
At 2:36 AM 8/16/93 +0000, an12070@anon.penet.fi wrote:
building up all these things on student accounts is commendable but a foundation of quicksand in the long run.
Quicksand is fine if you use pontoons. We *are* a guerrilla operation, aren't we? Let me pay homage to those who have endured the risk of offering their student accounts for use as remailers, etc. We need more like you. I could get some bootleg student accounts, but I think the annoyance factor might outweigh the benefit of more resouces. And, as my anonymous posting implies, I'm not entirely sure I want to be out of the closet as a cypherpunk yet.
rumor has it even soda.berkeley.edu ftp site (perhaps the most critical cypherpunk element other than the mailing list) is being run off a student account.
This is indeed our great vulnerable point. We should attempt to decentralize it (at least have more backup). UNIX gurus- if I put PGP in my home directory, how do I make it available netwide? Does my sysadmin Another possibility - spring some real cash and get cycles and ftp support on netcom or something like it. How much would it cost? Is it cycles, space and access we need, money, or just someone to take charge? Once we got digital cash working, things have a better chance to become self-supporting and less at the mercy of university system administrators. How difficult would it be to get some resources (cycles, disk space, code) from Chaum's company Digicash? We could do an academic research project studying the feasibility of trade over internet, funded primarily by in-kind donations. Can we piggy-back on the netcash effort?
* the `i thought you were doing that' factor.
Is this really a problem? I'm always pleasantly surprised when something gets done, even if I'm working on it.
* to a large degree, despite the commandment `cypherpunks write code', the `cypherpunks' have always gained their cohesion more from political ideology than implementing tangible systems.
I don't know about anyone else, but the tangibility did it for me. I used to be fatalistic about privacy etc. The tangible achievements of the cypherpunks have given me hope that there *is* a soft underbelly on that beast. Not that ideology isn't fun!

remail@tamsun.tamu.edu says:
At 2:36 AM 8/16/93 +0000, an12070@anon.penet.fi wrote:
building up all these things on student accounts is commendable but a foundation of quicksand in the long run.
Quicksand is fine if you use pontoons. We *are* a guerrilla operation, aren't we?
I dunno about you, but I'm mainstream. Privacy is for everyone. The more we treat ourselves as people doing things that are shady, the more we will be treated as shady. Nothing we are doing is illegal -- why must we then slink in shadows? This list includes some of the world's foremost experts in cryptography, as well as lots of perfectly solid citizens. I say we wait until we are driven underground to pretend that we are underground. If we act as though we are shady, we will only make it easier to repress us. Perry

On Aug 17, 7:02pm, "Perry E. Metzger" wrote:
Subject: Re: `Stalled' Progress
If we act as though we are shady, we will only make it easier to repress us.
Amen! I enjoy being shady at times - and certainly did in my youth (something I cling to with my fingernails, now :-). However, the giverment is trying to do something here which is an affront to perfectly dull, ordinary people (like the Republicans for whom I work) and Cypherpunks are doing something to fight against such reprehensible behavior. For this fight against Skipjack, Clipper and ITAR, I see no reason to act like an underground organization. In the above-ground fight, of course, it's interesting to speculate about what the underground would do if Clinton's Cops were to try to clamp down. That can be good information to bring to the public. Then again, if it's scary enough (like the V.Voice article, perhaps), maybe it could drive the voting public into the loving arms of the FBI. - Carl
participants (3)
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cme@ellisun.sw.stratus.com
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Perry E. Metzger
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remail@tamsun.tamu.edu