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Martin H. Eastburn Martin H. Eastburn is offline
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Default Of Interest -metalworking..uranium

What airhead or terrorist allowed or put that in. Might be a plant.
There are mistakes, but that kind of stuff is normally protected better.

Weird stuff happens, like when a certain R&D center published the keypad
concept for not only home phones but the extra set for trunk and stations...

That mistake into a company magazine - went to university libraries around
the country and soon the birth of the black and blue boxes that dialed
free long distance calls.

In the late 60's and early 70's those were a rave - and pay phones on college
campuses were taken out as they were simple targets. Now cell phones make it
easy enough to call away.

Martin

Martin H. Eastburn
@ home at Lions' Lair with our computer lionslair at consolidated dot net
TSRA, Life; NRA LOH & Patron Member, Golden Eagle, Patriot's Medal.
NRA Second Amendment Task Force Charter Founder
IHMSA and NRA Metallic Silhouette maker & member.
http://lufkinced.com/


Jon Elson wrote:


Gunner Asch wrote:
Are any of you onto this breaking story?

The Times of London is generally accepted as a credible
source:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/new...le3137695.ece?



Not really much new there. Also, it has come up many times that
incredibly highly classified info on modern bomb design has gotten
published in unclassifed journals by mistake. In at least one case,
DOE or FBI agents had to go around to a bunch of university and research
institute libraries and remove a particular issue of some physics
journal that had an article on centrifuge design, I think it was.
This has been going on for probably 40 years, now, and anyone who has
the resources to deeply scrutinize the Physics library at a major
university can probably learn nearly everything that is known by a major
nuclear weapons-possesing nation.

I work in the radiochemistry department at a major university, and I've
come across a few issues of journals that had stuff I couldn't BELIEVE
was totally unclassified, like one that was a field guide for
identifying US warheads after an accident. It had photos and complete
physics data on all the deployed US warheads! That wouldn't really help
you to build one, but could be REAL useful to a terrorist wanting to be
sure he stole the right container from the storerom.

Jon