1993-06-16 - Re: Timothy C. May:superhacker

Header Data

From: bbyer@BIX.com
To: AOLCHTNN@vax1.tcd.ie
Message Hash: 7fe9f4ac5c17e9da59678e666e04273f69d4cfd5a66ae67bf2a349c55d2549f3
Message ID: <9306152043.memo.64107@BIX.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-06-16 00:53:46 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 15 Jun 93 17:53:46 PDT

Raw message

From: bbyer@BIX.com
Date: Tue, 15 Jun 93 17:53:46 PDT
To: AOLCHTNN@vax1.tcd.ie
Subject: Re: Timothy C. May:superhacker
Message-ID: <9306152043.memo.64107@BIX.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


In-Reply-To: <01GZ6EDS7DHK003YG5@vax1.tcd.ie>
> Why doesn't Tim and anyone else who suspects that they have reached
> the much-sought status of "superhacker on gov't files not just write
> to their local friendly federal government office and ask for a copy
> of their own records?
>
> Of course any interesting information they've got is likely to be classified,
> but at least you'll find out whether any such information is stored on the
> files.
> 
> Of course, requesting your own government file is likely to draw attention
> to yourself, so it's probably best not to do so unless you're sure that 
> they already know that you know-that-they-know-something.

Yes, acoording to a 2600 article (admittedly not the best source),
requesting a file on yoursself causes one to be created if one does
not exist.

Ben Byer <bbyer@bix.com>






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