NSA line eater
<messaging, tool> The National Security Agency trawling program sometimes
assumed to be reading the net for the US Government's spooks. Most hackers
describe it as a mythical beast, but some believe it actually exists, more
aren't sure, and many believe in acting as though it exists just in case. Some
netters put loaded phrases like "KGB", "Uzi", "nuclear materials", "Palestine",
"cocaine", and "assassination" in their sig blocks to confuse and overload the
creature. The GNU version of Emacs actually has a command that randomly inserts
a bunch of insidious anarcho-verbiage into your edited text.
There is a mainstream variant of this myth involving a "Trunk Line Monitor",
which supposedly used speech recognition to extract words from telephone trunks.
This one was making the rounds in the late 1970s, spread by people who had no
idea of then-current technology or the storage, signal-processing, or speech
recognition needs of such a project. On the basis of mass-storage costs alone it
would have been cheaper to hire 50 high-school students and just let them listen
in. Speech-recognition technology can't do this job even now (1993), and almost
certainly won't in this millennium, either.
The peak of silliness came with a letter to an alternative paper in New Haven,
Connecticut, laying out the factoids of this Big Brotherly affair. The letter
writer then revealed his actual agenda by offering - at an amazing low price,
just this once, we take VISA and MasterCard - a scrambler guaranteed to daunt
the Trunk Trawler and presumably allowing the would-be Baader-Meinhof gangs of
the world to get on with their business.
[Jargon File]
(1994-12-13)
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NSAPI » NSDI » NSE
NSAPI
Netscape Application Programming Interface
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NSDI » NSE » NSF
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