PSI Gulps Pipeline
Forwarding mail by: gleick@pipeline.com (James Gleick) on Fri, 10 Feb 0:12 AM ------------------- Dear Pipeliners, I'm pleased to be able to tell you that the Pipeline has become part of a larger enterprise: Performance Systems International (PSINet), the nation's leading Internet access provider. That means two things immediately. First, PSINet has a state-of-the-art dialup network in many cities across the nation, and these will shortly be available to our users at a cost much less than our current out-of-town SprintNet surcharges. Second, PSINet plans to use our Internaut software as the basis for a national service--not to replace the New York-based Pipeline but to provide an alternative for out-of-towners who don't especially care about New York information and services. PSINet is a company a lot like ours--small (though not so small anymore), enthusiastic, fast-moving, and steeped in Internet history. The people there care about the Internet as an environment worth preserving even as it grows so explosively. And they admire what we've accomplished here at the Pipeline in forming a model online service. That's enough for now--there will be more information following along behind, but I wanted you to hear it here first. As for me--this isn't goodbye, exactly, but I have gotten a little behind on a book I was supposed to be writing . . . I am deeply grateful to all of you--staff and customers--for making the Pipeline what it is and for letting me get to know you a little bit. Jim -- James Gleick The Pipeline
Friends - and Bernstein, - I am a writer on assignment from the Economist writing about a certain cryptographers' tussle with the State Department, a fellow who is known around the beltway crypto-anarchy, privacy, niceness-on-the-Internet advocacy crowds as Bernstein. I have the outline of the case from the attorney's handling it. But my editors would really like to be able to name the party and sketch his background. All I have now is a last name, that he is a professor/and/or graduate student at UC Berkeley and is being roughed up by the State Department. Can anyone here - or the hero of the hour himself - come forward and help me complete my assignment? - Regards, - Peter Cassidy - PS: By the way, thanks to the guys who helped me shore up some basic concepts for the pieces I've done for OMNI and the Covert Action Quarterly that have touched on cryptography. Weirdly, one editor actually knew the fellow from Texas that I'd interviewed on technical points. (They worked together on a newspaper. What a ruck!)
I have never heard of such an individual, and I strongly suspect I would have heard of them. I believe you have the name and details wrong if the individual you are looking for exists at all. Perry Peter F Cassidy says:
Friends - and Bernstein, - I am a writer on assignment from the Economist writing about a certain cryptographers' tussle with the State Department, a fellow who is known around the beltway crypto-anarchy, privacy, niceness-on-the-Internet advocacy crowds as Bernstein. I have the outline of the case from the attorney's handling it. But my editors would really like to be able to name the party and sketch his background. All I have now is a last name, that he is a professor/and/or graduate student at UC Berkeley and is being roughed up by the State Department. Can anyone here - or the hero of the hour himself - come forward and help me complete my assignment? - Regards, - Peter Cassidy
- PS: By the way, thanks to the guys who helped me shore up some basic concepts for the pieces I've done for OMNI and the Covert Action Quarterly that have touched on cryptography. Weirdly, one editor actually knew the fellow from Texas that I'd interviewed on technical points. (They worked together on a newspaper. What a ruck!)
Actually, it is possible that you are talking about Dan Bernstein (djb@silverton.berkeley.edu), but to my knowledge he hasn't had any criminal problems with the state department. He's just requested some export licenses that have been refused. Perry Peter F Cassidy says:
Friends - and Bernstein, - I am a writer on assignment from the Economist writing about a certain cryptographers' tussle with the State Department, a fellow who is known around the beltway crypto-anarchy, privacy, niceness-on-the-Internet advocacy crowds as Bernstein. I have the outline of the case from the attorney's handling it. But my editors would really like to be able to name the party and sketch his background. All I have now is a last name, that he is a professor/and/or graduate student at UC Berkeley and is being roughed up by the State Department. Can anyone here - or the hero of the hour himself - come forward and help me complete my assignment? - Regards, - Peter Cassidy
- PS: By the way, thanks to the guys who helped me shore up some basic concepts for the pieces I've done for OMNI and the Covert Action Quarterly that have touched on cryptography. Weirdly, one editor actually knew the fellow from Texas that I'd interviewed on technical points. (They worked together on a newspaper. What a ruck!)
participants (3)
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John Young -
Perry E. Metzger -
Peter F Cassidy