
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to be amplified, regenerated, or switched, the light pulses had to be
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transformed into electronic pulses by optoelectronic converters. For
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all the talk of the speed of light, fiber-optic systems therefore
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could pass bits no faster than the switching speed of transistors,
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which tops out at a cycle time of between 2.5 and 10 gigahertz.
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Meanwhile, telecom companies could not deploy new low-cost fiber
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products any faster than the switching speed of politicians and
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regulators, which tops out roughly at a cycle time of between 2.5
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years and a rate of evolution measurable only by means of carbon 14.
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Nonetheless, the intrinsic capacity of every fiber line is not 2.5
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gigahertz. Nor is it even 25 gigahertz, which is roughly the capacity
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of all the frequencies commonly used in the air, from AM radio to kA
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band satellite. The intrinsic capacity of every fiber thread, as thin
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as a human hair, is at the least one thousand times the capacity of what
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we call the "air." One thread could carry all the calls in America on
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the peak moment of Mother's Day. One fiber thread could carry 25 times
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more bits than last year's average traffic load of all the world's
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communications networks put together: an estimated terabit (trillion
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bits) a second.
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Over the last five years, technological breakthroughs and
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legislative loopholes have begun to open up this immense capacity to
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possible use. Following concepts pioneered and patented by David Payne
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at the University of Southampton in England, a Bell Laboratories group
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led by Emmanuel Desurvire and Randy Giles developed a workable
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all-optical device. They showed that a short stretch of fiber doped
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with erbium, a rare earth mineral, and excited by a cheap laser diode
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can function as a powerful amplifier over fully 4,500 gigahertz of the
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25,000 gigahertz span. Introduced by Pirelli of Italy and popularized
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by Ciena Corporation of Savage, Maryland, and by Lucent and Alcatel,
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today such photonic amplifiers are a practical reality. Put in packages
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between two and three cubic inches in size, the erbium-doped fiber
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amplifiers (EDFAs) fit anywhere in an optical network for enhancing
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signals without electronics.
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This invention overcame the most fundamental disadvantage of
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optical networks compared to electronic networks. You can tap into an
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electronic network as often as desired without eroding the voltage
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signal. Although resistance and capacitance will leach away the
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current, there are no splitting losses in a voltage divider. Photonic
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signals, by contrast, suffer splitting losses every time they are
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tapped; they lose photons until eventually there are none left. The
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cheap and compact all-optical amplifier solves this problem. It is an
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invention comparable in importance to the integrated circuit.
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Just as the integrated circuit made it possible to put an entire
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computer system on a single sliver of silicon, the all-optical amplifier
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makes it possible to put an entire system on a seamless seine of
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silica--glass. Unleashing the law of the telecosm, it makes possible a
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new global economy of bandwidth abundance.
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Five years ago when I first celebrated the radical implications of
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erbium-doped amplifiers, skepticism reigned. I was summoned to Bellcore,
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where the first optical networks had been built and then abandoned, to
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learn the acute limits of the technology from Charles Brackett and his
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team. I had offered the vision of a broadband fibersphere--a worldwide
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web of glass and light--where computer users could tune into favored
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frequencies as readily as radios tune into frequencies in the atmosphere
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today. But Brackett and other Bellcore experts told me that my basic
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assumption was false. It was no simpler, they said, to tune into one of
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scores of frequencies on a fiber than to select time slots in a
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time-division-multiplexed (TDM) bitstream.
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Indeed, electronic switching technology was moving faster than
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optical technology. In the face of the momentum and installed base of
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electronic switching and multiplexing, the fibersphere with hundreds of
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tunable frequencies would remain a fantasy, like Ted Nelson's Xanadu.
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In 1997 the fantasy is coming true around the world. Xanadu has
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become the World Wide Web. The erbium-doped fiber amplifier is an
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explosively growing $250 million business. Electronic TDM seems to
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have topped out at 2.5 gigabits a second. TDM gear has suffered a
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series of delays and nagging defects and so far has failed in the market.
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Electronic TDM failed not only because it pushed the envelope of
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electronics but also because it violated the new paradigm. In
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single-mode fiber, the two key impediments are nonlinearities in the
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glass and chromatic dispersion (the blurring of bit pulses because even
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in a single band different frequencies move at different speeds).
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Chromatic dispersion increases by the square of the bit rate, and the
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impact of nonlinearities rises with the power of the signal.
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High-powered, high-bit-rate TDM flunked both telecosm tests. By
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contrast, wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) follows the laws of
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the telecosm; it succeeds by wasting bandwidth and stinting on power.
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WDM takes some 33% more bandwidth per bit than TDM, but it reduces power
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to combat nonlinearity and divides the bitstream into multiple
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frequencies in order to combat dispersion. Thus it can extend the
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distance or increase capacity by a factor of four or more today and can
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lay the foundations for the fibersphere tomorrow.
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In 1996 the new fiber paradigm emerged in full force. Parallel
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communications in all-optical networks, long depicted as a broadband
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pipe dream, crushed all competitors and became the dominant source of
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new bandwidth in the world telecom network. The year began with a
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trifold explosion at the Conference on Optical Fiber Communication in
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San Jose when three companies--Lucent Technologies' Bell Labs, NTT Labs,
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and Fujitsu--all announced terabit-per-second WDM transmissions down a
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single fiber. Sprint confirmed the significance of the laboratory
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breakthroughs by announcing deployment of Ciena's MultiWave 1600 WDM
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system, so called because it can increase the capacity of a single fiber
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thread by 1,600%.
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The revolution continues in 1997. At the beginning of January,
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NEC declared that by increasing the number of bits per hertz from one to
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three, it had raised the laboratory WDM record to three terabits per
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second. During 1996, MCI had increased the speed of its Internet
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backbone by a factor of 25, from 45 megabits a second to 1.2 gigabits.
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On January 6, Fred Briggs, chief engineering officer at MCI, announced
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that his company is in the process of installing new WDM equipment from
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Hitachi and Pirelli that increases the speed of its phone network
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backbone to 40 gigabits per second. Accelerating MCI's previous plans
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by some two years, the new system will use a more limited form of
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wavelength-division multiplexing to put four 10-gigabit in-cause
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formation streams on a single fiber thread.
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The first deployment will use existing facilities on a 275-mile
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route between Chicago and St. Louis, but the technology will be extended
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to the entire network. This move will consummate a nearly thousandfold
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upgrade of the MCI backbone, from 45 megabits per second to 40 gigabits,
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within some 36 months. Ciena, meanwhile, has announced technology that
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allows transmission of 100 gigabits per second.
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Its February IPO was the most important since Netscape (market
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cap at the end of the first trading day: $3.4 billion). Why? Ciena is
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the industry leader in open standard WDM gear. During the first six
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months the MultiWave 1600 was available, through October 1996, the firm
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achieved $54.8 million in sales and $15 million in net income. (Lucent
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is believed to be the overall leader with more than $100 million of
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mostly proprietary AT&T systems.) At the same time, the trans-Pacific
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consortium announced that it would deploy 100-gigabit-per-second fiber
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in its new link between the United States and Asia.
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A powerful new player in these markets will be Tellabs, currently
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the fastest-growing supplier of electronic digital cross-connect switches
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and other optical switching gear. In a further coup, following its
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purchase of broadband digital radio pioneer Steinbrecher, Tellabs has
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signed up all 12 principals in IBM's all-optical team. Headed by Paul
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Green, recent chairman of the IEEE Communications Society and author of
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the leading text on fiber networks, and by Rajiv Ramaswami, coauthor of
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a new 1997 text on the subject, the IBM group built the world's first
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fully functioning all-optical networks (AONs), the Rainbow series.
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Tellabs now owns the 11 AON patents and 100 listed technology disclosures
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of the group.
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The implications of the WDM paradigm go beyond simple data pipes.
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The greatest impact of all-optical technology will likely come in
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consumer markets. A portent is Artel Video Systems of Marlborough,
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Massachusetts, which recently introduced a fiber-based WDM system that
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can transmit 48 digital video channels, 288 CD-quality audio bitstreams,
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and 64 data channels on one fiber line. Aggregating contributions from
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a variety of content sources--each on different fiber wavelengths--and
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delivering them to consumers who tune into favored frequencies on
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conventional cable, the Artel system represents a key step into the
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fibersphere. It can be used for new services by either cable TV
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companies or telcos.
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The deeper significance of the Artel product, however, is its use
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of bandwidth as a replacement for transistors and switches. The Artel
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system works on dark fiber without compression. The video uses
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200-megabit-per-second bitstreams (compare MPEG2 at 4 to 6 megabytes
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per second) that permit lossless transmissions suitable for medical
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imaging, and obviate dedicated processing of compression codes at the
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two ends.
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A move to massively parallel communications analogous to the move
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to parallel computers, all-optical networks promise nearly boundless
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bandwidth in fiber. According to Ewart Lowe of British Telecom, whose
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labs at Martlesham Heath in Ipswich have been a fount of all-optical
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technology, the new paradigm will reduce the cost of transport by a
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factor of 10. For example, the optoelectronic amplifiers previously
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used in fiber networks entailed nine power-hungry bipolar microchips
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for each wavelength, rather than a simple loop of doped silica that
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covers scores of wavelengths.
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As these systems move down through the network hierarchy, the
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growth of network bandwidth and cost-effectiveness will not only
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outpace Moore's law, it will also excel the rise in bandwidth within
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computers--their internal "buses" connecting their microprocessors
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to memory and input-output.
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While MCI and Sprint move to deploy technology that functions at
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40 gigabits a second, current computers and workstations command buses
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that run at a rate of close to 1 gigabit a second. This change in the
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relationship between the bandwidth of networks and the bandwidth of
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computers will transform the architecture of information technology.
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|
As Robert Lucky of Bellcore puts it, "Perhaps we should transmit signals
|
|
thousands of miles to avoid even the simplest processing function."
|
|
|
|
Lucky implies that the law of the telecosm eclipses the law of the
|
|
microcosm. Actually, the law of the microcosm makes distributed
|
|
computers (smart terminals) more efficient regardless of the cost of
|
|
linking them together. The law of the telecosm makes broadband networks
|
|
more efficient regardless of how numerous and smart are the terminals.
|
|
Working together, however, these two laws of wires and switches impel
|
|
ever more widely distributed information systems, with processing and
|
|
memory in the optimal locations.
|
|
|
|
WHAT SHOULD THE MAJOR PLAYERS DO NOW?
|
|
|
|
FOR THE TELEPHONE COMPANIES, the age of ever smarter terminals
|
|
mandates the emergence of ever dumber networks. Telephone companies
|
|
may complain of the large costs of the transformation of their system,
|
|
but they command capital budgets as large as the total revenues of the
|
|
cable industry. Telcos may recoil in horror at the idea of dark fiber,
|
|
but they command webs of the stuff 10 times larger than any other
|
|
industry. Dumb and dark networks may not fit the phone company
|
|
self-image or advertising posture. But they promise larger markets
|
|
than the current phone company plan to choke off their own future in the
|
|
labyrinthine nets of an "intelligent switching fabric" always behind
|
|
schedule and full of software bugs.
|
|
|
|
Telephone switches (now 80% software) are already too complex to
|
|
keep pace with the efflorescence of the Internet. While computers become
|
|
ever more lean and mean, turning to reduced instruction-set processors
|
|
and Java stations, networks need to adopt reduced instruction-set
|
|
architectures. The ultimate in dumb and dark is the fibersphere now
|
|
incubating in their magnificent laboratories.
|
|
|
|
The entrepreneurial folk in the computer industry may view this
|
|
wrenching phone company adjustment with some satisfaction. But computer
|
|
firms must also adjust. Now addicted to the use of transistors to solve
|
|
the problems of limited bandwidth, the computer industry must use
|
|
transistors to exploit the nearly unlimited bandwidth. When home-based
|
|
machines are optimized for manipulating high-resolution digital video at
|
|
high speeds, they will necessarily command what are now called
|
|
supercomputer powers. This will mean that the dominant computer
|
|
technology will first emerge not in the office market but in the
|
|
consumer market. The major challenge for the computer industry is to
|
|
change its focus from a few hundred million offices already full of
|
|
computer technology to a billion living rooms now nearly devoid of it.
|
|
|
|
Cable companies possess the advantage of already owning dumb
|
|
networks based on the essentials of the all-optical model of broadcast
|
|
and select--of customers seeking wavelengths or frequencies rather than
|
|
switching circuits. Cable companies already provide all the programs
|
|
to all the terminals and allow them to tune in to the desired messages.
|
|
But the cable industry cannot become a full-service supplier of
|
|
telecommunications unless the regulators give up their ridiculous
|
|
two-wire dream in which everyone competes with cable and no one makes
|
|
any money. Cash-poor and bandwidth-rich, cable companies need to
|
|
collaborate with telcos--which are cash-rich and bandwidth-poor--in a
|
|
joint effort to create broadband systems in their own regions.
|
|
|
|
In all eras, companies tend to prevail by maximizing the use of
|
|
the cheapest resources. In the age of the fibersphere, they will use
|
|
the huge intrinsic bandwidth of fiber, all 25,000 gigahertz or more, to
|
|
simplify everything else. This means replacing nearly all the hundreds
|
|
of billions of dollars' worth of switches, bridges, routers, converters,
|
|
codecs, compressors, error correctors, and other devices, together with
|
|
the trillions of lines of software code, that pervade the intelligent
|
|
switching fabric of both telephone and computer networks.
|
|
|
|
The makers of all this equipment will resist mightily. But there
|
|
is no chance that the old regime can prevail by fighting cheap and
|
|
simple optics with costly and complex electronics and software.
|
|
|
|
The all-optical network will triumph for the same reason that the
|
|
integrated circuit triumphed: It is incomparably cheaper than the
|
|
competition. Today, measured by the admittedly rough metric of mips per
|
|
dollar, a personal computer is more than 2,000 times more cost-effective
|
|
than a mainframe. Within 10 years, the all-optical network will be
|
|
thousands of times more cost-effective than electronic networks. Just
|
|
as the electron rules in computers, the photon will rule the waves of
|
|
communication.
|
|
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
The article above, was adapted by Forbes ASAP from
|
|
the Gilder Technology Report, February 1997.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Until recently, George Gilder's provocative and insightful
|
|
analyses of technology were only available through guest appearances
|
|
and magazine articles. With the publication of the "Gilder Technology
|
|
Report," the Gilder Technology Group now makes Geroge Gilder's vision
|
|
available to subscribers on a regular and timely basis. The Report is
|
|
written by George Gilder and is published monthly. Find out what
|
|
companies possess the technology to fulfill the Gilder Paradigm of
|
|
"Nothing But Net".
|
|
|
|
The Gilder Technology Report is designed to assist investors and
|
|
corporate decision makers in formulating strategy and tactics for the
|
|
exciting new era of technology.
|
|
|
|
For additional information, please contact the Gilder Technology
|
|
Group by calling toll-free (888) 484-2727.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Regards,
|
|
|
|
|
|
Gordon Jacobson
|
|
Portman Communication Services
|
|
(212) 988-6288
|
|
|
|
gaj@portman.com MCI Mail ID: 385-1533
|
|
Home Page: http://www.seas.upenn.edu/~gaj1/home.html
|
|
|
|
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
[TELECOM Digest Editor's Note: Thank you very much Gordon for passing
|
|
along this latest essay from George Gilder, who has in fact been a
|
|
regular reader and contributor to TELECOM Digest on several occassions.
|
|
The quality of Gilder's contributions and that of several other of
|
|
the regular correspondents to the Digest is what has kept the Digest
|
|
one of the better mailing lists on the internet.
|
|
|
|
Please remember that TELECOM Digest is brought to you by you ... it
|
|
is reader financial support which makes it possible. An annual donation
|
|
of twenty dollars is suggested if you enjoy this publication and wish
|
|
to see it continue. Financial support and editorial content in the
|
|
Digest are completely independent of each other. No one is obligated
|
|
to give anything, however your gifts are extremely important to me as
|
|
I labor in preparing each issue.
|
|
|
|
Patrick Townson
|
|
TELECOM Digest
|
|
Post Office Box 4621
|
|
Skokie, IL 60076
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Fri, 23 May 1997 11:18:34 -0800
|
|
From: "--Todd Lappin-->" <telstar@wired.com>
|
|
Subject: File 2--FBI arrests alleged hacker-for-profit
|
|
|
|
Source - fight-censorship@vorlon.mit.edu
|
|
|
|
FBI arrests alleged hacker-for-profit
|
|
--------------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
SAN FRANCISCO (May 23, 1997 00:19 a.m. EDT) -- Federal agents arrested a
|
|
36-year-old man who allegedly stole information from the credit card
|
|
accounts of 100,000 people by hacking into the database of an
|
|
undisclosed major business, the FBI said.
|
|
|
|
Carlos Felipe Salgado Jr., of Daly City, Calif., was arrested Wednesday
|
|
as he was trying to sell information related to more than 100,000
|
|
accounts that contained names, card numbers and other personal
|
|
information about the card holders, said FBI spokesman George Grotz.
|
|
|
|
"We believe that he had access to at least 100,000 in terms of credit
|
|
card numbers -- perhaps even more," Grotz said.
|
|
|
|
"He was trying to sell it" to an undercover agent, Grotz said. "We had
|
|
determined that he was in the market to sell this information, and we
|
|
were able to contact him via the Internet and set up a meeting to
|
|
discuss terms of the sale. ... Based on those negotiations, he was
|
|
placed under arrest."
|
|
|
|
Salgado was scheduled to be arraigned in federal court in San Francisco
|
|
on at least one charge of unlawfully intruding into a computer network
|
|
database for the purpose of theft and a separate charge of selling
|
|
confidential credit card information via the Internet.
|
|
|
|
If convicted of both charges, Salgado could face a maximum of 15 years
|
|
in federal prison and a fine of up to $250,000 on each count, according
|
|
to the FBI. Under federal law, Salgado could be charged with separate
|
|
felony counts for information theft of each of the 100,000 accounts that
|
|
were illegally obtained. But so far, Grotz said, authorities plan to
|
|
file only one count. The investigation remains ongoing and more charges
|
|
could be added later.
|
|
|
|
The FBI still does not know how he allegedly obtained the information.
|
|
Agents contacted Salgado on-line and "did some business with him," Grotz
|
|
said. But investigators were unable to find out his identity until they
|
|
set up the in-person meeting at the airport.
|
|
|
|
"We believe that he has been hacking into various protected computers
|
|
for at least five years," Grotz said. "We don't know the extent of the
|
|
damage that he has done. He has gotten these credit card numbers via the
|
|
Internet and he has tried to sell them via the Internet. ... But we
|
|
still don't know the extent of his activities."
|
|
|
|
Authorities said that the Salgado case does not appear to be linked to
|
|
the recent theft of information on about 20,000 employees of Levi
|
|
Strauss, when a hard drive was taken from the firm's San Francisco
|
|
headquarters last month.
|
|
|
|
Grotz said that after Salgado's arrest, agents were planning to search
|
|
his residence and his personal computer for evidence related to the
|
|
information theft.
|
|
|
|
Agents did not have any information about Salgado's employment or where
|
|
he developed his hacking skills, Grotz said. "The guy obviously has
|
|
knowledge," he said.
|
|
|
|
Grotz said federal agents have seen young males try to gain access to
|
|
credit databases more as a lark, but this is believed to be one of the
|
|
first cases where someone hacked into an encrypted business database
|
|
expressly for the purpose of robbing for a profit.
|
|
|
|
"We found out about it from some vigilant technicians doing routine
|
|
maintenance" on an Internet service provider, Grotz said. That tip
|
|
prompted an FBI probe on the Internet that led to Salgado on Wednesday,
|
|
he said.
|
|
|
|
-- By JIM HERRON ZAMORA, the San Francisco Examiner.
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Sun, 25 May 1997 17:23:12 EDT
|
|
From: Martin Kaminer <iguana@MIT.EDU>
|
|
Subject: File 3--HACK - Texas Driver's License database on the web
|
|
|
|
------- Forwarded Message
|
|
|
|
Date--Sun, 25 May 1997 11:15:33
|
|
From--FringeWare News Network <email@Fringeware.COM>
|
|
|
|
Sent from: Paco Xander Nathan <pacoid@fringeware.com>
|
|
|
|
URGENT NEWS RELEASE -
|
|
|
|
Regarding the release and use of personal information from Texas motor
|
|
vehicle records, i.e. our recent news about the "www.publiclink.com"
|
|
web site, the Texas legislature will vote on the floor TOMORROW over
|
|
SB1069, which would attach a criminal penalty to such information use,
|
|
except for "permitted disclosures".
|
|
|
|
Note that these criminal penalities and their exceptions have been
|
|
substituted onto a proposed bill which was already in play (SB1069)
|
|
in the Texas Senate, one which had already been passed in the Texas
|
|
House. The bill and its history are available online at:
|
|
http://www.capitol.state.tx.us/
|
|
|
|
Search for "SB1069" under the bill search link. The Texas legislature
|
|
is currently in session, which only happens once every two years, and
|
|
only a matter of days remain in the current session for introducing
|
|
any legislation.
|
|
|
|
After "www.publiclink.com" went online, a lawsuit was filed against
|
|
the site's publisher, the site was taken down, and the story earned
|
|
widespread headlines.
|
|
|
|
Governor George Bush Jr., et al., expressed concerns over protecting
|
|
the privacy of Texas citizens vis-a-vis Internet services such as
|
|
Public Link, while failing to mention that Texas State offices have and
|
|
will continue to receive revenue from the bulk sales of this same data.
|
|
|
|
For example, if another driver cuts you off in traffic, you take down
|
|
their license plate number, then go home, check the Public Link web site
|
|
to find out: the name of the car's owner, where that person lives, with
|
|
whom that person lives, their race/height/weight/birthdate, a list of
|
|
their neighbors, how they have voted in recent elections, what criminal
|
|
convictions they have, etc.
|
|
|
|
My own comments on KVUE-24 news and the CNN Headline News trailer, along
|
|
with similar comments online by Mike Godwin, et al., of EFF, have shown
|
|
the "double-edged sword" effect of regulating such information.
|
|
|
|
Certainly the issue of protecting privacy vs. freedom of information
|
|
(since this information is and will remain public record in Texas) comes
|
|
to mind, as has the most prevalent argument coming from women's groups
|
|
in Texas, that such information, even though it has been available for
|
|
years, now placed on the Internet can pose a public threat in terms of
|
|
assisting stalkers.
|
|
|
|
But the real issues run much deeper. On one hand, the information is
|
|
available (and has been for years) to anybody with enough means to
|
|
hire an attorney or investigator: "Please give me a list of all the
|
|
women over age 65, widowed, living alone in a particularly wealthy block
|
|
of Dallas". That one *might* cost you $75, but think of the potential
|
|
return-on-investment for b&e specialists, televangelists, and other
|
|
social vultures.
|
|
|
|
Public Link has merely made this same data, derived from public record,
|
|
available to all who have Internet access. Restrictions from the Texas
|
|
legislation on who/what can be listed on the Internet would be pointless
|
|
because servers could easily move to Louisiana, Mexico, or even somewhere
|
|
out in the Indian Ocean....
|
|
|
|
One the other hand, look at the trade-off of who's agenda will be served
|
|
by making this data only available to those parties authorized for the
|
|
"permitted disclosures". Consider that investigative journalists have
|
|
used this kind of data to breach stories in the public interest which
|
|
the wealthy and powerful might otherwise attempt to keep quiet. Consider
|
|
on the flip side that this kind of information is regularly used by the
|
|
personnel staff at large corporations, who need to make decisions on
|
|
hiring new employees and therefore buy computer-based records about
|
|
private individuals: voting records, criminal records, worker's comp,
|
|
any available medical data, etc.
|
|
|
|
Here's the scenario: a personnel director needs to choose between two
|
|
applicants for a position, let's say one is a woman from a racial minority
|
|
who has had a previous C-section birth and voted Democrat in the past four
|
|
elections; then the other applicant is a white male who voted Republican
|
|
in the past elections on record. Now really, given the cost of medical
|
|
insurance and employee relations these days, whom are they going to pick
|
|
for the job?
|
|
|
|
This exact data is at question. It is commericially available and in
|
|
widespread use throughout "human resource departments" and "security"
|
|
firms. Moreover, an older issue of workplace drug testing brings in
|
|
related concerns. Random drug testing used in corporate America is at
|
|
best 60% accurate, i.e. practically meaningless, BUT those tests provide
|
|
employers and government agencies with a legal "foot-in-the-door" for
|
|
correlating all of the personal information listed above along with the
|
|
individual's medical records and SSN. Think about it. Think really hard
|
|
about the implications, for a long time, and then ask yourself if drug
|
|
testing really concerns "family values", not to mention the other privacy
|
|
abuse practices in question.
|
|
|
|
To the point of Texas Senate Bill 1069, an unofficial comment from one
|
|
Texas capitol legislative analyst responsible for independent research of
|
|
this issue was that "journalists are going to hate this bill."
|
|
|
|
If you read the text of SB1069, it becomes hauntingly clear that government
|
|
agencies, employers, insurance companies, private investigators, and even
|
|
firms which conduct "surveys, marketing, or solicitations", will all keep
|
|
their bulk access to Texas citizens personal data, BUT that any other use
|
|
would become a criminal offense. Furthermore, this portion of the bill is
|
|
what has been added at the last minute, i.e. subsequent to the news reports
|
|
about Public Link.
|
|
|
|
To wit, it will be fine for a spammer to buy and use the data to tailor
|
|
"bulk distribution" mailings, but it will become a criminal offense for
|
|
anybody to place the same exact data up for public use on a web site.
|
|
|
|
Also, it will be fine for personnel managers and insurance agents to use
|
|
this data in private while deciding about an individual's hiring potential
|
|
or quoted insurance rates, but it would become a criminal offense for a
|
|
newspaper journalist (or Internet email list participant) to access the
|
|
same exact data in public record for the purposes of, say, exposing illegal
|
|
hiring practices.
|
|
|
|
Note that this bill has been slid through the voting process quietly, as a
|
|
deliberate act by the legislators. It was substituted onto a bill already
|
|
passed by the House, and then "recommended for local & uncontested calendar"
|
|
by the Senate, i.e. so as not to draw public attention.
|
|
|
|
If you live in Texas, we urge you to take action. Flood the legislature.
|
|
If you are an attorney or expert familiar with Texas State privacy laws,
|
|
please render a written opinion faxed to your representative. Current
|
|
estimates project that the SB1069 will pass the Texas Senate tomorrow (i.e.
|
|
quietly while most of the state is off on holiday).
|
|
|
|
1984 is only 13 years away...
|
|
|
|
Paco Xander Nathan
|
|
FringeWare Inc.
|
|
25 May 1996
|
|
Austin, TX, Earth
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Date: Thu, 7 May 1997 22:51:01 CST
|
|
From: CuD Moderators <cudigest@sun.soci.niu.edu>
|
|
Subject: File 4--Cu Digest Header Info (unchanged since 7 May, 1997)
|
|
|
|
Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
|
|
available at no cost electronically.
|
|
|
|
CuD is available as a Usenet newsgroup: comp.society.cu-digest
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|
|
|
Or, to subscribe, send post with this in the "Subject:: line:
|
|
|
|
SUBSCRIBE CU-DIGEST
|
|
Send the message to: cu-digest-request@weber.ucsd.edu
|
|
|
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DO NOT SEND SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE MODERATORS.
|
|
|
|
The editors may be contacted by voice (815-753-6436), fax (815-753-6302)
|
|
or U.S. mail at: Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL
|
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60115, USA.
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|
|
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To UNSUB, send a one-line message: UNSUB CU-DIGEST
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Send it to CU-DIGEST-REQUEST@WEBER.UCSD.EDU
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(NOTE: The address you unsub must correspond to your From: line)
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Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
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LAWSIG, and DL1 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
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CuD is also available via Fidonet File Request from
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The most recent issues of CuD can be obtained from the
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Cu Digest WWW site at:
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URL: http://www.soci.niu.edu/~cudigest/
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COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
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|
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diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
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------------------------------
|
|
|
|
End of Computer Underground Digest #9.40
|
|
************************************
|
|
|