000828.html

Submitted by Bill St. Clair on Mon, 28 Aug 2000 12:00:00 GMT
J. Orlin Grabbe at Laissez Faire Times - Louis Freeh Spies on Bill Clinton: How to Exploit the Hole in PGP: An example of how to add an additional recipient request to a PGP public key. I imported his example with the added recipient into the new PGP Freeware, version 6.5.8, that I downloaded on Saturday, then exported to a file and inspected the packets with GnuPG (gpg --list-packets <filename). The additional recipient was gone. So unless PGP 6.5.8 is exporting different key data than it stores in the repository, which is certainly possible, they are now stripping these security risks on key import, as advertised. I'm going to continue to use the newly patched PGP version 6.5.8 until I hear that it's not a good idea. Mr. Grabbe promises a future article about how to work around the bug. Maybe he'll notice by then that 6.5.8 has fixed it or tell us why not. [grabbe]

Last night I watched The Hurricane, starring Denzel Washington as Rubin "Hurricane" Carter. Mr. Carter was framed for murder in 1966, and spent 20 years in jail before a boy from the Bronx and his Canadian friends finally did the research that set him free. He was freed by a federal district court judge, who went outside the normal rules to allow new evidence to be presented in federal court that was never taken to state court. They convinced the judge that the state courts would bury the evidence, as they had buried it for 20 years of appeals. My take-away was that it's good that Mr. Carter was released, but why do we give federal judges so much power. Whether it's one man, a triumvirate, or the nine Supremes, these men have way too much power. The other take-away is that the man who framed him is still free (or maybe he's dead by now). He should be in jail for life for robbing Mr. Carter of so many years of his. Though long, 2.5 hours, it is a movie worth watching IMNSHO.

Rubin Carter -- The Hurricane is a site with lots of words and links about Mr. Carter.

Rubin "Hurricane" Carter: The Other Side of the Story maintains that Mr. Carter was guilty.

Wow! End the War on Freedom was number 18 at Userland's Most Read Sites Yesterday page, with 781 hits. Wonder who's pointing at me. The home page only got 48 of those, and there is no other single page that accounts for the hits. Maybe I got walked by a couple of search engines.

SpeakOut.com - SelectSmart: a short questionaire leading to a matching of presidential candidates to your responses. My answers agreed with with Harry Browne at 95%, George W. Bush at 62%, Ralph Nader at 34% and algore at 24%. They also have a modified Nolan chart, where I ranked today as a conservative-leaning-libertarian. There was no place to answer Mu to some of the questions that needed that answer. For example, I was asked to choose between school vouchers and government schools. Neither is correct. The correct answer is to eliminate all government funding of education and completely privatize all schools.

STAWRS Kids - Why Do We Pay Taxes? STAWRS is the "Simplified Tax & Wage Reporting System. This is a Flash animation attempting to convince kids that taxes are good. It has a stick figure with a smiley face and assorted backgrounds giving the following speech:

Hi! Taxes. Yuck! But we have to pay them. If we didn't, we would have no highways, no roads! (gets hit by car). Oops! Roads are good. And so are schools. Schools give us doctors, lawyers, scientists, and help us build our communities. Taxes help farmers too. They help them maintain their crops and take care of their land (tornado in background). Back to work. and taxes pay for our military. ships, tanks, and neat airplanes. taxes also buy food to feed poor families. though they're not much fun, taxes help us all. Are you ready to start your own business? Good luck!
Then it offers three choices of business, a lemonade stand, a lawn mowing service, and a band. It uses these businesses as examples of the multitude of government forms you have to file to pay taxes. Sick.

Add comment Edit post Add post