once again I'm asking for some details/help on what looks ever more like a pure anonymity problem. maybe I should start with revealing what it's all for, since I'm pretty much stuck there at the moment. point your browser to http://www.lemuria.org/Black if you want and take a look. there's not much there at the moment, but should be enough to give you a basic idea. in short, it's kind of an archive for thought crime. a little like cryptome but with a different topic and philosophy. most importantly, it's only a front. the actual data store is somewhere else, e.g. freenet. so when the thugs kick in my door and take the machine, nothing whatsoever is lost. now since some of the information archived there will surely be illegal in one or more countries, what is needed is guaranteed anonymity for pretty much everyone involved (except the publisher, who's taking a risk but can drop out at any time without destroying the data). some of the related problems are solved, many not. one of the worst unsolved so far is what I call "hidden update". in short, I need a way for Alice to give Bob a piece of information with neither Alice nor Bob knowing each other. however, Bob should have a way to verify that subsequent messages are coming from the same Alice. bonus points if there's a way for Bob to send messages to Alice, too. main problem: the need to implement the above with existing and readily available infrastructure. one solution I've come up with so far is for Alice to encrypt to Bob's (anonymously published) key and post via remailers to, say, alt.anonymous.messages, which Bob is known to read. alternatively, agree on one or more porn/binary newsgroups and use stego.
Why doesn't Napster just move offshore? Ken
At 01:23 PM 2/13/01 +0100, Tom wrote:
Ken Brown wrote:
Why doesn't Napster just move offshore?
because it is headed by identifiable individuals.
Yeah. Something Napster-the-Program-like could easily move, and there are a large number of OpenNap servers run by random people, but Napster-The-Company is trying to make money for its investors - it's no longer a couple of college students whose objective is to have fun and share music of dubious copyright status. Because Napster is headed by identifiable US individuals who've been hit with court orders, the scenario of "Napster shut down and a surprisingly similar company reopens in Tonga" would be looked at very closely. Thanks! Bill Bill Stewart, bill.stewart@pobox.com PGP Fingerprint D454 E202 CBC8 40BF 3C85 B884 0ABE 4639
participants (3)
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Bill Stewart
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Ken Brown
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Tom