Re: New remailer up.
Perry Metzger wrote, "Tapping Netcom's net connections would take more than $20 of effort. Up it to $50,000 and I'll happily take on your offer. However, I am going to need assurances that the money will actually be paid." This is exactly the point I was trying to make. I wanted the word "trivial" to be clarified by those who were being so vocal about dismissing a remailer on Netcom. You'll also need a good lawyer when Netcom finds your tap ;-). But I'm sure some skilled hacker will be able to tell me the site and I'll happily be out $20, in say, a couple days? No use hacking my password, as I keep no logs (for now). The reason it's only $20, is that I am indeed honestly interested in knowing something about my remailer's security, and I don't know enough internet/Unix to risk being a total sucker. -Xenon
qwerty-remailer@netcom.com says:
Perry Metzger wrote, "Tapping Netcom's net connections would take more than $20 of effort. Up it to $50,000 and I'll happily take on your offer. However, I am going to need assurances that the money will actually be paid."
This is exactly the point I was trying to make. I wanted the word "trivial" to be clarified by those who were being so vocal about dismissing a remailer on Netcom.
Well, the problem is that NETCOM has logs that are good enough that THEY can trivally trace things if they want. Assuming they are doing normal SMTP logging tracking you down should be easy. I would require a network tap assuming that I wasn't going to have their help. However, make no mistake that Netcom can and will cooperate with the police if you use your remailer in a way that the government doesn't like, so it seems that the security afforded isn't that good.
But I'm sure some skilled hacker will be able to tell me the site and I'll happily be out $20, in say, a couple days?
Without any information out of the network logs or the network itself, no one is going to be able to say. Besides, $20 is a paltry sum for the amount of work involved.
No use hacking my password, as I keep no logs (for now).
Netcom keeps logs. .pm
participants (2)
-
Perry E. Metzger -
qwerty-remailer@netcom.com