Tim May, Father of 'Crypto Anarchy,' Is Dead At 67 (reason.com) 60
Tim May, co-founder of the influential Cypherpunks mailing list and a significant influence on both bitcoin and WikiLeaks, passed away in mid-December at his home in Corralitos, California. The news was announced last Saturday on a Facebook post written by his friend Lucky Green. Long-time Slashdot reader SonicSpike quotes Reason:
In his influential 1988 essay, "The Crypto Anarchist Manifesto," May predicted that advances in computer technology would eventually allow "individuals and groups to communicate and interact with each other" anonymously and without government intrusion. "These developments will alter completely the nature of government regulation [and] the ability to tax and control economic interactions," he wrote... Running 497 words, it was his most influential piece of writing... May became convinced that public-key cryptography combined with networked computing would break apart social power structures...
In September 1992, May and his friends Eric Hughes and Hugh Daniels came up with the idea of setting up an online mailing list to discuss their ideas. Within a few days of its launch, a hundred people had signed up for the Cypherpunks mailing list. (The group's name was coined by Hughes' girlfriend as a play on the "cyberpunk" genre of fiction.) By 1997, it averaged 30 messages daily with about 2,000 subscribers. May was its most prolific contributor. May and Hughes, along with free speech activist John Gilmore, wore masks on the cover of the second issue of Wired magazine accompanying a profile by journalist Steven Levy, who described the Cypherpunks as "more a gathering of those who share a predilection for codes, a passion for privacy, and the gumption to do something about it...."
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was an active reader and participant on the list, contributing his first posts in 1995 under the name "Proff."
The article notes that May "recently expressed disgust with the current state of the cryptocurrency community, citing its overpriced conferences and the advent of 'bitcoin exchanges that have draconian rules about KYC, AML, passports, freezes on accounts and laws about reporting 'suspicious activity' to the local secret police.'"
In his last published interview he told CoinDesk "I think Satoshi would barf."
In September 1992, May and his friends Eric Hughes and Hugh Daniels came up with the idea of setting up an online mailing list to discuss their ideas. Within a few days of its launch, a hundred people had signed up for the Cypherpunks mailing list. (The group's name was coined by Hughes' girlfriend as a play on the "cyberpunk" genre of fiction.) By 1997, it averaged 30 messages daily with about 2,000 subscribers. May was its most prolific contributor. May and Hughes, along with free speech activist John Gilmore, wore masks on the cover of the second issue of Wired magazine accompanying a profile by journalist Steven Levy, who described the Cypherpunks as "more a gathering of those who share a predilection for codes, a passion for privacy, and the gumption to do something about it...."
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was an active reader and participant on the list, contributing his first posts in 1995 under the name "Proff."
The article notes that May "recently expressed disgust with the current state of the cryptocurrency community, citing its overpriced conferences and the advent of 'bitcoin exchanges that have draconian rules about KYC, AML, passports, freezes on accounts and laws about reporting 'suspicious activity' to the local secret police.'"
In his last published interview he told CoinDesk "I think Satoshi would barf."
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
There are not many people I've met who trusted government less than I do. Tim and Hugh are the first two who spring to mind.
Tim did a lot of good for his friends, for our industry, and for our freedom. Very sad to see him go.
-jcr
+1. I got my start in security by reading sci.crypt and then the cypherpunks mailing list. As much as the technology fascinated me, the ideas about radical freedom, a freedom built by simply, peacefully constructing an alternative world that didn't want or need government force, really resonated with my young libertarian self. Tim May's mission wasn't to destroy Hobbes' Leviathan, but just to make it obsolete.
As it turns out, the real world is much messier and more complicated than we all though back the
Re: (Score:2)
Visionary (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Embedded developers were furious with the anti-TiVo provisions themselves.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not accurate. Take into account, psychopathy, with sufficient genetic cerebral function differences with regard to social interactions in a social species, we do not evolve alone but distinctly together. They represent a parasitic sub-species in social behavioural norms, they do not cooperate, the prey upon the social political body to it's detriment. Psychopaths features largely at the top of capitalism in quite the most corrupt fashion, bleeding dry the majority of our society to feed their insatiable, gr
What Might Have Been Newer Was. (Score:2)
We could have had decentralized services a long time ago, but they weren't profitable enough.
Which often translates as slow, limited, unreliable and difficult to use. Which is why the commercial, centralized, services succeed. Click on Netflix and the movie plays across all devices.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
there is no reason two-way services like messaging shouldn't be decentralized.
Even if messaging is decentralized, how can finding someone to message in the first place be decentralized?
Re: (Score:2)
DNS is centralized: someone controls the root server for . and for each major TLD.
How did one find the email address of someone interesting to talk to, or an interesting newsgroup? How did one even find a Usenet server to which to connect?
Finding other Tox users (Score:2)
Even if messaging is decentralized, how can finding someone to message in the first place be decentralized?
Tox is decentralised, utilises DHT.
Let me rephrase: Once a user has installed Tox, how would he go about finding other Tox users to message?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
We could have had decentralized services a long time ago, but they weren't profitable enough. In 2018 the Internet is more centralized than ever before.
It wasn't about profit..........it was about people not knowing how (or not being willing) to use the technologies available. Most people didn't know how to set up a personal website with RSS feeds. Then Facebook came and made it easy and took a profit.
But if the distributed protocols, etc, had been easier to use in the first place, Facebook wouldn't have been able to dissuade people from using HTTP and RSS. But it's too hard, so Facebook wins and gets to extract money. Sad.
Visionary or Paranoid Nutjob...? (Score:2)
'...bitcoin exchanges that have draconian rules about KYC, AML, passports, freezes on accounts and laws about reporting 'suspicious activity' to the local secret police.'
For those who aren't versed in financial acronyms, KYC is 'Know you customer', AML is 'Anti-money laundering'. W
We have proof! (Score:2)
Not only will cryptocurrency bankrupt you, cryptography in general will shave 11 years off your life! Avoid anything related to privacy at all costs - it WILL kill you!
Signed, The Powers That Be
37n87L+RkPB/aT2N/7rvOffj1ZriiAtRnUG5YV9ajfg= (Score:2)
8ItgPz8ZHLRsj1RhEMlTXAu1d9fJMYNb69K8SNxR0DxETKzBOWZV8h4ERBwvCZzlzxRUDiJhigGY/LJ1zADy8w== :-)
Cryptocurrency exchanges (Score:2)
How did he expect exchanges to avoid playing ball with governments if they wanted access to electronic real currency transfer? He seemed oblivious to the true power of government to me. Life is not lived online, you can't route every interaction through hidden channels ... they'll always catch you at the edges to tax/regulate you.
Re: (Score:2)
Likely the way that exchanges worked prior to bank centralization for lending controls. In other words the market more or less set the monetary value of an item, vs the artificial float that's existed the last ~200 years or so.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, those exist too ... but without the real money exchanges bitcoins would never have gone beyond their techno nerd niche and the real money exchanges have no choice but to interact with governments.