Re: Extradition from the Great Beyond
Not safe at all, even the unclassified programs are getting better all the time. Check the archives for some interesting past discussion--and if you feel like tinkering around yourself, there's a ton of free software you can download here:
Very interesting! I wonder if it is possible to learn to write in other "linguistic fingerprints"? I'll have to look into this. Are there any such programs that are free and run under Linux?
Should be easy to spoof. Submit your efforts to Babelfish and translate it through a few languages. I'll bet that will blenderize it enough to fool most programs. Dr. Evil writes...
Not safe at all, even the unclassified programs are getting better all the time. Check the archives for some interesting past discussion--and if you feel like tinkering around yourself, there's a ton of free software you can download here:
Very interesting! I wonder if it is possible to learn to write in other "linguistic fingerprints"? I'll have to look into this. Are there any such programs that are free and run under Linux?
At 1:09 AM +0000 8/4/01, Dr. Evil wrote:
Not safe at all, even the unclassified programs are getting better all the time. Check the archives for some interesting past discussion--and if you feel like tinkering around yourself, there's a ton of free software you can download here:
Very interesting! I wonder if it is possible to learn to write in other "linguistic fingerprints"?
More interesting by far would be to write software that sanitized the text. Learning to write with a *different* fingerprint should be easy. Remebering which "style" goes with which nym would be tougher, but not undoable. Having a software filter would be optimal. Sort of an advanced version of the Swedish Chef or Jive filters. Proably already done and discussed during a period when I was taking a break from this list.
I'll have to look into this. Are there any such programs that are free and run under Linux?
On 4 Aug 2001, Dr. Evil wrote:
Very interesting! I wonder if it is possible to learn to write in other "linguistic fingerprints"? I'll have to look into this. Are
Since people can't do good random, I presume you can't prevent from leaking bits, unless you use very short messages with very primitive syntax, and do some algorithmic substitution. A better solution would be to use AI which expands a formal construct into natural language, or just ask another person to rewrite a text, then another and maybe one more. Of course the final message still bears a fingerprint, but it's no longer your own.
there any such programs that are free and run under Linux?
participants (4)
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Dr. Evil
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Eugene Leitl
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Kurt Buff
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Petro