Rhys Kyraden wrote:
Okay. Here's my 2-bits. I run on the MacOS, but how hard could it be to port this code? If anyone is willing to do this (I assume it's not written in Pascal, which is my only language of any consequence), I will run it. It will be available from now until I graduate in '98 during the school months. If anyone wants to try this from scratch, we could try it in Pascal. I would be very willing to do the developing as well as host a discussion list for anyone who jumps in.
But is your Mac on the Internet on a more or less continuous basis? A remailer that only works when the owner happens to log on to collect his mail is not terribly useful (though not useless, as others have also noted....just a "very unpredictable lag time" remailer, sort of the "surface mail" of e-amil). It happens that the Net is mainly built up of Unix boxes, hence the focus here on Unix. OS/2, Windows, and Mac boxes will be used increasinly for constant connection applications, so the idea has merit, long term. (Another nit: the Mac, which is what I also use, currently lacks preemptive multitasking. Thus, if one's Mac is playing a multimedia CD-ROM when new mail comes in, it likely won't get remailed until the first app quits or is manually switched out. (Yeah, a few things like print drivers can run in background, and maybe the new TIA emulators can trick the OS into processing SLIP or PPP mail in the background, but who knows?) The consensus is that the Mac is powerful, but it ain't cut out yet to be a Unix box.) The language is a lesser deal. Remember that Eric Hughes knocked out the first remailer in Perl in a few days, and MacPerl exists for the Mac. Going to Pascal would probably be more trouble than it's worth. But the most important feature to have is a solid, reliable connection to the Net. A computer that gets taken to classes, is not connected to the Net, etc., is not very useful as a remailer. (The key is not that a remailer can sometimes remail, but that it can be counted on to be part of chain without the mail getting "dropped on the floor.") --Tim May -- .......................................................................... Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^859433 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available. Cypherpunks list: majordomo@toad.com with body message of only: subscribe cypherpunks. FAQ available at ftp.netcom.com in pub/tc/tcmay