Full Disclosure mailing list archives

RE: Cryptome Hacked!


From: "Steve Wray" <steve.wray () paradise net nz>
Date: Thu, 27 Feb 2003 17:49:45 +1300

From the group charter:
"Politics should be avoided at all costs."

So discussion about the discussion of politics is ok
but discussion of politics is not?

8-/

-----Original Message-----
From: full-disclosure-admin () lists netsys com 
[mailto:full-disclosure-admin () lists netsys com] On Behalf Of 
Kevin Spett
Sent: Thursday, 27 February 2003 5:29 p.m.
To: Sung J. Choe; full-disclosure () lists netsys com; jya () pipeline com
Subject: Re: [Full-disclosure] Cryptome Hacked!


RE: [Full-Disclosure] Cryptome Hacked!>> a) What do you mean 
by "leftist"?
By scrutinizing some of the occasional statements made by 
persons posting
at cryptome, one can assume that the politics of the site 
operators leans
towards the left.  Read the message traffic generated by 
"The practical
reason the US is starting a war." and you will understand.

Okay, while you were busy scrutinizing occasional statements, 
the rest of us
look at consistent, broad and prevaling themes.  John Young's 
views are
unique enough that they do not fall into either of the two 
categories that
people love to imagine the whole spectrum of political 
opinion is divided
into.  Reasonable people don't care to reduce any given 
political stance as
being some point on a line with "Left" on one end and "Right" 
on the other.
While Bill Clinton (who I heard was a Democrat, which in 
turn, I hear are on
"the Left") was in office, the ideas and information 
expressed on Cryptome
were constantly in opposition to his policies, actions and 
propositions.
The fact that the Clipper Chip had the support of "the Left" 
didn't seem to
deter Cryptome from criticizing it.

"The practical reason the US is starting a war" is an overt 
editorial (it's
an email message) that discusses war and its possible 
consequences.  It
doesn't discuss anything that could be correctly classified 
as "Leftist".
Or did I miss a line in there about how stronger government 
regulation of
the means of production would produce a society in which 
wealth were more
justly distributed?  It's written by someone whose opinions 
(no matter how
ridiculous they are) might be of interest to people who 
follow cryptography.
Bonus information: it is neither written by, nor expressly 
endorsed by John
Young.  It's just an opinion that has been posted.  If you 
care to, you can
write a disagreeing opinion and it'll be put up on the 
thread, just like
other people have.

b) What do you mean by "anti-American" (sic)?

I would personally define anti-American as being in a state of mind
where every action taken by the US government is 
represented as being
against American interests.  Therefore, my definitions of 
anti-American
and anti-government are essentially identical.

Let's look at the language you use here: "every action taken by the US
government" and "against American interests".  As for the 
first, it's a
silly hyperbole that isn't even true when you limit its scope 
to that which
is reasonable: cryptography, intellectual property, privacy 
and government
intelligence.  When the US government relaxed the export 
controls on PGP or
when the Communications Decency Act was defeated did John 
Young rail on and
on about how they were horrible events and how the government 
was a terrible
institution for allowing them to occur?  Hmmm, I must have not checked
Cryptome that day.  As for the latter... if John Young dissaproved of
actions that he felt were "against American interests", 
wouldn't that make
him pro-American?  Your arguments seems at odds with one another.

Also, many people do not define the word "American" as the 
ideas and actions
supported by those in power in American government.  
Similarly, definitions
of "anti-government" vary.  I'm fairly certain that John Young is not
inherently against government.  He would probably like a 
government that
made it a priority to protect the civil liberties of its citizens.

Just because somebody can formulate an argument based on one, two,
or three documents does not mean that they grasp the full meaning
of the subject in question.

Don't you know it!!!

Yet, that's how most of the "opinions" and "arguments" are 
presented;
with one or two sources.  And besides, what is "real information"?
Ever hear of "public diplomacy"?

Every article on Cryptome should be considered individually.  
Typically,
they are more informative and give more information about 
their sources than
CNN.com or the ten o'clock news.  I'm not really interested 
in debating
epistemology here.  Do you believe that no information is 
real and that
we're really living in the world of the Matrix where the evil 
AIs of the
future are battling humans for control of the earth?

I've never seen any kind of anarchist advocacy on
cryptome.  Dissent does not make you "anti-government".

Responsible dissent is indeed a duty of US citizens.  How you define
responsible is up to you.

d) For the most part, Cryptome distributes documents... like,
in plaintext format.

True, but they also present snippits of those docs along with a
headline.  The sections that they choose to snip fascinates me in
terms of the content which they feel is important.

Again, it's silly to seek more information in a few 
"snippets" than in a
large quantity of actual content.  I'm sure that you and your 
buddy Ann
Coulter like to sit around for days and talk about "spin" and 
"bias" while
other people choose to debate things of actual meaning.  Cryptome is a
blatantly baised site; It doesn't take a detective to realize 
that.  That
doesn't neccessarily damage its integrity.

e) How is John Young an "extremist"?
Would you describe him as being conservative, or moderate 
in his approach?
If not, he is an extremist in my eyes.

Again, you choose to oversimplify things... are conservative, 
moderate and
extreme the only things that are out there?  When I think of 
extremists, I
think of people like the Black Panthers, Adolf Hitler, Hamas 
and Thomas
Jefferson.  John Young runs a website.  He simply isn't in 
the running for
Extremism.

Are you trying to imply that John Young is trojaning
the software that his site (infrequently) distributes?

Not at all.  I believe that Mr. Young wishes to provide his
community access to good crypto software.  I also believe
that he is committed to his cause.  However, I do think that
those who work for/with No Such Agency would like that.

You think that the NSA is modifying widely distributed crypto 
software?
Okay, that's possible.  How about some proof?  You can 
speculate endlessly
on the behaviour of an organization that no one has a lot of 
information
about.

Cryptome (note Crypt) does indeed distribute and advocate the
use of PGP and other encryption and/or privacy enhancing software.
Given the more-paranoid-than-normal state of most of the cryptome
visitors (myself included), I would think that quite a high 
percentage
of them download and use the software for their own reasons.

You posted a message saying that cryptome had been hacked and 
that you were
concerned about software that it mirrors might be tampered 
with not only on
Cryptome but on other sites.  The software that cryptome has 
is also located
in many, many other places and thus it would be easy to spot 
differences
between them.  If you want to start asking "how do I trust the hashing
tool", "how do I trust the crypto algorithm" or "how do I 
trust the compiler
that I'm using to build the code that I wrote to implement 
the algorithm",
you've wandered outside the scope of what most people on this 
list care to
answer.

In conclusion, for you to attempt to describe cryptome as if it was
C-SPAN, or the Library of Congress is incredible.  If you 
believe that
the operators of cryptome have good intentions towards the 
US government,
than you are also naive.

Cryptome is a site that strongly promotes a very specific 
agenda which is
often at odds with established public policy and popular 
opinion.  It also
publishes opinions of dissent that it may not fully support 
but feel deserve
discussion and exposure.  Neither John Young nor Cryptome are 
many of the
things that you have described them as.  The purpose of my 
message was to
point out what I believe were errors in how you portrayed them.


Kevin.

_______________________________________________
Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
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Full-Disclosure - We believe in it.
Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html


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