-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- On Thu, 27 May 93 23:04:21 -0600, ""L. Detweiler"" <uunet!longs.lance.colostate.edu!ld231782> wrote -
Apparently someone has forged a Sternlight posting on sci.crypt and alt.privacy.clipper. If the author can hear me: you should be severely ashamed. I've said before that Sternlight is actually (in a warped way) a *resource* to the net because of his representation of the NSA and `fuzzy-brained public' opinion. Without him, we'd have nothing but all of ourselves in a bland choir.
Cypherpunks, maybe we can help track down the culprit. The forgery says `recently, some have called me a dupe'. Perhaps it is an allusion to a recent flame war wherein the counterfeiter participated.
Cypherpunks are sneaky, but not sleazy. I look forward to the day when digital signatures and other authentication methods make forged postings like this a strange historical anachronism.
I'm surprised no one realized this before now. My first reaction to this was that of humor. My second reaction was that I felt embarrassed for thinking it was funny. My subsequent reaction was that of irony. As was overheard in the newsgroup -
From: steiner@jupiter.cse.utoledo.edu (Jason 'Think!' Steiner) Date: 27 May 93 07:09:07 EST
heh. maybe David should start signing his posts with PGP so he won't have this problem in the future. :^)
[yeah, the irony was deliberatly manufactured by whoever forged that post, but it's still too good to pass up.]
I couldn't agree more. I do, however, agree that it was a pretty sleazy trick on somone's part -- but the irony factor is just too surreal. Cheers. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.2 iQCVAgUBLAYovJRLcZSdHMBNAQGLtQP/Y5mGsWAGqtCwHYpiPkq/98ofprvRowq3 AZ1u+w0TJSYXeZpF+jSr6cOLH8boWS1Ud3tugFTUuQA/SD7sMFSwdPlvBzfHAIiE 1BiVs7+SDCFOPXXpttv8PezR0ZspyXwxNofGZVM1wXLG1siPBE3XeEbBjKp2SCev DK5Ez1QbSCI= =2Pne -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- Paul Ferguson | The future is now. Network Integrator | History will tell the tale; Centreville, Virginia USA | We must endure and struggle fergp@sytex.com | to shape it. Stop the Wiretap (Clipper/Capstone) Chip.