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Re: [Declan McCullagh: "A List Goes Down In Flames," from Netly]
> The only other alternative I can see would be to limit membership --
> but not limit what members might write.
The notion that there are "members" in some kind of formal fashion is
inherently un-cypherpunk in my book and would most likely be
rejected.
> Having been "on" the net for over 15 years -- and with experience in
> both ends of the censorship/moderation problem (I'm probably the
> only Cypherpunks member to have had a book "banned in Boston"), I'm
> sorry that a handful of sociopaths managed to destroy this
> experiment in anarchy, but I suspect that this was inevitable.
In your 15 years on-line you should KNOW that it's an inevitable
cycle inherent to anarchic forums like cypherpunks. But the notion
that cypherpunks is dead and destroyed is silly. Cypherpunks will
(and already are) reform and renew as is, I believe, necessary.
Whether or not the name cypherpunks is used and embraced is
irrelevant. Those interested in cryptography as a tool of personal
privacy and freedom will inevitable congregate in the self-organizing
fashion that "cypherpunks" have always recognized.
The "human judgement" you are referring to is leadership. Leadership
is not necessarily anathema to cypherpunks. Leadership is provided
by those who try to post signal and ignore the noise. Those who
continue to push the discussion forward.
People inevitably tire of robust forums such as this. The sociopaths
and the leaders come and go in waves. Let the forum mutate in
whatever way it chooses.
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Omegaman <mailto:[email protected]>|"When they kick out your front door,
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Send email with "get key" as the| -- The Clash, "Guns of Brixton"
"Subject:"to get my public key | _London_Calling_ , 1980
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