On Sun, May 02, 2010 at 07:21:35AM -0400, John Young wrote:
Yes, and this list also since 1992. Come on, this list is among the earliest to be federally databased and loose fingers tapping greasy keyboards surely led to capturing other lists, and emails, and privacy protection methods, names, addresses, behavioral profiles, nyms, pseudonyms, anonymns, hide-outs, onions, tors, crypto "unbreakable" and implementations easily hackable, TA evasions, accusations, put-downs, name-callings, rattings to the spying customers that paid subscribers to join up and report malefactors, who was susceptible because ridiculed here, who pretended to the least susceptible but bragged about it so much it led to exactly the kind of attention braggarts desire to turncoat with a smirk, and as ever, the ones who came here to learn how to make a buck by exploiting openness and gullibility and blind faith in surefire comsec ways to elude "jack-booted authorities."
This is a pretty small group (these days, there are probably less than 10 people total still on this list), and presumably everybody who has signed up fully realizes what she is disclosing, and just how much she is comfortable disclosing. The millions on social networks are a completely different order of magnitude and amount of personal information leaked, integrated over all social networks over time.
Face it, Facebook and ilk came from this nascent social media promulgating the wonderful world of "if you are really stupid the Internet is the place to empower you, here's how to hide your plans in the open."
Take a look at social media Lady Ga Ga super-confidential Wikileaks' unctuous comsec promises which have zero chance of being any more trustworthy than the plethora of com, org, gov privacy policies deluding users.
The more promises of privacy the greater the deception, affirmed here as biblical.
Post tips for perfect privacy here, Schneier's blog, Cryptography, alt-this-or-that, Tor -- cellars that never leak like those screaming beggars for being screwed.
Notice that the information you and your friends have leaked cannot be recalled. It is almost certainly sitting in some corporate or federal database out there, ready to be mined some day.
Today, you can easily store ~MByte for each warm body on this planet in a single rack -- or a GByte in a single datacenter. And an elephant never forgets. -- Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org">leitl</a> http://leitl.org
ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820 http://www.ativel.com http://postbiota.org 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE