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Mailing List Logs for ShadowRN

Message no. 1
From: James Dening jdening@****.co.uk
Subject: FYI
Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2000 16:02:14 +0100
***** help
Help for ShadowTk mailing list:

This is email command help for version 1.1 of the "Mailman" list
manager. The following describes commands you can send to get
information about and control your subscription to Mailman lists at
this site. A command can be in the subject line or in the body of the
message.

Note that much of the following can also be accomplished via the World
Wide Web, at:

http://lists.dumpshock.com/mailman/listinfo/shadowtk

In particular, you can use the Web site to have your password sent to
your delivery address.

List specific commands (subscribe, who, etc) should be sent to the
*-request address for the particular list, e.g. for the 'mailman'
list, use 'mailman-request@...'.

About the descriptions - words in "<>"s signify REQUIRED items and
words in "[]" denote OPTIONAL items. Do not include the "<>"s
or
"[]"s when you use the commands.

The following commands are valid:

subscribe [password] [digest-option] [address=<address>]
Subscribe to the mailing list. Your password must be given to
unsubscribe or change your options. When you subscribe to the
list, you'll be reminded of your password periodically.
'digest-option' may be either: 'nodigest' or 'digest' (no
quotes!) If you wish to subscribe an address other than the
address you send this request from, you may specify
"address=<email address>" (no brackets around the email
address, no quotes!)

unsubscribe <password> [address]
Unsubscribe from the mailing list. Your password must match
the one you gave when you subscribed. If you are trying to
unsubscribe from a different address than the one you
subscribed
from, you may specify it in the 'address' field.

who
See everyone who is on this mailing list.

info
View the introductory information for this list.

lists
See what mailing lists are run by this Mailman server.

help
This message.

set <option> <on|off> <password>
Turn on or off list options. Valid options are:

ack:
Turn this on to receive acknowlegement mail when you send
mail to the list.

digest:
Receive mail from the list bundled together instead of one
post at a time.

plain:
Get plain-text, not MIME-compliant, digests (only if
digest is set)

nomail:
Stop delivering mail. Useful if you plan on taking a
short vacation.

norcv:
Turn this on to NOT receive posts you send to the list.
Does not work if digest is set.

hide:
Conceals your address when people look at who is on this
list.


options
Show the current values of your list options.

password <oldpassword> <newpassword>
Change your list password.

end or --
Stop processing commands (good to do if your mailer
automatically
adds a signature file - it'll save you from a lot of cruft).


Commands should be sent to shadowtk-request@*********.com

Questions and concerns for the attention of a person should be sent to

shadowtk-admin@*********.com
Message no. 2
From: Mark Imbriaco <mark@******.NET>
Subject: FYI..
Date: Thu, 23 Jan 1997 15:20:20 -0500
***** PRIVATE: Kor
>>>>>[ If we're going to be dealing with Maxim a lot, I think I should let
you know a little something that happened a while back. I don't think
it'll be a problem at all, but I'd rather not have any surprises if it
comes back later.

If you think back a few months, you'll remember that Maxim had 3
facilities where they were housing nukes systematically destroyed. One of
my squads was responsible for the one in Cairo, and Maxim knows it was us.
I sent a polite message to Nicole Velli with some security improvement
recommendations afterwards, and got a gruff "thanks" and a sort of "don't
fuck with us again, and we won't squash you like a bug" message from their
head of security.

I just thought you should know in case it ever becomes pertinent.. ]<<<<<
-- Tangent <15:18:12/01-23-58>

Disclaimer

These messages were posted a long time ago on a mailing list far, far away. The copyright to their contents probably lies with the original authors of the individual messages, but since they were published in an electronic forum that anyone could subscribe to, and the logs were available to subscribers and most likely non-subscribers as well, it's felt that re-publishing them here is a kind of public service.