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Mail-from: From tcmay@netcom.com Sun Sep 11 23:37 EDT 1994
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From: tcmay@netcom.com (Timothy C. May)
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Subject: Re: Cyphernomicon
To: hal@MIT.EDU
Date: Sun, 11 Sep 1994 20:37:04 -0700 (PDT)
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In-Reply-To: <199409120211.TAA23744@mail3.netcom.com> from "Hal Abelson" at Sep 11, 94 10:11:34 pm
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From: tcmay@netcom.com (Timothy C. May)
Subject: Re: Cyphernomicon
To: hal@MIT.EDU
Date: Sun, 11 Sep 1994 20:37:04 -0700 (PDT)
Cc: tcmay@netcom.com
In-Reply-To: <199409120211.TAA23744@mail3.netcom.com> from "Hal Abelson" at Sep 11, 94 10:11:34 pm
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Hal,

> By way of introduction, I teach computer science at MIT and I'm one of
> the three or four people behind MIT's distribution of PGP 2.6/2.6.1.
> It's been an interesting experience.  On Friday, for example, Jeff
> Schiller and I met with Phil Zimmermann in the morning and with Jim
> Bidzos in the afternoon.  Our goal, by the way, is to turn PGP into an
> international standard under the aegis of the Internet Engineering
> Task Force. Not everyone is signed onto that yet, but we're getting
> close.
> 
> Anyway, so much for my cypherpunk credentials.

And I have long relied on your "Structure and Interpretation..." as
the seminal book in my library...I'm just upset that I got the
brownish (I'm partly color blind) cover with a dust jacket and not the
color cover.

(I was a Lisp programmer in my later years at Intel... I used to use
MacScheme. I think I even bought a tutorial version connected with
your book, but I don't recall using it. My hot interest now is
SmalltalkAgents, for "protocol ecologies," about which my ideas are
just starting to form...it may take a few more years.)

So I'm honored to have your request, and you can do with as you wish.
My main concerns were two-fold:

1. That people would split the doc up, make various connections, and
then be upset when the orignal doc changed. (Or expect _me_ to only make
changes to the docs they'd already Webified.) So long as you don't
mind this situation, I don't.

2. Credit. You know the problem. If "Structure" got fragmented into a
hundred small chunks and scattered....

> I'm writing to ask your permission to do exactly what you said you
> didn't want done with the Cyphernomicon -- taking it and splitting it
> up and putting it on the web.
> 
> The reason is that I'm teaching a class at MIT this fall on legal an
> ethical problems arising from the net.  One of our main topics is
> crypto.   The class readings are mostly on the Web, so students can
> get at them easily.  You might want to look at the class home page
> http://martigny.ai.mit.edu/6095, since you write that you have lynx.
> 
> I'd like to include the Cyphernomicon in the reference material.  I'd
> do it by splitting it up into chapters, linked to from the table of
> contents.  I'll put a link at the beginning of each chapter to your
> copyright statement, together with a note that this is a snapshot of a
> rapidly changing document, and that people who want an up-to-date copy
> should get it from you.  I plan to leave the database up on the Web
> permanently, but if you want, I'll remove this copy of the
> Cyphernomicon at the end of the semester.
> 
> Can I have your permission to do this?

Sure. But clearly there are weak spots, flaws, incomplete sections,
etc. I just got so tired of it dominating my life that I had to
release it, flaws and all.

Also, the politics may not be to everyone's liking. I don't advocate,
for example, untraceable markets in abhorrent acts (contract killings,
extortion, etc.), but I think they're inevitable (to some extent) and
this will not sit well with many. In particular, a journalist could
have a field day with selective quoting of the stuff on "crypto
anarchy."

(Though the journalists like Kevin Kelly and Steven Levy have done an
excellent job on covering this stuff.)

I have no idea, for example, how MIT might react to having these ideas
openly available. I obviously see no problem in having anyone old
enough to think for themselves having access. But not all agree.

So long as my words are not edited or bowdlerized, use them as you wish.

Thanks,

--Tim

-- 
..........................................................................
Timothy C. May         | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money,  
tcmay@netcom.com       | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero
408-688-5409           | knowledge, reputations, information markets, 
W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA  | black markets, collapse of governments.
Higher Power: 2^859433 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available.
"National borders are just speed bumps on the information superhighway."

