As a fairly recent alumnus of CMU, I've been paying particular attention to the CMU sex ban -- especially since several of my friends (and old room- mates) are the ones who were ordered to implement the ban. For those who don't know what I'm talking about, the Time (inc) article is available at: http://www.timeinc.com/time/magazine/domestic/1994/941121/941121.culture.htm... This is the direction from which I expect anonymous methods of contact to first gain wide use and, to a much lesser extent, acceptance. Consider the economic force of sex: we can only benefit from sex being driven underground. Peoples' desire for sexually stimulating video drove the VCR market into existence -- it will also drive the creation of privacy methods. Since governments are short on understanding of C-space, we can expect them to attempt to regulate based purely upon their own rhetoric, ignoring the realities of C-space. That will leave us with computer professionals who will be forced to implement rules they deeply disagree with -- probably many cypherpunks will be among them. Therefore, the Tiger-team beta testers of privacy methods are likely to administrators at schools like CMU who aren't likely to be sympathetic the goals of their marching orders. This particular fracture line in our society, between the technologically elite and the "moralist" power elite, is a god-send. Thank your nearest evangelical: better that this issue, considered much more frivolous than, say, tax evasion, be used to test privacy means. What does this mean in the short term? Remailer operators should be aware that this will be the vector of the soonest attack upon their independence. -- Todd Masco | According to the US dept of Justice Stats, 3.98% of the US cactus@hks.net | population is in prison, the highest count in the world. We cactus@bb.com | live in a police state and are lulled by notions of normalcy.