Re: Assassination Politics--isn't it gambling?
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- At 06:00 PM 2/6/96 PST, banelaw@med.com wrote:
Jim: as to "Assassination Politics." Isn't the structure you describe gambling? Placing money on a prediction, with the correct predictor winning?
I guess that depends on the laws, doesn't it? <G> Seriously, though, since all the participants are anonymous, and it can all be done from overseas... Somehow, though, I think politicians will take little solace from knowing that they are protected from death only by laws against gambling.
And if so, isn't it illegal if done over the wires, i.e., federal commerce? I'm not looking for a way to declare your scheme illegal, I'm just pointing out that there are other angles, especially if done over the wires.
I'd sure like to read a serious legal analysis of all this. Maybe all the lawyers are too terrified to respond.
I guess you could move the structure off shore--pity the poor country hosting such an entity! If you were at all succesfull, the server accepting digital cash would be moving from place to place--remember pirate radio?
Presumably, the digital cash could be encrypted with the organization's private key, and published (anonymously) on a USENET area, in a way which is untraceable and unidentifiable. Jim Bell jimbell@pacifier.com Klaatu Burada Nikto Something is going to happen. Something.......Wonderful! -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBMRlnY/qHVDBboB2dAQHJcQP/T8u6c5K3Idb5K8/ztBJWSqTQBPmvMlpR y4GlRgOyIn11jnMX60p7ffselQwSF8mxM3BJv4O2ODr/KWwACeQoK9svWW30xSyF 0eSuFzHvOfrZLW3xvpTo1mMoxRCtYeUQZLZGLvU2G99P6GeWCPRhWbFfTQ1Q6aen yiEOvB/DfUs= =Aj2b -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
On Wed, 7 Feb 1996, jim bell wrote:
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At 06:00 PM 2/6/96 PST, banelaw@med.com wrote:
Jim: as to "Assassination Politics." Isn't the structure you describe gambling? Placing money on a prediction, with the correct predictor winning?
I guess that depends on the laws, doesn't it? <G> Seriously, though, since all the participants are anonymous, and it can all be done from overseas...
Somehow, though, I think politicians will take little solace from knowing that they are protected from death only by laws against gambling.
Yeah, those silly homicide laws don't apply if there is a bet on the line.
And if so, isn't it illegal if done over the wires, i.e., federal commerce? I'm not looking for a way to declare your scheme illegal, I'm just pointing out that there are other angles, especially if done over the wires.
I'd sure like to read a serious legal analysis of all this. Maybe all the lawyers are too terrified to respond.
Wire fraud would be the least of your worries. Try conspiracy to commit murder.
jimbell@pacifier.com
Klaatu Burada Nikto ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ I know I should know it, but can't place it. Help anybody?
EBD
At <http://www.us.net/~steptoe/welcome.htm>, there is a link to a paper by Stuart A. Baker, formerly (if I remember correctly) NSA's Chief Counsel. EMERGING JAPANESE ENCRYPTION POLICY by Stewart A. Baker Acouple of choice paragraphs: Japan's encryption policymaking is in its early stages, but there are strong signs that encryption is increasingly seen as a key technology for improving Japan's penetration of the Global Information Infrastructure. A highly selective (and possibly biased) sampling of informed Japanese opinion on cryptography suggests a growing determination to treat cryptography as a national Japanese economic priority. - and - For a variety of reasons, commercial interests are predominant in Japanese government thinking about encryption. Time after time during my interviews, I was reminded that Japan was an island nation that has not had to defend itself for fifty years and so has not had to confront the national security concerns associated with encryption. And Japanese police face severe political and constitutional constraints on wiretapping, so the prospect of losing this criminal investigative tool seems not to be as troubling to the Japanese government as to the United States and many European nations. There's lots more here, and I haven't read it all. -- Marshall Marshall Clow Aladdin Systems <mailto:mclow@mailhost2.csusm.edu> "Eternal vigilance is the price of PostScript" -- MacUser Jan 96 DTP and Graphics column
participants (3)
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Brian Davis -
jim bell -
Marshall Clow