I think there are two more remailers: elee7h5@rosebud.ee.uh.edu, and catalyst@netcom.com (keys below) Incidentally, I see you have the Mr. Remailer key (elee6ue@rosebud.ee.uh.edu). How did that slip out? :-) I must have extracted it instead of elee7h5@rosebud.ee.uh.edu. Anyway, that one should be stable - I've used it for various scripts hacks and testing, and I restored it to plain form recently. In fact, it may become the preferred remailer on rosebud - the account it is in is still "valid"; it belongs to a friend of mine who is currently working in New Hampshire (he has no telnet access). His password is still valid, and the remailer is set up with his permission (even blessings). I mention this since I have been told by a lawyer that running a remailer on an account I no longer have legitimate access to breaks about three laws here in Texas. So I attempted to re-legitimize my account (described below). Once upon a time that was my account, but I'm through with that grad area, and university, so the account is locked now... but my directory structure is still there. So, I mailed to two people in charge on rosebud and told them to get back to me. So far, I haven't heard anything, so maybe they don't care! Actually, if it doesn't impose a cpu burden (it doesn't) or take up much space (it doesn't), they might not give a crap. elee7h5@rosebud.ee.uh.edu: -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: 2.3a mQCNAiscKOYAAAED/jmrZbh5t5HgEHDGE2zzFZx3sIplEjIFRFsLpCfJYBfN36Rm uT8VGIyCcUSmCTqEOJ5HJZF58CUCOsy3B215ptOvbZdGijC3Qs7FbtGHKGA49q0v gBgVIcjjyppRI9YjfqlI2gUKDLPceCTw20ODAA7UTKYIa3IBS32zjcrFq/uzAAUR tCZyZW1haWxlcjAzIDxlbGVlN2g1QHJvc2VidWQuZWUudWguZWR1PokAlQIFECtk lUeDgOzqS1rWMwEBUdAEAIosaOm/+kTsQI53GAqPXr08v5AAfwup5lDiUbCWp17C ueYHZrP4zolAqQ7kyWrkIeHgJHkX3yB6YH/jQ0MeDZERXS69kq2SGVQSH6inGoF9 3WerfGRpdONa597JVcRpklzMUz6bmXnhsiEm/K1FP9pNOZYyS6h/3gs92ikezq3X =tUXb -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- catalyst@netcom.com -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: 2.3a mQCNAiyBTjoAAAEEAMIKpRnqXb82TOQpx/vEDwGPXndXaxtfiZeSLZqullWCEbd4 YkCHG/F1i3Wzq4Pgz6nSbb58vMS5RonY7+ZC6IHI8zBpp9oMW3u+lqbk8Z61x49d xwAKlE7Zsk/pOeGrqbsidm83WUqlSGgyOpvq0A8LzT4+WPra8ZvHue9jwOpJAAUR tChBbm9ueW1vdXMgUmVtYWlsZXIgPGNhdGFseXN0QG5ldGNvbS5jb20+iQCVAgUQ LIaqhIOA7OpLWtYzAQH4sgQAsc6s3X75LwWTV65Dw76wdSRKuoI57F2ZZWjSOIQK n1CWUn6YEYOIs3kkdHNd0uz9Mspoy+6BsnWGSW11r8k88VThEoVpJ74o91apR1ML yCEdD7O/+nZK8N484+mN2BcKOdeze4QvgTt+qHHUd+Q5alW9VfXtbNImmSnI3FC/ 8n4= =Hh6a -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- -- Karl L. Barrus: klbarrus@owlnet.rice.edu keyID: 5AD633 hash: D1 59 9D 48 72 E9 19 D5 3D F3 93 7E 81 B5 CC 32 "One man's mnemonic is another man's cryptography" - my compilers prof discussing file naming in public directories