Tim May 1992 Post on Future of Cyberspace/Cryptology/Digital Money/Transnationalism

Cari Machet carimachet at gmail.com
Mon Dec 24 12:49:35 PST 2018


I LIKE TO SAY: PURITY IS A COFFIN

some freedom some imprisonment - just like life we are free we just happen
to be experiencing life in a very limited container

so what about those pesky little undersea cables all going to the turtle
island - u s of a ?

umn without them we got nothin goin too fast anywheres

when did they get laid ? 1854

by a coorporation

life is a build and dualism has run its course ... good and bad boys do
good and bad things and sometimes what they do that is considered bad ends
up being overall good and vice versa

happy winter solstice - when the sun is still - all the beautiful people on
this listserve

On Mon, Dec 24, 2018 at 9:19 PM juan <juan.g71 at gmail.com> wrote:

> On Sun, 23 Dec 2018 22:55:23 +0000 (UTC)
> jim bell <jdb10987 at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> >
> > >> 26 years is "forever" in technology.   26 years ago, very few people
> had even heard of the "Internet".
> >
> > >    Actually in the last 26 years there hasn't been any significant
> 'technological' change *at all*. The only thing that happened is that
> microelectronics got relatively cheaper.
> >
> > You forgot that in 1992, typical dialup modems worked at 9600 bps.  Now,
> most people have access to 25 megabits/sec Internet.
>
>
>         I don't think I've forgotten that. That fact isn't just too
> relevant to what I'm saying.
>
>         TM : "Networks are multiplying beyond any hope of government
> control,"
>
>         Point is, 26 years ago there was no 'technological' reason for
> that to be true just like there's no reason for that to be true now.
> Networks were (supposedly...) beyond govcorp control simply because govcorp
> wasn't devoting many resources to control them, not because they lacked the
> 'technology' to control them.
>
>         Yet another point is who 'owned' those networks. Oh wait, they
> were and are owned by a few monopoplies chartered by the government,
> monopolies that are of course just arms of the government.
>
>
>
> > I occasionally see people in discussion areas claim that "the U.S.
> Government" was responsible for making "The Internet".I shut that talk
> down,
>
>
>         You do? =) Yet it is a plain historical fact that the US govt and
> military were heavily involved in the creation of the internet.
>
>
> >by pointing out "Do you think that The Internet would have 'worked' if a
> person, at home, had to connect up to his ISP at with a 300 bps modem?
> 1200 bps?  2400 bps?"I counter by pointing out that the people REALLY
> responsible for a usable Internet were those who developed the 9600 bps,
> 14,400 bps, and 28,800 bps modems.  Rockwell, USR (US Robotics), Hayes,
> Telebit, and a few others.  Had that not existed, it would have been hard
> to make the Internet available to most people.
>
>
>         The main or only reason those audio modems were developed was to
> use the existing telephone lines. Yet in 1995 ethernet run at 100
> megabits...
>
>
>
> > It took a lot of work to learn how to shove 28.8Kbits/sec down a 3000 Hz
> channel.
>   By and large, those people who did that were the ones who made the
> Internet of the late 90's possible.
>
>
>         Nah. On the other hand, it's true that all the hardware was
> produced and is produced by pseudo 'private' government chartered firms.
> Which is how highly corporatist mixed economies work.
>
>         Bottom line : the belief that freedom is 'served' by 'technology'
> is fully detached from reality.
>
>

-- 
<https://about.me/carimachet?promo=email_sig&utm_source=product&utm_medium=email_sig&utm_campaign=gmail_api&utm_content=thumb>
cari machet
about.me/carimachet
<https://about.me/carimachet?promo=email_sig&utm_source=product&utm_medium=email_sig&utm_campaign=gmail_api&utm_content=thumb>
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