-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The overall message I get from JYA's impressionistic essays on network security is that in his view there ain't no such animal. Add to this the well established security axiom across all contexts, "a trusted entity is one that can break your security model." In the present context, trusting Cryptome to protect your privacy is a sucker bet: Either you don't care, or your own OpSec is up to that task, or you are screwed. This context makes the issue at hand an object lesson in stating the obvious. A rented, public facing, vendor configured and maintained web server instance appears to be 'leaking' its http logs to world + dog. That would mean data that is supposed to be available only to a few dozen intelligence services, tech support guise and marketing departments is world readable. A level playing field with equal access for all is worse than one where access is monopolized by a clusterfuck of privileged players why? :o) -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1 iQIcBAEBAgAGBQJWFlEDAAoJEDZ0Gg87KR0LJKEP/RrMbcQWSeEVgXDNULqIHOV0 /hKa3G0yumMGT2Jne4yMrKlAEoCKD9x0BT03avLKaBd647mzxLfPVtQKcH1JMnCR +y1anJRzyBa2K/5Q9vKRWtpe+N7PP5bK5nZF0l95OzxYa7rMCv6Ruzd5kJmkARcP 92y6iCKjHBmzO9Qs3HC9rxJEiwqDsOqtbWCGTce5bemriH1AymZldwrNn2DL0Q2w k8kkhqP/1RRgAi5edKhrvwDvwlMCMAwtGK+KV9Ehv1O5KuyRCi963Uoyt5iuXvFa 98yLBe7xXOVQNl6KUynbn/oPErmCZIplkmpuMikgx40aCvzVndGj0VBxzw1RqjiW ZKWU8+foVUXfs83Xk46i5iHTuJApGMh8L8bSUPxyd68KvB3HJw5043rO4A9g5q8/ SuIILOwDkqLTqf1baUC7tPYIs2ucT6Eo2o0bJcEmQZidgG+PQ8ZxTcdr1j0d5bGd /JB45Rr1UY2wGV/DcFQGZ7WuMfZra7wcUL4pMk23OtRPhR1glSF1JHg64vNrybsh EuzC56QDcHNEEgcqXTRTCCNCK20RxbpSEkib22F1tdZNk/6C6BDqpwUIo5U5nkbr 7zwau6CA1bWzWYQdIvuSlQ35VIvN03NxrddGLp0Gy9bQGQhFVV7KpNravgurs1H0 0Zv7i5ErmHlGJEr2ztRg =cQhw -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----