From: Eugene Leitl (eugene.leitl@lrz.uni-muenchen.de)
Date: Tue Aug 17 1999 - 19:10:31 MDT
Dan Fabulich writes:
> Yes. But while you're on the subject, there's no need to reinvent the
> wheel here. The CdC (Cult of the Dead Cow)'s BackOrifice software would
> do everything you needed it to, and hides itself fairly well.
I suggest you reread the thread. cDc's BackOrifice 2000 is in another
league entirely. No one can even remotely do what we were talking about.
> Having said that, I hope that this settles the technical question and that
If this indeed would settle the question (i.e. finding a generic way
of mutating machine code or FPGA circuits robustly, and utilize this
in a global self-sustaining ALife ecosystem) you'd received a notice
from the Nobel prize comittee already. You'd also run a fair change to
trigger the Singularity (probably not on present substrate), too.
> those interested may now stop talking about it here and discuss further
> plans via a non-public channel. Really, the last thing you guys need is
> for some enforcement agent to go searching the web for +GIMPS and +virus
> and find your post (on the extropian maliing list archives) at the top of
> the list.
I do not see why. Freedom of thought and speech can't prevent me from
discussing the issue as long as no harm is done. As to the harm,
delaying development of such a worm would cause the more harm the
longer it is not deployed. Dynamic host/parasite equilibrium will take
its sweet time to coevolve, at the point of emergence being
necessarily in turmoil. Obviously, the sooner, the less damage done.
> Not to mention the fact that cracking is probably off-topic on the
> extropian lists, but that's really secondary.
Once again I suggest you reread the thread. This is not about cracking
at all.
As to system security, that is indeed a very extropian topic.
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