13.5.1. "What are the likely attitudes toward mainstream Cypherpunks projects, such as remailers, encryption, etc.?" - Reaction has already been largely favorable. Journalists such as Steven Levy, Kevin Kelly, John Markoff, and Julian Dibbell have written favorably. Reaction of people I have talked to has also been mostly favorable. 13.5.2. "What are the likely attitudes toward the more outre projects, such as digital money, crypto anarchy, data havens, and the like?" - Consternation is often met. People are frightened. - The journalists who have written about these things (those mentioned above) have gotten beyond the initial reaction and seem genuinely intrigued by the changes that are coming. 13.5.3. "What kinds of _attacks_ can we expect?" + Depends on the projects, but some general sorts of attacks are likely. Some have already occurred. Examples: + flooding of remailers, denial of service attacks--to swamp systems and force remailers to reconsider operations - this is fixed (mostly) with "digital postage" (if postage covers costs, and generates a profit, then the more the better) + deliberately illegal or malicicious messages, such as death threats - designed to put legal and sysop pressures on the remailer operator - several remailers have been attacked this way, or at least have had these messages - source-blocking sometimes works, though not of course if another remailer is first used (many issues here) + prosecution for content of posts + copyright violations - e.g., forwarding ClariNet articles through Hal Finney's remailer got Brad Templeton to write warning letters to Hal - pornography - ITAR violations, Trading with the Enemy Act - espionage, sedition, treason - corporate secrets, - These attacks will test the commitment and courage of remailer or anonymizing service operators
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