
Thanks to help from a person here we have developed a likely source for the RIAA meeting messages, and at the moment it appears likely Safeweb was used to send the messages as well as check on the Cryptome file. Safeweb appears to dynamically assign addresses to users, though within a limited range which might be set by the location of the user, but we are not sure of that. Indeed, if Safeweb does not cloak location by avoiding a predictable range that would be a serious weakness. But we need to test that. Safeweb is, at least in part, hosted by the giant ISP Abovenet, home-based in San Jose, CA, with facilities all around the US and overseas. To help us triangulate a likely location from which the messages were sent we need to log accesses to Cryptome from a variety of US and overseas locations. For example I get the same range of addresses as those of the RIAA messages and file accesses by logging in from New York City to Safeweb.com then using Safeweb to request a Cryptome file. What I don't know is whether those same addresses would be used from other physical locations around the world. For anybody who wants to risk giving away their own location I ask that accesses be made from the Safeweb.com from any location in the world to a fictitious file on Cryptome: http://cryptome.org/this-is-safeweb-xxxxxxxx.htm Replace xxxxxxx with a clue to your location, say, texas, germany, whereever I could identify. The request will generate an error code and an originating address from Safeweb which I can use to compare to what I've got for the RIAA messages and for NYC. Presumably Safeweb will cloak your actual IP address. Let me emphasize that I do not yet believe the source was perpetrating a hoax, or if so whether the hoax was run to benefit RIAA which is the current outcome. My intention is not to out the source if the leak is legitimate, but I damn well want to broadcast it if RIAA, its friends or a TLA cooked up the ruse. Declan has jumped the gun on assigning blame here, apparently doing little more checking than Tony Smith. But hell that snotty Net competition at its best: fire, aim, oh, the safety was off.