1993-04-30 - Re: npr report

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From: karn@qualcomm.com (Phil Karn)
To: jet@nas.nasa.gov
Message Hash: 60f1504ca6ba7932e090aa09f5a27faa652c12d90d21f6c3c456ca017ab2dacd
Message ID: <9304302043.AA21502@servo>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-04-30 20:44:08 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 30 Apr 93 13:44:08 PDT

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From: karn@qualcomm.com (Phil Karn)
Date: Fri, 30 Apr 93 13:44:08 PDT
To: jet@nas.nasa.gov
Subject: Re:  npr report
Message-ID: <9304302043.AA21502@servo>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


> This is a *wonderful* analogy.  Imagine if one could not buy a set of
> locks for their house w/o buying the government lock-box to go beside
> the front door.

It's an even better analogy (for me) because of the experience I had a year
ago with a house I was renting. The owner had put it up for sale, so a
lockbox was installed on the garage door. One day I came home and noticed
that the box was open, and the key inside was missing.

Gave me a real warm and fuzzy feeling.

One of the really nice things about now owning a house (vs renting) is
that I can change the locks whenever I please and I don't have to give
a copy to *anybody*...

Phil







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