1994-09-08 - Re: Introduction: Telephone traffic analysis

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From: Jim Hart <hart@chaos.bsu.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: a248c367ba81e68bd0f085e30d54839805f1dd3af96c103ecf0dd58fec402af8
Message ID: <199409080753.CAA20933@chaos.bsu.edu>
Reply To: <199409080043.RAA27552@netcom7.netcom.com>
UTC Datetime: 1994-09-08 07:53:28 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 8 Sep 94 00:53:28 PDT

Raw message

From: Jim Hart <hart@chaos.bsu.edu>
Date: Thu, 8 Sep 94 00:53:28 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Introduction: Telephone traffic analysis
In-Reply-To: <199409080043.RAA27552@netcom7.netcom.com>
Message-ID: <199409080753.CAA20933@chaos.bsu.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



This is a good argument for using e-mail digital mixes for even
routine communications, and eschewing house-to-house phone 
conversations with one's closest associates.  Here are some
other alternatives:

+ Use public phones with transferable phone cards
+ Phone redialing services
+ Call large numbers of wrong numbers from your home
phones.  This is easy to do with a modem script,
but might be hard to arrange so that you don't run up
the phone bill or annoy lots of people.

Jim Hart
hart@chaos.bsu.edu




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