
[Well, this should trigger most people's killfiles.... :-)] At 05:29 PM 6/3/97 -0400, Hallam-Baker wrote:
I'll accept that the ranting faction do some good work but I've not seen anything usefull out of either Bell or Vulis unless that is you are an FBI agent looking to get a promotion from Freeh.
Vulis has contributed a few good things to the remailer discussions, such as methods for keeping block lists as hashes rather than plaintext, which potentially increases privacy of people on publicly accessible lists. (I say "potentially", because I don't think anyone's implemented it, but it's clearly the Right Thing to do.) However, he's deliberately made himself annoying to everyone, without the redeeming social value in most of his posts that arch-ranters like Detweiler had, and even his useful posts generally include gratuituous vulgar insults. Bell's value, by contrast, has been in the Assassination Politics work. Sure, he's a mostly one-track ranter, to the extent that lots of people got fed up with it, but much of his analysis is sound even though his advocacy of it is pretty dodgy. I don't think that anybody is likely to set up this sort of Assassination Pool on a regular basis, but he does solve one of the fundamental difficulties with it - how to let the real hit man claim that he did the job and where to send his payment when the deal is handled entirely over the net (and thus there's no good way to prove who done it vs. who's claiming they did it to get the money.) Some of these techniques may be useful when applied to other problems in the emerging Internet economy; it gets at issues of repudiation of anonymous transactions, need for (real) escrow, etc. Bell's point that government would be much better behaved if the individuals in government could be held individually and personally responsible for their actions is certainly valid. Whether shooting them is an appropriate way to hold them responsible is another discussion (:-). # Thanks; Bill # Bill Stewart, +1-415-442-2215 stewarts@ix.netcom.com # You can get PGP outside the US at ftp.ox.ac.uk/pub/crypto/pgp # (If this is a mailing list or news, please Cc: me on replies. Thanks.)