540 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
540 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Thu, 1 Apr 93 22:18:30 PST
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Reply-To: <surfpunk@osc.versant.com>
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Return-Path: <cocot@osc.versant.com>
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Message-ID: <surfpunk-0071@SURFPUNK.Technical.Journal>
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Mime-Version: 1.0
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Content-Type: text/plain
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From: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (GEHYL CREFBANY PBZCHGVAT)
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To: surfpunk@osc.versant.com (SURFPUNK Technical Journal)
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Subject: [surfpunk-0071] cranksPENTIUMwacoROBOTlofcDENNINGanon.penet.fiAUTONOM
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# TBIT - Haiku for Carp> Enter message
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#
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# Saturday 20-Feb-93 00:52:35 from mnq
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# what's in my head, and
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# what seems to come out of my
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# mouth, never seem to
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#
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# connect. what's in my
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# head seems better. but what's in
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# my head does come out
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#
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# my fingers, so if
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# i type, i'm alright. i'm turn
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# ing into a night
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#
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# person, cause i hate
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# to wake up in the morning.
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# i'm a modem junk
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#
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# ie, cause it never
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# hurts like realtime. love that sound
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# when modems connect.
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okay, these are real, not april fools, I think... strick
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Subject: [spaf] Scientific American gets enough crank letters to fill...
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Subject: [keith] This is a riot... [PENTIUM HAS TWICE TRANSISTORS]
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Subject: [Don Webb] Tibet and Waco . . .
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Subject: [Don Webb] Robot and other parts
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Subject: Lib. of Cong. on Internet
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Subject: [karn] [to denning] your note on sci.crypt
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Subject: [julf@penet.FI] anon.penet.fi bites the dust
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Subject: Call for Submissions: Autonomedia
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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To: surfpunk@osc.versant.com
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Subject: Re: [surfpunk-0067] SciAm; Patron Deity of Computers; Net Culture
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 93 09:28:21 -0500
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From: Gene Spafford <spaf@cs.purdue.edu>
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I'm sure Scientific American gets enough crank letters to fill several
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issues. However, they must make up the ones they published in an
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April Fool's issue because I'm sure they don't want to antagonize the
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nutcases who write the letters. It's one thing to get letters
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claiming to know about alien conspiracies. It's an entirely separate
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matter to have some psychotic show up with an assault rifle to talk
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about exposing his letter to the aliens by publishing it.
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I've had my own share of crank letters, with a couple usually showing
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up right after I do a radio or TV interview. It is disturbing to
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realize that there are seriously deranged people walking around loose
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in the world, and that they have my name and address. (And no, I
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don't mean you, Strick -- you are normal compared to thise guys!)
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[ oof.. the assault rifle thing is a bit scary.
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the net seems so safe, so far ... strick ]
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________________________________________________________________________
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From: keith@cc.gatech.edu (Keith Edwards)
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Subject: This is a riot... (pentium)
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 93 13:44:12 EST
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Here's how Americans get their news! Any technology-minded citizens who
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picked up USA Today yesterday will get to read this gem:
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---
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PENTIUM HAS TWICE TRANSISTORS:
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Pentium packs 3.1 million transistors onto a slice of silicon
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about the size of a thumbnail. That is twice as many as
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transistors as the 486. It is capable of executing 112 million
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instructions per second (MIPS). In two seconds, Pentium could
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execute an instruction - for example, fetch information from a
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PC's memory - for almost every person in the U.S. That's twice as
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fast as the fastest 486.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Wed, 24 Mar 93 14:56 GMT
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From: Don Webb <0004200716@mcimail.com>
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To: surfpunk <surfpunk@osc.osc.com>
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Subject: Tibet and Waco . . .
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Dear Fringeoids and Surfpunks,
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As most of you know up the road a piece is Waco, what you might
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not know is that the FBI's pyschological warfare device is the
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Bodhisattva chant of Tibetan Buddhism played over and over.
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Gate Gate Pargate Parasamgate Bodhi Svaha!
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Now the purpose of the chant is to help the listener become a
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bodhisattva, a savior of humanity (and all sentient beings). Now
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I don't understand a whole about pyschoclogial warfare, but I
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think they're on the wrong track here.
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0004200716@mcimail.com (Don Webb)
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Thu, 1 Apr 93 23:19 GMT
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From: Don Webb <0004200716@mcimail.com>
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To: surfpunk <surfpunk@osc.osc.com>
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Subject: Robot and other parts
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You guys probably already know this, but the best place to buy
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ultra-cheap Science&Industry surplus is:
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American Science & Surplus
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POB 48838
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Niles, IL 60714-0838
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(Formerly Jerrico) Their catalog costs a buck and has everything
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from surplus telephones ($10.00) to Infrared transmitter and
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receiver sets ($9.95) to legal pads to Gold anodized aluminum
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heat sinks to neat toys. I've dealt with them for seven years
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and never been disappointed. The place to go when you need 3/8"
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dia. flexible shafts for cheap. Should be good for home robot
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stuff.
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0004200716@mcimail.com
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Don Webb
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The Secret of magic is to transform the magician.
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________________________________________________________________________
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From: David_A_Fiske@cup.portal.com
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Subject: Lib. of Cong. on Internet
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Date: Sun, 21 Mar 93 14:07:20 PST
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The following is from the Public Access Computer Systems list.
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Scorpio is the Library of Congress's database system for tracking
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Federal legislation. Someone had recently posted an item
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about Congress not wanting to put its Legis system on the Internet.
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Scorpio would be an alternative way to get at legislative info.
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--------------------------------
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Source: Public-Access Computer Systems News
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INTERNET ACCESS TO LC INFORMATION FILES
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The Library of Congress has announced a major new initiative
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to increase the availability of its resources to the public.
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In a statement before the House Legislative Branch
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Appropriations Subcommittee on January 25, 1993, during
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hearings on the Library's fiscal year 1994 budget request,
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Librarian of Congress James H. Billington said that the Joint
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Committee on the Library had approved online access to the
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Library's automated information files through Internet beginning
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in late April 1993.
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These files, containing more than 28 million records in over 30
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files, have been available to congressional offices, state
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libraries, and cooperative cataloging libraries in the past. The
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files to be offered by the Library include all LC MARC
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(machine-readable cataloging) files; copyright files, 1978 to the
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present; public policy citations, 1976 to the present; and
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federal bill status files. Both the technical
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processing/cataloging system (MUMS) and the reference/retrieval
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system (SCORPIO) will be accessible for searches over the
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Internet.
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The Library has experimented with various forms of remote access
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to its public files--initially in a pilot project called ROLLUP,
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and most recently in its LC DIRECT fee-based service to state
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library agencies. Online access to Library of Congress databases
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is useful to a variety of libraries. The Internet will provide a
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means by which access can be had at minimal cost to all. No fees
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will be charged.
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The Library of Congress is able to offer remote access to its
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public databases via Internet as a free service, but must limit
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its customer support to documentation download over the Internet.
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The Library will begin by providing system availability to 60
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simultaneous Internet users to ensure that service to Congress
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and on-site users is not degraded. Usage will be monitored to
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determine if this number can be expanded if needed, but service
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to congressional users will continue to be the Library's primary
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goal for its online systems.
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Specific details regarding when and how one can connect to the
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Library's public online files through Internet will be available
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in April.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 93 02:45:15 -0800
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From: Phil Karn <karn@unix.ka9q.ampr.org>
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To: denning@cs.cosc.georgetown.edu
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Subject: your note on sci.crypt
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Cc: cypherpunks@toad.com
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[ I was unable to find Dr Denning's note in our /usr/spool/news/sci/crypt.
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I would have liked to have surfpunked both together. You can find her
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article in a recent Communications of the ACM. --strick ]
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Dr. Denning:
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Although you are correct that many of the responses to your proposal
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contained personal attacks (in which people called you naive, etc),
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you seem to believe that this invalidates the fundamental underlying
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point they were making. This is not so.
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This fundamental point can be summarized as follows:
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The US government has repeatedly shown by its past conduct that it
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simply cannot be trusted to obey its own laws regarding spying on
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private citizens, particularly those who are organized in lawful,
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peaceful opposition to government policies. And history has shown that
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it can take many years for unlawful monitoring to become public, if
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indeed they ever do (consider the current story I just sent you about
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the Army spying on Dr. Martin Luther King). In other words, the
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government has frequently ignored its own laws, because it knows it
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can do so with impunity.
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No credible case can be made that the problem has been "fixed" since
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the now-publicized abuses of the 1960s and 1970s, i.e., that new
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safeguards have somehow rendered the government incapable of violating
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the privacy rights of its citizens. Privacy violations may or may not
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still be occurring; we have no way to know. But I suspect it depends
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far more on the people in power than on any post-Watergate
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"safeguards" against the abuse of that power.
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The private use of strong cryptography provides, for the very first
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time, a truly effective safeguard against this sort of government
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abuse. And that's why it must continue to be free and unregulated.
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I should credit you for doing us all a very important service by
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raising this issue. Nothing could have lit a bigger fire under those
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of us who strongly believe in a citizens' right to use cryptography
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than your proposals to ban or regulate it. There are many of us out
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here who share this belief *and* have the technical skills to turn
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it into practice. And I promise you that we will fight for this belief
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to the bitter end, if necessary.
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Phil Karn
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________________________________________________________________________
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To: cypherpunks@toad.com
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Subject: anon.penet.fi bites the dust
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 93 22:21:43 +0200
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From: Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.FI>
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Today I posted the attached message to various newsgroups. I still plan
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to continue mail service, and my work on the alt.whistleblowers project.
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Julf
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-----------
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The anonymous posting service at anon.penet.fi has been closed down. Postings
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to netnews and mail to arbitrary addresses has been blocked.
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Mail to anonymous users will still be supported, so anon.penet.fi can be
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used as an anonymous P.O.Box service.
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Due to the lawsuit-intensive climate in the US, many anonymous services have
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been short-lived. By setting up anon.penet.fi in Finland, I hoped to create
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a more stable service. Anon.penet.fi managed to stay in operation for almost
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five months. The service was protected from most of the usual problems that
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had forced other services to shut down. But there are always going to be
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ways to stop something as controversial as an anon service. In this case, a
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very well-known and extremely highly regarded net personality managed to
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contact exactly the right people to create a situation where it is
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politically impossible for me to continue running the service.
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But of course this political situation is mainly caused by the abuse of the
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network that a very small minority of anon users engaged in. This small
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group of immature and thoughtless individuals (mainly users from US
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universities) caused much aggravation and negative feelings towards the
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service. This is especially unfortunate considering these people really are
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a minuscule minority of anon users. The latest statistics from the service
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show 18203 registered users, 3500 messages per day on the average, and
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postings to 576 newsgroups. Of these users, I have received complaints
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involving postings from 57 anonymous users, and, of these, been forced to
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block only 8 users who continued their abuse despite a warning from me.
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In retrospect I realize that I have been guilty to keeping a far too low
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profile on the network, prefering to deal with the abuse cases privately
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instead of making strong public statements. Unfortunately I realized this
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only a couple of days before being forced to shut down the service, but the
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results of a single posting to alt.binaries.pictures.erotica.d gave very
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positive results. I take full blaim for my failure to realize the
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psychological effects of a strongly stated, publicly visible display of
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policy with regards to the abuse cases. For this I have to apologize to the
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whole net community.
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On the other hand I am deeply concerned by the fact that the strongest
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opposition to the service didn't come from users but from network
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administrators. I don't think sysadmins have a god-given mandate to
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dictate what's good for the users and what's not. A lot of users have
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contacted me to thank me for the service, describing situations where
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anonymity has been crucial, but I could never have imagined in my wildest
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dreams. At the same time quite a few network administrators have made
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comments like "I can't imagine any valid use for anonymity on the net" and
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"The only use for anonymity is to harrass and terrorize the net".
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Nevertheless, I really want to apologize both to all the users on the
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network who have suffered from the abusive misuse of the server, and to all
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the users who have come to rely on the service. Again, I take full
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responsibility for what has happened.
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Julf
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________________________________________________________________________
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Date: Tue, 23 Mar 93 19:19:32 EST
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From: dmandl@shearson.com (David Mandl)
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Subject: Call for Submissions: Autonomedia
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Please feel free to distribute the following to anyone you think might be
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interested. Thanks.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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Dear Friends,
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Autonomedia is preparing an anthology of essays and possible visual
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material for a book (and electronic media) on the issues surrounding
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communications, intellectual property, work, and new information
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technologies. We anticipate a publication date at the end of this year.
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Among the many topics we hope to address:
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The anti-copyright movement
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State information-control mechanisms
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"Plunderphonics" and sound sampling
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Immediatism
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Plagiarism
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Cypherpunk and crypto anarchy
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Hacking and cracking
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The politics of "academic freedom"
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Virtual prisons and digital leashes
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Class struggle on the high-tech front
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Phone sex and computer porn
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Obsolescent media and "product"
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The politics of mail art and free radio
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Future tech
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Network TV, cable, and narrowcasting
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Laws and borders, globalism
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Aesthetics of appropriation after post-modernism
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Electronic banking, digital cash, the end of "money"
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Visual imaging and electronic pictography
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Virtual reality and electronic spectacularity
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Data piracy: computer viruses, high tech luddism, etc.
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Anonymity and digital identities
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Genetics as commercial medium
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Primitivism and the anti-technology movement
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The legacy and future of phone phreaking
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Body politics, angelic capital, mormons in space
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Robots and computerized industrial production
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Media ecology and media diets
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Surveillance and popular defense
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"Information economy"
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Cybergnosis
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This list is meant to be suggestive, not exhaustive. Query us with
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your suggestions as soon as possible. We hope to make contact with
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all possible contributors by the start of summer, with a final deadline
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of October 1, 1993, for submissions. Wherever feasible, please send
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submissions on computer disk (ASCII or any word processing format in any
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platform) as well as by paper copy.
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We appreciate any help you may be able to offer in this endeavor.
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AUTONOMEDIA COLLECTIVE
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P.O. Box 568
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Williamsburg Station
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Brooklyn, NY 11211-0568
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USA
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email: jafhc@cunyvm.cuny.edu or dmandl@shearson.com
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Fax: 718-387-6471
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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The SURFPUNK Technical Journal is a dangerous multinational hacker zine
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originating near BARRNET in the fashionable western arm of the northern
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California matrix. Quantum Californians appear in one of two states,
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spin surf or spin punk. Undetected, we are both, or might be neither.
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________________________________________________________________________
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Send postings to <surfpunk@osc.versant.com>, subscription requests
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to <surfpunk-request@osc.versant.com>. MIME encouraged.
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Xanalogical archive access soon. For a good prime, call 391581 * 2^216193 - 1
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________________________________________________________________________
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________________________________________________________________________
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# hey henry - been a while since i typed at ya.
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yeah ... same here. sorry so long.
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# i'm starting to spend some time this week
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# becoming net literate - i've been grazing through
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# news groups - amazing stuff!
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"ftp" to "nysernet.org", and then, in the ftp
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session, "cd" to "/pub/guides".
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Here is some stuff I copied from there once, I
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think it's still there:
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-rw-r--r-- 307042 Dec 12 Guide.V.2.2.text
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-rw-r--r-- 88916 Dec 12 agguide.dos
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-rw-r--r-- 108032 Dec 12 agguide.wp
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-rw-r--r-- 148620 Dec 12 ftp.list
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-rw-r--r-- 71220 Dec 12 internet.faq
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-rw-r--r-- 32817 Dec 12 internet.faq2
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-rw-r--r-- 216594 Dec 12 internet.tour.txt
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-rw-r--r-- 307042 Dec 12 new.user.guide.v2.2.txt
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-rw-r--r-- 62564 Dec 12 surfing.the.internet.2.0.txt
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-rw-r--r-- 12598 Dec 12 whatis.internet
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-rw-r--r-- 492530 Dec 12 zen-1.0.ps
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(* the net is slow today, and I am unable to
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get you a more recent snapshot:
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425 Can't build data connection: Connection timed out.
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[1] Terminated Ftp nysernet.org
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*)
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The internet.faq* are full of TLA (three letter
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acronyms) and jargon. Not real useful for
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sources, but does help with the secret argot.
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zen is probably the best. this might be the same zen
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that you can buy in a book. surfing might be OK.
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# subscription to americast - articles from
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# washingto post, la times, and usa today is what i
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# found tonight - about 30 postings daily in each
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# of four to six broad headings for each paper,
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# ranging from 250 line essays to 10 line letters
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# to the editor - even got to read 'i don't have a
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# racist bone in my body' from ollie north.
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These usually bore me. The NYT is much better
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for "mainstream" news.
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# found some physics news groups - sci.physics.research
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# has some potential use fo
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Netnews is somewhere between serious and
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flippant, and between useful and a waste of time.
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The best thing you can do is get a "threading"
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news reader -- "trn" and (I think) "tin" are
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probably what they are called on UNIX. I use
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"trn", because before these, "rn" (by Larry Wall)
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was the best.
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# have been tinkering more w/ think c - have tried
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# to get a hold of memory management - locking down
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# handles (macs have a nasty habit of moving your
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yeah, I haven't got the hang of mac handles
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either.
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# finsihed snow crash today - the whole surfing
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# motif really struck deep w/ me - pooning and
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# kayaking and hacking - learning how to catch
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# rides off of the greater forces that are going on
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# around you - definately something to be
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and it captures the "action flick" aspect of The
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Net in a way that's difficult to explain.
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# kept in mind during the info explosion - at first
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# i thought your 'surf'-punk title pretty hokey but
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# now i'm beginning to grok it's implications...
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it's still mixed emotions for me. Both SURF and
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PUNK have entered the mainstream media so much
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moreso since I started this... at least the
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media hasn't stolen the combination SURFPUNK
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yet. [Of course *I* stole it from the band, so
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who am I to bitch? ] Hopefully the TIME magazine
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helped confuse people a lot, and at least left an
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impression that "cyber" culture is not just
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"CYBERPUNKS: Outlaws on the Electronic Frontier"
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but a whole jumble of stuff. Broadinging the
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term is a step in the right direction.
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To the Elite "3L1+3" Insiders, it's criminal to
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try to present what's happening on the
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"leading/underground edge of the net" in a format
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for mainstream surfers ... but that attitude like
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trying to turn back the hands of the clock, or at
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least freeze them. I think in order to preserve
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the Anarchal flavor of The Net, it is important
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to show the mainstream that it's better than
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Prodigy. And I try to present it with the real,
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unadulterated, uncensored thing, rather than with
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TIME magazine style hype ...
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# --b--^Z^Z
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# oh yeah - vi.
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can't spell "vile" without "vi"!
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Did I give you EMACS for macintosh?
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