BlackNet Investigations--the Truth (fwd)
Cypherians, Here's a posting I sent to the "Extropians" list, which many of you are already on..sorry about getting this twice. Hit "delete" now if you are not interested in the "crypto-anarchy" side of what we are doing. I say this because when I post on these topics, which are apparently of interest to some, I often get notes or postings saying "Not all of us are anarchists, so keep this stuff off the list!" Now we are a diverse bunch. Some of us are fairly radical libertarians and see strong crypto as the technological tool to demolish governments (including the U.S. government). Others of us are anti-big business and see crypto as a means of reducing the power of large corporations over individuals. Others are socialists, acid freaks, even military cadets. Whatever. Some want to talk about using thermite bombs to melt hard disks (a current hot topic, as it were). Others are deeply into Perl scripts, MIME, and so on. For others, patent law and the ins and outs of the ECPA are the big excitement. The point is, there are a lot of loosely related items in the Cypherpunks agenda. What follows is related to _my_ main interest, the colonization of cyberspace and the institutions and methods which will arise. Don't read it if it doesn't interest you. And if you're scared that talking about using technology to bypass laws and ultimately overthrow national governments as we know them today will get you into trouble with the authorities or with your company, well, then this list is probably not for you. Me, I say what I think. Others can say what they think, too. -Tim May Forwarded message: To: Extropians@extropy.org Date: Fri, 1 Oct 93 14:06:16 -0700 From: tcmay@netcom.com (Timothy C. May) Subject: BlackNet Investigations--the Truth BlackNet Investigations Announces New Dossier Services FLASH: BlackNet Investigations is pleased to announce the immediate availability of dossiers from the former East Germany (DDR) and the former Soviet Union. We have obtained tens of millions of dossiers on activists, dissidents, extropians, and ordinary people and have meticulously scanned and digitized the essence of these files (many of these files were already in magnetic format, albeit primitive). Now you can learn what the KGB had on your business associates! Now you can discover if that little German pastry is as innocent as she seems. And you can even find out what the GRU had on you from your visit to Vienna in 1984. Contact us for details. Competitive rates, as always. And coming soon: the previously secret files of the KriminalStaatsPolizei. Plus, the now-privatized dossiers of the South American police states! Sources close to the FBI may soon make their files available as well! We are also negotiating with personnel at hospitals and insurance companies to obtain black market copies of insurance records, describing in gory detail all medical and psychiatric conditions for tens of millions of Americans. Onward and Upward! -BlackNet Investigations, a Cyberspace Entity ......... By now many of you know that BlackNet Investigations is not quite real...yet. More than just a Klaus!-style put-on, it's a basically plausible implication of current trends. Some of you requested your dossiers, others even wrote threatening notes. And a few of you even played along, saying how "shocked, simply shocked" you were to see the dossiers compiled on you. (Thanks! You know who you are.) As Dave Krieger noted in his piece on BlackNet Investigations, folks need to keep the inevitability of such dossier-based systems in mind. Others may not "advertise" the way BlackNet does, but they're just as surely keeping dossiers. I don't think it's overly paranoid to suggest that things you write on Usenet, or in mailing lists like Extropians and Cypherpunks, are being compiled by some into dossiers of sorts...call them "databases" if you like, but they're still dossiers. And in fact I do have a lot of Extropians and Cypherpunks postings tucked away in places that my Mac databases can access them easily, via keyword searches, tagged fields, etc. I'm quote sure a lot of people are doing this, quite likely some TLA agencies. All of the Extropians and Cypherpunks traffic for the past couple of years, and a lot more, fits on a single 128 MB magneto-optical cartridge...and I've got 10 or so of them. All Usenet postings are archived on CD-ROMs, available by subscription (Walnut Creek Software, or somesuch...and maybe multiple sources). Easy to obtain. Expect ftp sites to carry these back postings, if they aren't already available. In the next 10 years it'll be essentially a trivial exercise for any person--your child, your potential employer, credit agencies, etc.--to sift through the 20 or 30 gigabyes of Usenet traffic for a 10-year period and look for juicy items, for admissions of unusual sexual practices, for extreme political statements, etc. Data storage increases (CDs, DATs, MOs, new media) and processor speed increases will make searches easy and fast. Rather than having all this data on one's own machine, many people will compile it into files or dossiers, and then charge access fees. Customized searches, specialized grepping, and database "engines" optimized for search (like the Connection Machines, the Teradata hypercubes, neural net and fuzzy logic engines, etc.) will make this even easier. As jurisdictions attempt to pass laws restricting these accesses, as with the convoluted U.S. laws regarding credit, tenant (renter) credit, medical malpractice databases, etc. (the whole credit market, in other words), these databases will be moved offshore. Or the access may go offshore, and then back again! (You can set up the databases in your bedroom, then sell access through "cut-outs" that lie beyond the reach of U.S. laws.) Private investigation as we know it today will be radically changed. (Actually, much of current P.I. work is already accessing records and databases, so-called "skip-tracing" work, to see where vanished people have ended up...deadbeat dads, missing children, etc.) Entities like BlackNet will flourish in the crypto-anarchic world of cyberspace (or "cypherspace," as John Draper dubbed it). Positive reputations will be of utmost importance, as we've discussed so many times. Digital pseudonyms will of necessity become more widespread. Offshore data havens, credit agencies that aren't restricted to the "7 years" allowed by U.S. law, repositories of stolen software, all will be accessible by "BlackNet"-style "wormholes" (the public key access methods that allow entities to communicate anonymously and untraceably). Wake up and prepare for this future. Embrace it, or be left behind. Crypto-anarchy is inevitable, and changes everything. -Tim May -- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-688-5409 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^756839 | Public Key: by arrangement Note: I put time and money into writing this posting. I hope you enjoy it.
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tcmay@netcom.com