At 3:35 pm -0400 on 9/3/97, Tim May wrote:
I almost deleted these messages from Bob, but have decided to say a few words about financing companies "to help the Cypherpunks cause."
Frankly, I wish you had, we seem to get along better that way, something I keep forgetting, but here goes...
To the contrary, I never write political and socioeconomic essays with the expectation that someone out there will be "making something for me."
So, you just write them in vaccuo? I doubt that. Nobody writes things so that no one ever will ever read them. Especially when they post them to an immediate potential audience of thousands, and their words are permanently archived for posterity in at least 10 places. :-). Even if you posted them here so no one would act on your suggestions -- the best ones out there, I might add, because you've thought about all of these things longer and harder than practically anyone in the world -- they still have value, which is why I, for one, asked for them.
But generating "VC funding requests" is most definitely not even in my Top Ten of reasons.
Of course not. However, it doesn't keep your best thinking on this from having economic value, nonetheless...
From Day One, I have not shied away from talking about interesting building blocks.
Which is why I asked for your opinion, besides to set a rhetorical trap for you, of course. :-).
I agree with this. Certainly for all of the chants about "Cypherpunks write code," and the several years worth of (apparently) several dozen folks here writing code of some sort, what are we really left with that has had a major effect?
Nothing. That's because it costs money to do, and the best people have to work for a living. Well, most of the best people do, anyway. :-).
Most of the code apparently being written either never makes it into products, or is buried deeply, or just evaporates (as code tends to do, a la bit rot). PGP, SSH, the remailer code, and a few other such achivements are what lasts.
Agreed. Just think, there would be more effort put into the exercise of writing code if people could see reward for the risk of their time and neurons. Frankly, for the best coders _qua_ coders, probably, the only reward, after the inherent satisfaction of doing good work, in my opinion, is money. Like Rhett Butler said in GWTW: "People say that money doesn't buy happiness, but it usually does, and when it can't it can buy the most interesting substitutes." I see your life, including your door-side stack of assault rifles, to be reasonable proof of interesting substitutes at the very least, myself. :-).
I don't trash such efforts. Rather, I think it means that it is vitally important that we think carefully about what code is interesting and important. This beats the hell out of people just starting in at coding for the sake of coding.
Indeed. And, I claim that the very best barometer of what works is what sells in the market.
First, this grossly oversimplifies the process of funding companies.
If *I* knew what *you* knew? Someday, when I can afford the body armor, you can give me the breifing. :-).
Methinks Bob has read about Jim Clarke's decision to fund Andreesson and Company too many times. Rarely (very rarely) do the VCs hire people to write the code for some vision.
Well, frankly, I'm not after VC money, but we'll talk about that in a minute.
Second, writing code is cheap, and requires almost no capital. No factories, no chip making machines, no clean rooms, etc. Just a bunch of people with ideas doing it themselves. Nearly all successful software companies started out with almost no working capital.
Agreed. However, there is opportunity cost, measured not only in the time invested on something else, but the return on the investment of doing that other thing. "The cost of anything is the foregone alternative." As my old Mizzou econ prof liked to beat us with. Frankly, if you're doing things for the glory of the revolution, or to make the world free from nation-states, or the joy of flight, that's cool, but it don't pay the rent. It may temporarily focus your efforts more than if you're just trying to pay the rent, certainly, but it won't actually keep the wolves from the door nearly as well as a ducat or two will. I other words, it may have been the joy of flight which motivated the Wright Brothers, but it was coach fare to Cleveland which built the DC3 and got the rest of us actually in the air.
(By contrast, I've watched several "idea" companies which had the "grand vision" first and then sought to hire the hired guns to write the code. All four that I have followed failed.
Certainly a bass-ackward way to do it. Unfortunately, that's the way Disney did it, or L.B. Mayer did it, or Gates, or Edison, or Parekh did it. They had a picture in their head of the way the world worked, or should work, they did things, as cheaply as possible, which should work in that picture, and they were right. They still invested something, is my point, whether it was their money or their time, or their inspiration. Just because your friends spent so much money doing what they wanted to do, Tim, or doing the wrong thing because they didn't know how, doesn't mean that economic enterprise shouldn't exist at all. There's something to be said for heuristics, obviously, but I think your sample size is too small.
A handful of these programmers seem to be truly gifted...the rest are, well, hackers. OK for churning out code with well-defined specifications (and even then the well known Brooks' Law sorts of factors can make some of them grossly unproductve). The few who seem really gifted would be fools to work for a pittance for me--and I'm not willing to give them their easily-gotten daily consulting rates for months on end, etc.
Frankly, gifted programmers are not the people who make money, Tim. Robert Noyce may have been a gifted scientist once, but in the end it was his ability to motivate people ("...don't expect to come here and have me solve your problems. It's *your* ass.") that mattered. That and his ability to understand the opportunities in his market.
Fourth, in my years of Cypherpunks involvement, I have never seen any reasonable investment opportunities. This is not to say there have not been any, especially with the benefit of hindsight.
Probably because as one of the few people around who understood what constitutes an investment opportunity, you didn't create one?
Side note: <snip> What about C2 Net? <snip> He probably--and I haven't checked with him on this--knew that the best opportunities were funded on a shoestring, by those involved directly, by those living the dream, and that diluting his ownership with outside funding would be a mistake. And this shoestring operation was able to more nimbly move to take advantage of opportunities, e.g., dropping the original focus on being a kind of "local ISP" (which is what I perceived the original CC to be) and to instead focus on SSLeay/Stronghold stuff.
Sameer is exactly my case in point. He decided, at the outset, to make money, with as little investment as possible, from cryptography. He kept looking, no, *creating*, opportunities in cryptography until he figured out that financial cryptography was literally where the money was, and now he's riding that pony for all it's worth. Gates, Carnagie, Morgan, all those guys did the same thing.
Other companies have sought funding in a grander way. E.g., PGP, Inc. I had no desire to invest in them, for various reasons. I wish them well, of course.
I look at PGP, Inc., as the second round of funding for Phil's Pretty Good Software, Inc.. They have a product, they have a market, they have (mostly) a managment, they needed money to go after much larger competition, like RSA/DSI, and people with money trusted that they could do it. And, it's a good bet, after a false start, that that's the case...
Eric Hughes has a company, "Simple Access." To tell the truth, and in spite of Eric being a longtime friend of mine (since 1990 at least), I really have no idea what they do. The "www.sac.net" site is remarkably uninformative. Perhaps by design. In any case, I don't think investing money in this is what I want to do.
Rumor has it that they don't pay their bills, and have been stiffing various suppliers ever since they started up. "You should think like an illegal actor" indeed. I understand that there's enough in unpaid bills from around the country at this point to call in the Feds, of all people, onto SA, but most of the people holding the bag are politically opposed to calling the cops. Kind of works out nice for Eric and Hilby, though it makes for an interesting incentive to build one of your eternity-style deadbeat servers, now that I think about it. It might explain why, in addition to the reasons you've already outlined above, they haven't actually gotten anything off the ground. What goes around comes around, and all that.
And there's Electric Communities (www.communities.com), containing several past or present Cypherpunks. I have a lot of hope from them, for "Microcosm," but,again, this is someone else's vision. It's too soon to tell if they have a killer app on their hands. If they do, then business magazines will write sage articles on the wisdom of the VCs. If not, as the odds must say is likelier, just by Bayesian odds, then they'll be forgotten, and the VC money will have just evaporated.
Agreed. However, you have to remember that probability works both ways. The expected value of an investment, be it VC or not, has to be greater than zero, or the money won't go there. That, I believe, is why we have investors in technology, in particular cryptography. It's why I also think that the largest investment opportunities in cryptography will be in financial cryptography, which, I expect, requires all the fun things that people here want to implement, anonymity, unbreakable encryption, reputation sanction, the works, to exist in order to work well. More to the point, all of this stuff will exist because it will be the *cheapest* way to transact business on the net, probably by several orders of magnitude over the way it's done now. It's also why I think you, Tim, would be one of the best financial cryptography investors on the planet. If you decide to "create" an opportunity or two.
Fifth, what I have seen from all of these experiences is that the popular impression of VC funding, that someone has a good idea, then finds a VC angel to provide seed funding, then worker bees are hired, etc., is basically wrong. Or at least a recipe for disaster.
Pretty much agreed. Like the old jewish shopkeeper's maxim: "First thing you do, you get the money." That means customers, not investors. However, in order to get customers, you have to have something to sell, which requires an investment of some kind. Chicken and egg, maybe. That's probably why some investors are willing to break the cycle if you can show them where the money's going to come from. Frankly, if you sell them a story instead of a market, they deserve to lose their money on you, and you deserve to not get anyone's money anymore.
The best growth opportunities come from nimble, mostly self-funded small teams that can learn in an evolutionary way, changing focus as failures occur and learning from mistakes. The worst growth opportunities come from "grand vision" situations.
Absolutely agree. Except of course, that those nimble self-funded small teams have the most coherent "grand visions" in their head of anyone in the market. They know what the world should be so well that even if nobody will invest in their idea, they can make money with it. "The first thing you do, get the money." However, coming from Intel, did you notice that Intel had investors? Admittedly, software startups don't need *that* much, money, as you've said. As long as the principals see there's money to be made from their efforts in the long run. Or they want to change the world. And, frankly, I think financial cryptography is the best of both; you're getting paid to change the world.
Sixth, we often forget that "history is written by the winners." We ask the five star general what his strategies were, forgetting that he became a general because he survived the battles and triumphed. Sort of like asking the Lottery winner what her strategy was....one will get answers, but they probably won't be useful.
Post hoc, ergo, propter hoc. Certainly. Warren Buffett talked in a Forbes issue on portfolio managers a few years ago about a country of 268 million chipanzees, where everyone is given a quarter, and every day the chimps would pair off and flip coins, winner take all. After 28 days of increasingly high-stakes "competition", a single winner would emerge, and write a book titled "How I made $68 million in a month, working just seconds a day". However, like I said before, if the expected value of a given investement is positive, then you can make money investing in enough investments just like it, Tim, as you, of all people, know. It's not a zero sum game. That's why it's called investing, and not gambling... Lots of people who just go through the mechanics of "active" portfolio management might as well invest in an index and let other people think about such things. However, Tim, my claim is that, as someone who knows more than practically anyone else about this field and what it could do, you have the, forgive me, "grand vision" thing down better than almost anyone. You invented most of it, for starters. :-). It's one of the reasons this list is what it is, vitriol and all. ;-). A selling point of the Schnelling Point, to torture the language more than a little.
Asking Jim Clarke or Bill Gates to opine on his strategies for success is not quite as pointless, but is not real useful either. Ask also Manny Fernandez about Gavilan Computer. Or ask the financiers of Ovation, Processor Technology, Mad Computers, Symbolics, Thinking Machines, Trilogy, or a hundred other examples of companies that burned through a billion dollars of hard-earned investor money.
I'm not so sure about that. Clearly, people like Clarke, or Gates, or lots of other people, for that matter, know how to make money just by investing their time and intuition into something. That skill is mostly learned, I think. Gates' parents and family taught it to him, for instance, and it's clear that somebody taught Clarke as well, or he wouldn't have been able to do Netscape after SGI. Whether Clarke, or Gates, for that matter, can continue to do so is anybody's guess, but clearly, they're making it happen, or we wouldn't be talking about them. I also believe that lots of other people who know almost what you know about cryptography could learn a little about making a business, pick up a lot of that financial cryptography that's on the floor, and make the stuff we all think should happen faster than if they just wrote code for the cause and hoped that people would use it. Money makes a good proxy for measuring success, and it buys stuff too...
Seventh, I have no doubt that if I issued a cattle call for programmers to write C code for some pet project I'd get some bites. The "burn rate" for a supported programmer is higher than the salary, of course. (Many will work for a share of the company, plus a living wage, but this of course means incorporation....not a simple matter of just offering to hire programmers.)
Yes, you have to actually spend money (in some form, even time) in order to make money. And, frankly, if you spend enough time doing something well, you'll probably make money too, in spite of your reason for doing things. PRZ is a great example of this, which actually proves my point.
Those small software companies I mentioned burned through $5 million in 3 or so years, with nothing to show for it. And they sure did have the grand vision.
Well, if you count the odds of a single company succeeding, that's about what you expect, right? However, if you looked at, say 30 of such companies, even picking them at random would probably pay for your losses from the ones which hit.
Sorry, but I have no desire in even "giving away" a million bucks, let alone several.
I don't think I said anything about giving money away. I said that you, of all people, know significantly more about cryptography, financial cryptography in particular, that you would be a person who could make real nice money investing in it. Unlike most investors who will be investing in strong crypto and privacy, you are in a very good position to create your own opportunities, instead of waiting for them to present themselves.
In 1993 I elected to help fund a small startup with an extremely promising technology. <snip> And that $65K investment necessitated my sale of $100K worth of various stocks, inclduding Intel, due to the income tax laws being what they are. That $100K worth of stock would now be worth $600K, roughly, given that Intel has gone from $15 to $100 in that period. C'est la vie.
The cost of anything is the foregone alternative. But, like Heinlein said, "Of course the game is rigged. But, you can't win if you don't play."
But is sure makes me more cautious about funding little startups.
Amen.
And I for damned sure won't write out checks for people I only casually know from this mailing list and from occassional Cypherpunks meetings!!!)
I doubt that that's the way *you'd* invest in crypto at all. Nobody but fools would do that. However, you, not being a fool, do know what to invest in, and, more to the point, you'd be more likely to make the stuff you want to happen if you were actively engaged, i.e., invested, in the process. Given what you've done in your life so far, that is.
I could easily spend $500K (costing me an actual $700K before taxes, less some tax deductions as a business, possibly) hiring a staff of several programmers for slightly more than a year. Then it'd be gone. Would a "product" be ready? You tell me the odds.
Frankly, I think they'd be pretty good. Given what we've agreed before about what to code being the most important part of coding. I also expect that others with more money than time, would kick some in to make it happen.
And what would come out of such an effort? I've watched a certain American living in Europe burn through most (and maybe all?) of his fortune, and (some say) his family's fortune, and he had the best of pedigrees and the best set of ideas there is. Now many of us quibble with the choices he made, in licensing, etc., but this should be a cautionary tale to anyone who thinks such funding is easy.
You're talking about David Chaum, of course. And hindsight, which is always bullshit (my hindsight in particular ;-)), says that he should have worked on financial cryptography, a field he invented, and let other people try to be banks, and then software companies, and now credit card associations. Dolby is his business model, not Citibank, or VISA.
I'm not being defeatist. I know that sometimes a $500K investment could turn into tens of millions. It sometimes happens. But usually not, even for the proposals that get funded. (And VCs tend to look at 10 to 30 proposals for every one they actually fund, so the odds in the Cypherpunks pool ain't real great that even a single proposal would reach the funding stage, let alone turn into another Netscape or Yahoo.)
I think that the time has come to change the conventional wisdom on that. In my opinion, there is enough cryptography out there, particularly financial cryptography, that can be funded to see what sells. Stuff which, by your own admission on this list as far back as 3 years ago, needs more money than people can donate time for, though not as much as you thought back then.
No, I'm not a defeatist. But I worked very hard for many years, saving a large fraction of my paycheck and saving my purchased stock (including stock options, which were not as lucrative as popular myth might have it...what made them now worth so much money is that I didn't sell them when they became available, as so many of my coworkers did). I don't intend to blow through half a million or a million bucks a year funding some grand vision,
I think we're getting to the nub of things, here, and maybe a way to hone the point a bit. I'm saying, for a lot of technology, that it may not cost $500K. It might, because of the diseconomies of scale for internet software and the lack of barriers to entry for the extremely clueful technology folks out there, be possible to get a fully functional product to market for as little as $250k, if you could figure out a way to standardize most of the administrative/legal/financial cruft so that the current crop of 20-something proto-crypto-entrepreneurs could concentrate on getting stuff done quickly. That, in fact, is what a bunch of us want to do with this e$lab thing we're kicking around. However, Tim, someone like you doesn't *need* something like e$lab (if anyone does at all :-)). You already *know* how to invest in something properly. You *know* who all the good people are and where all the bodies are buried. And you clearly know how to squeeze a buck until it hollers. Hell, you can even fight off an assault of black-nomex-clad ninja bill collectors. :-). Finally, you probably could do it for significantly *less* than that $250k... Someone like you could go out there and find, or, better, build, something which is just sitting at the edge of the cliff, full of kinetic energy already, and kick it off onto the market's head. There's shitloads of that stuff out there right now, and if you thought about it, you'd know more about what to do, and how to do it, than anyone else. Anyone. And, I claim, that *that* is the only way to *deploy* any of the stuff on your list in any *useful* fashion quickly enough to stop the kinds of totalitarian statism that seems to be afoot this week. If you make something which saves people whole bunches of money and which uses strong cryptography to do it, then privacy through strong cryptography isn't just a good idea, it's a business necessity. Again, you're the person who can do this best, I think.
especially when there seem to be few grand visions that are realistic.
As the one person I know whose reality distortion field is bigger (and more coherent, I might add) than mine (I'm also modest to a fault; ask me...), I find this hard to believe. *Make* a grand vision which is realistic, if you don't like what's out there. Frankly, you already have one. Just add money and stir rapidly...
(Plenty of zealots, though.)
So it seems. ;-).
The Pagemaker team wrote it on a shoestring. No VCs until much later, when a product existed. (BTW, similar to the models for both PGP, Inc. and C2Net, where actual products are actually being sold or distributed.)
Exactly. However, in the case of Pagemaker, the shoestring was *paid* for. That's why he made out like a bandit. Because he knew exactly what he wanted, hired the programmers, told them what to write, and paid them for their work, he *owned* the code when he was done. This is exactly what I see you doing. Same thing with C2NET. My bet is that, for the moment, at least, Sameer owns it *all*, and, frankly, most of the people who work for him are just happy to get paid to do what they love to do, because nobody's investing in the market right now the way Sameer does. When people start to really invest in the market, Sameer's going to have to offer stock options, like Gates did, to keep people. But he's never going to need to get actual investment from anyone ever, if he plays his card right. Of, course, like Gates, he might have to go public someday if he's got too many option holders. That's a nice problem to have, as I've said before. My point, Tim, is that you could take any of the projects on your list, or just the best one, and fund its development as cheaply as possible, on a shoestring, and do exactly what Sameer or Gates did. Though obviously not on the same scale as Gates, of course, but certainly the same mechanical process, and with more than enough return on your investment.
As it happens, I knew Adam Osbourne.
Great. So you know how to do it then.
The problem with your "rhetorical traps," by your own admission, is that you just don't know what you're talking about in most cases, at least insofar as startups and funding go.
You may be right, and, frankly, at the moment, all I can do is bark at the end of my rope about it. :-). Your uncanny talent for ad hominems aside, I believe that my *analysis* of the situation is still valid, no matter my motives or credentials to make it. Frankly, there are people with more than enough credentials agreeing with me on a lot of this stuff. However, that and a nickle, etc... That analysis is that you, Tim May, the person who knows more about this class of stuff than anyone out there, would, in my (completely unworthy ;-)) opinion, be an ideal person to make the right stuff happen. You have the (if you'll pardon the aspersions on your character) "vision", you have the knowlege, -- you even have the money -- to create your own opportunities in cryptography, especially in financial cryptography, which is the lever long enough to lift the world, as it were. And it's a shame you don't just up and do it.
I recall your "hothouse" VC proposal (I may have the name wrong, but the idea was the same as one of those hothouse schemes, with offices for budding entrepreneurs, etc.).
Yup. It's called e$lab, for the time being, and it's supposed to be modeled on IdeaLab in Sacremento, and ThermoElectron, here in Massachusetts, and it's purpose is to put together as many financial cryptography companies as possible. Thank you the plug, however backhanded. Just spell my name right, or not, and I'll be happy. Any mention you can walk away from, and all that...
Maybe in another post I'll give my views on why such hothouse schemes are lousy ideas.
Wonderful. Love to hear it. Be prepared to stand in line for a little while at the microphone, though... :-).
But if yours is up and running and headed for success, I'll be happy to stand corrected.
I'd be happy to stand and correct you, someday, hopefully soon. If it works, that is. Another nice problem to have. Certainly e$lab represents my willingness to put people with money and business acumen together with people who know financial cryptography until the people who know financial cryptography have enough business accumen to teach it themselves. Whether e$lab ends up a 'hothouse' in the model we've all come to know and love remains to be seen. It doesn't mean we get to quit, though. Sameer's original idea for C2NET didn't work, or his second, either, for that matter. Microsoft isn't Traff-o-Data anymore. However, the "grand vision" is still there, and I'm just as convinced that it's right as they were of theirs...
John chooses to do the things he chooses to do. He has more interest in, or faith in, the legal process. I have more interest in, or faith in, the expository process. I write about 100 times as much as he does. To each their own.
Indeed. Maybe we're circling around another important truth here. Mark Twain made his name, and lots of money, writing. You don't need money, but you've made your name by thinking, writing, and talking, for the most part. Mark Twain spent horrendous chunks of his personal fortune on a supposedly revolutionary printing press, or maybe it was a precursor to the typewriter, something like that. His famous quote, "Put all your eggs in one basket. And watch the basket." comes from that experience. Heck, maybe all *I'm* good for is shooting my mouth off too. (That and conning people into doing fun projects, hopefully for money.) It would be nice, someday, to have done a little more than that, though. It could be that you're not tempermentally suited to invest your time, effort, and money into strong cryptography as a business, even if you did know more about where the future is and how to do it cheaper than anyone else, as I believe you do.
I won't get involved in Bob's seeming challenge to me to start matching John's investments.
I'm not challenging, per se. That's a little more effort than I'm capable of. Wheedling might be more apt, but that's an undignified appelation for my good intent, here. ;-).
It costs money, but almost certainly not VC money. Take just one example, an offshore credit reporting agency not bound by U.S. restrictions under the FCRA. There is no need for a VC to fund this...this is best done "on a shoestring" by someone who starts small and expands.
Exactly my point. I think, myself, that venture vapital is probably an industrial phenomenon, caused by transfer pricing inefficiencies in a hierarchically organized, government controlled, capital market. (But, that, of course, is an indecipherable jargon-pile for another day.) I'm sure that someday -- after someone *else* makes a bunch of money bootstrapping various successful financial cryptography companies -- venture capitalists will invest in financial cryptography. Maybe, if we make something like e$lab work, somebody in the venture capital business will want to play there some day, too. Hopefully, if need to have a second round at all, shares in e$lab would be stable -- and large -- enough to be more in line with straight up institutional investment than venture capital. Again, a nice problem to have. And maybe one we don't even need to have. e$lab may only be of a certain size. Certainly if the investment's small enough and the returns are large enough, and if every person in china gave us a nickle... :-).
(Think of how Amazon.com got started. Lots of similar examples.)
Indeed.
Personally, I would only get involved in such a thing if I lived offshore, as the government could otherwise come after me (even for funding such a thing). But the interesting pros and cons of such a project are well worth discussing. Maybe someone out there will do it.
I think that lots of what you want to do don't need to be done offshore, and, remembering that whatever you do offshore still hangs your ass here Stateside, if it can be proven, it doesn't help to be there much. People like one of the Duty Free Shops partners, and a commodity trader in Zug, Switzerland (Not to be confused with ZOG, Palestine :-)) come to mind. In addition, there are lots of foriegn nationals trying to make some of this "regulatory arbitrage" stuff happen as we speak. Anyway, you yourself have said here, many times (check the archives ;-)), that technology has to be built which is jurisdiction independant, anyway. Besides, you've also said here, many times (check the arch<BIFF! Ouch!...>) that living offshore, except maybe for the nice weather in Anguilla, is not what it would be cracked up to be for someone like you, anyway...
(This space reserved for someone to chime in about Vince Cate's ISP operation in Anguilla.)
Ask not for whom the bell tolls, etc...
Why don't you knock off the "Put up or shut up" kinds of remarks? It's never a good basis for investment, to respond to "dares."
My apologies. I'm not entirely sure I was "daring" you to do anything. And, I agree that responding to a "dare" is not a rational investment strategy. However, I bet that if you put some of your considerable expertise in both investing and in cryptography, that you could figure out away to make a lot of the stuff that we talk about here on this list real. (Maybe, if I'm not careful and I keep bugging you enough, even assasination markets. ;-))
I'll say what I want to say. Maybe even someday a good investment will appear. But from what I've seen of the folks at gatherings I meet them at, few of them would be good candidates for a VC-funded approach.
Nope. More like a hands-on, bootstrap, create your own opportunity approach, which is what I'm talking about. Something you could probably do, and probably do better than anyone else out there, by virtue of having created this "vision" we all want to see happen.
No, what it shows is the power of small entrepreneurs doing very local things, with the things that succeed being all that we remember (the losers are forgotten).
Agreed, but again, that's not the point. The point is, that for a given amount of money, time, and determination, more money is made than is invested over all. And, frankly, I do not believe that people like Sameer is "lucky" (heh...) anyway. He made his luck by not giving up on making money with privacy and cryptography. What he found was the most money can be made in financial cryptography, which is, oddly enough, the way to make the most privacy happen as well. Funny how that economics stuff works...
Yeah, well let us know when "e$lab" gets really rolling.
As Telulah Bankhead said to Chico Marx under lewd circumstances: "And so you shall, you old fashioned boy"...
Personally, I think you undercut your own significance by the heavy reliance on cutesy names centering around "$" in place of "s," as in "e-$pam" and "e$lab." Cutesy wears thin fast.
Cutsey may be as cutesy does, but heavy reliance on it or not, it's not nearly as skinny a gambit as periodically calling for "somebody" to suitcase nuke Washington, however pleasant the prospect may be to some of us on occasion.
In the meantime, knock off with the dares.
Admittedly, I did not play fair back there. When one bangs on the cage of a 900 lb gorilla with a stick, one should expect a little shit thrown in one's face in return... I mean, not that you're a gorilla or anything, Tim. Or 900 pounds. Or even throw shit, for that matter, but, well, maybe I better quit, now...
Maybe we should just mutually ignore each other for a while.
Sounds like a good idea. I keep forgetting that when we try to engage in civil discourse, I say something that pisses you off and my throat gets ripped out... Cheers, Bob Hettinga ----------------- Robert Hettinga (rah@shipwright.com), Philodox e$, 44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA "... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity, [predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' The e$ Home Page: http://www.shipwright.com/