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Web Browsers and Anonymous Mail (Was: NSA net trolling)
Wayne Madsen wrote somewhere:
> A knowledgeable government source claims that
> the NSA has concluded agreements with [...] Netscape to
> permit the introduction of the means to prevent the anonymity of
> Internet electronic mail, [...]
I suspect this may actually mean that they're pushing Netscape to
incorporate cryptographic authentication into browser email, which I think is
a useful development. I'm not aware of any public remailers previously
operated by Netscape Communications Corp. that have now shut down. ;)
At any rate, it's an excuse for me to ask some questions:
(0) I'm not aware of any class library objects or methods in stand-alone Java
for calling the local mail transport agent. Is there any class library
support in Java+{Navigator, HotJava, Mosaic, NetCruiser, the AOL web tool,
etc.} for applet calls to the local mail agent that's configured in the
browser ?
I would prefer not to reimplement SMTP using the Socket class in my own
applets. Ideally I'd like to have an applet that presents a form with some
entry boxes and check boxes, quantizes and encrypts the input according to
the check box settings, and spews the resulting byte streams to the MTA.
(1) As I recall, I used to be able to set (as an Option) the path and name of
the local MTA (e.g. /usr/lib/sendmail) in an earlier version of Netscape.
That seems to have disappeared in Navigator 2.0. Is there indeed no longer a
way to set that ?
It occurs to me that we could have achieved partial integration of
remailing into Navigator quite cheaply with that option.
Comments from Sun and/or Netscape and/or anyone else would be welcome.
Thanks :)
-Lewis "You're always disappointed, nothing seems to keep you high -- drive
your bargains, push your papers, win your medals, fuck your strangers;
don't it leave you on the empty side ?" (Joni Mitchell, 1972)