Re: virus: Who's who on the web?

Marie L. Foster (mfos@ieway.com)
Wed, 18 Feb 1998 07:44:06 -0800


I for one find Reed's observations good. Also, I must add that in the
state of Washington it is a crime subject to civil penalties to experiment
on human subjects without going though a rigorous process of review. I
think about the crime aspect of anything that has happened here because I
find myself the subject of more serious attack.

My computer is being targeted by someone using WINNUKE or some other
utility to render it useless to me. Luckily, I have more than one...
hundreds actually, so I can keep in touch. But I am finding that the legal
authorities are not very helpful in taking on whoever has decided to do
this to me.

Marie, who has better things to do than erecting a firewall

At 05:22 AM 2/17/98 -0800, you wrote:
>
>Reed G. Konsler writes:
>
>> (Simon & Schuster) We are using life on the screen to engage in new
>> ways of thinking about evolution, relationships, politics, sex, and the
>self.
>
>[clip]
>
>> One has to be able to move fluidly between different models, to keep
>alternate
>> hypotheses living in the same mind, to question assumptions but still
>move
>> forward confidently on the best guesses one can make.
>
>I think "in the same mind" is the key example to set.
>
>-Prof. Tim
>
>
Marie

Marie L. Foster

<http://www.geocities.com/~mfos/>