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448 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
448 lines
26 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 710
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Title: HPR0710: spics on tech
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0710/hpr0710.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:19:57
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---
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Mmmm!
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Ha ha ha!
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Yeah, well, yeah, yeah, well, okay in English, huh, I mean, I think
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Okay, see it doesn't see it. See I said escuch all this time on a hacker public radio. No, never
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Okay, so let me let me let me start out by describing you what what's
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What this is all about so
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Okay, so there's this like
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There's this podcast called hacker public radio and it's it's it's kind of weird it kind of works like an aggregator
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Okay, so people people like produce it it it works in two ways so and
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Like so mode a so so you can't choose between the modes you get you got them both at the same time, okay, but
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But anyhow, so mode a is like syndication so they kind of subscribe to certain podcasts and then like you get them through their feed
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You know what I mean? Yeah, yeah, it's something like audio. Have you seen audio?
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No, I haven't I haven't used it. Didn't Twitter
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Come from audio or something like that. Oh, no, I don't think so it's it's something like you describe a web page when
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Where you add your podcast and through that page you can subscribe through different feeds something like that, but
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Okay, okay, I understand
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Okay, so so there's that so that there's that part and the other part is that like
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So so people produce special or not special, but just like shows that are only for hacker hacker public radio
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So you know what Twitter did
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Came from audio. I just remember. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Sorry. I was opening a Wikipedia
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Enter, you know like doing a Wikipedia
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Sorry, sorry, okay. Yeah, I'm turning off my I'm turning off my
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My torrent feed torrent the application now just just in case because you know, I don't want that messing up the bandwidth
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Yeah, okay get a nice clear crystal
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Sound and everything else. So so that's so so the
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One so I've been listening so people like
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These like this the special show like the syndicated shows sometimes we get
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Python a little bit of Python. Have you have you listened to that podcast before? No, never
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No, no, it's pretty cool like I'm kind of interested in Python sort of you know like once I once I you know
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Was it got a really good hang of Lisb and Haskell and all these like supposedly uber
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Really cool a programming languages, then I'm gonna move forward in to see and and Python and and I'll and small talk and
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Everything else, but it's it's it's cool to listen to the you know, just to to the developments and help you know all the different compilers and
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You know stuff like that. So, you know, I mean, it's interesting even if you don't know Python like it's it's really cool from yeah from like a developer perspective a system administrator
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You know from all these kinds of perspectives that that that you know kind of orbit around
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The development of a language. Yeah, I know because I have heard some podcasts that are very
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Technically advanced and I don't have the skills to to do what they can do, but it's really interesting to to hear how they do this stuff how they
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Recommendations and everything I hear for example
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You know a security security now
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Podcast and I think it's the tech technically. It's really advanced of course
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It's not meant only for experts, but I don't really use most of the technology discussed
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But it's really interesting to to hear opinions and everything
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Yeah, yeah, yeah, and right so so so the so one of them is
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So a little bit of Python is one of the syndicated shows
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There's others other syndicated shows, which I don't I don't remember right now
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But like lately like not the not syndicated like the special shows that people make only for for hacker public radio
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They even include people just talking about the history of computers or their own history with computers
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You know with like before the before the PC
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And even way before that then like like the the micro computers from the 60s and the
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You know the main frames and terminals and and that that kind of stuff
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So anyway, so the guy who's like organizing this stuff, which I I can't remember than his name
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You know off the top of my head or anything like that
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But he's saying like well if people don't produce special content for hacker public radio, then it's it's gonna go off the air
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Really or just gonna right is just gonna see is has a
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Oh my god, okay, that's that's that's that's like
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That's a whole are we taking time here because I only want to make this like 20 minutes long or so
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We can always edit this stuff, but it's like five minutes already five minutes already all right
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Yeah, so right so let's see so so I was so this is the proposal I have for you like we just we just make like
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Every few weeks like just one show to
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So so this hacker public radio thing keeps it doesn't dry up and we can just talk about just just
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Just general stuff. That's right. Like
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Picking our interest or whatever. Okay. I think it would be a great idea and I think that I
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Well, we have first
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Let me
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We have to do first, you know, like introduce ourselves. Why are we taking this this show?
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I think I think we I think we already have that covered since
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We talked but I think whoa that's the whole reason why I just said all that all that boring shit already
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Well, I don't think so
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Yeah, I think we should say more what oh go ahead then
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Well, okay
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I don't remember the first time I use a computer, but
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It was a really old one for my standards, you know MS-DOS
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and
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And I fell in love with computers at a really early age
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But I think I was involved in the hacker community when I was a teenager from
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15 to I don't know 20 maybe 19 and
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I was I made an e-sign and
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Hacking e-sign is Spanish and I was really really
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Getting into programming and and all the hacker stuff really
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But I don't know what happened that I
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changed directions and
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Ended up right now. I'm doing research about hackers and I live in the Mexico, US border
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I think that's about it
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Let's so what what state are you in I mean, let's like geographically so people know
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You can look it up on Google maps, you know, if you're a little I'm in Baja, you know, it's in the border with California and
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Mexico Lee
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border town about border city that it's
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In Imperial County with the border is it with Imperial County a very unknown city worldwide
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But it is like two and a half hours from Tijuana
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So you know
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Okay, all right
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Let's see. Well
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So how can I
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So a little bit about me then
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What well we're gonna use tags. I mean
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Handles or we're gonna use our real names. Well, I we can use handles. I mean
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Yeah, you say handle that will be cooler. I guess
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I'm just gonna make one up on the spot then but
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I've always wanted to you well on IRC. I'm verbose on on free free node
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Oh, no, no, no, wait. Hold on. I'm not verbose. I'm sick you sick. Il paque what which is a it's a Mayan sort of
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Sort of like a finger not a finger food. What do you call it when it like a dip? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so
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Yeah, so that's me. So anyway, so so yeah, so I was born in Tijuana
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Although I I tell everybody
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I tell everybody that I'm from Ensenada because if I tell if I tell people I'm from Tijuana then they
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Look at me. Well, they're like really suspicious eyes. Oh, yeah, I know what you mean
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I mean, I have to tell people that I leave one block away from the border and still they don't trust they they feel like
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I mean, I mean, you know
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There's some times I'm afraid of Mexico, right? And even one block away from the border
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You're still in the most dangerous place placing the world, right? Yeah
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like you know, like
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Yeah, well, I mean like Iraq and Afghanistan
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Exactly, those are like really far away so they don't kind of count too much. Yeah
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So yeah, so I was born in Tijuana and I'm 31 years old
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And I remember going to pick and save for those people who
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Can remember what does it's like
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It's like before Walmart and all these these other stores that are like offer really cheap crap
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They were these these stores that were called pick and save. They're called the big lots, right?
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Yeah, yeah, right now they are big lots. Okay, so it's so it's got a big lots from from the 80s
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And there was these really interesting books about basic
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Really weirder. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and if you saw that you know, we can save oh check this out
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Pick and save but they were in Spanish, okay, really? Wow
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So imagine that so I'm like, okay, so there's these Spanish books on on basic and
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They were like my life would have been totally different if I saw a basic book in Spanish in a pick and save really
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Definitely changed mine, so I picked it up. So I think I
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So they were really cheap. So I bought like three and
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They were like for kids they were like like with for kids and like really like illustrated, you know
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And all that kind of thing and so I was you know
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So so back then, you know before then before then I was like, oh, you know these computers
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They're like really magnificent machines. They're like totally mysterious and opaque and you can't you know
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I'll never find I mean I'll be like really old until like I really find out how they kind of work on the inside
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Which is which is true because I still don't really understand how they really work and I guess nobody really does
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Well, not
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Okay, well, I mean, I have a ways to go still so anyway, so so this these books
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They kind of really got me curious like oh, basically, okay, so
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So then a few years later my dad got a you know find out found out about the really cool and
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Library system that you guys in the US have and he found out that you could get a library card even if you weren't
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A resident you could just get like a like a special sort of I mean you had to pay a little bit more
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You could get a library card and you could take out books. So so I just went and and
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My dad's a he's my dad's like a dentist and he's also like a musician and a
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Radio DJ and all these kinds of other music
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Related things so anyway, so so he one of his patients one of his dental patients
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Like he kind of like oh, I don't have all this money to to pay you
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But I'll give you a computer and my dad was like oh sweet cool. All right sure
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So he one one night he's like he knocked on my doors. I was already asleep and he said oh look look what I brought about you
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Brought you and and it was like C64 which I knew back then even it was like
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1991 or so so I already I had already taken
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IBM PC classes like DOS and all that. This is night. I had I took them in 1989 or
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1990 so there was no windows still it was all MS DOS and I remember the big thing that happened
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Over there was people like when the teacher left
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This was in the Casa de la Cultura
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Okay, do
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Like a government run sort of cultural thing
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For kids and like and one of their one of their programs. I mean one of their like like classes
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They they had was computer. So I'm like, oh, okay cool. I'll take I'll take that. I took tap dancing
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Singing
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I'm a geek. Okay, so yeah, so tap dancing a fuel to me until the first class and I'm saying no way am I doing that?
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No way that's like totally
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Yeah, yeah, it looks cool like when other people do yeah
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So I'm like no
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So anyway, but the the I mean I got I got a really good kick out of the
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Computering computing classes and I mean they were kind of I'm guessing your classmate's got a good kick out of you in tap dance
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Yeah, well, they didn't they didn't really find out. I think I canceled that class like after a week or so
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Like I'm not yeah anyway your classmates when they saw you well, okay, forget it. Okay. It's okay
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I
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Mean they would have I mean imagine me tap dancing into the into the class, right like
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Good afternoon tap any tap any tap
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I could tap I could like tap with my with my uh with my feet while I while I typed on the on the
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On the keyboard, right? I could
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Anyway, so uh yeah
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So I'm making this too long. So anyway, so I learned all the commands Dell and you know
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Der and all those commands
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And then so when when my dad bought brought me the c64 I already knew that it was obsolete
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But I didn't get I didn't care because it because I could I turned it on I connected everything
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I saw the manual and it and it used basic oh really
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Yeah, so like right from the start like from like you could use basic on the like on their on its command line
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quote unquote
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So you can program it directly just by starting it up
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So that was that was really appealing and then like I don't know like that was 1991. So right now or to so 20 years later
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Uh, I got uh, so I got two you boon two desktops three actually
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Uh, a free bsd server which which for for now is only a
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a crappy
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file server
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And I'm interested in open bsd and just in uh programming languages
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And linguistics, which is which is what I'm gonna study. I'm 31 and I'm I haven't had a
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What do you call that in English when you have a license? Yeah, I'm like a bachelor's a bachelor's degree, right?
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So I don't I don't need I'm 31. I don't even have a bachelor's degree, but I'm working on it
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And that's that's those are pretty much my interest linguistics and computing
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Well, that was there with all kinds of things. So yeah, okay. I you brought to me a lot of memories, but um
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Maybe we can save that for later, but I can tell you that
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uh
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In
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Calexico the border town. I'm next to and there's it, you know that swap me or flea market. I don't know the exact term
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Tangus. Yeah for you you mean on you mean on the uh on the US side of the border, right? Yeah, I mean
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And there it's called Santa Tomas and you know there's a lot of stuff to buy clouds, you know furniture
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You know everything you can buy there and second hand
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And from time to time there there were boxes with computer stuff, you know electronics
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And I always looked there to see what I could find. You know they they gave you everything practically for free because
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They didn't know what what it was and frankly it was really old. It was obsolete. It was you know old hardware
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useless mostly
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but
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There were some manuals there
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So I bought everything I could so when I arrived home I looked at every
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Every piece of hardware and I said well, what what is this and
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I tried to figure out what
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What what is for because um there was an internet really and so I couldn't look it up
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And but I learned a lot even
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There were discounts or cities and I bought them and I I looked at them
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There was a lot of interesting information in those discs and information that shouldn't be there. I mean
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They should have for you raised the information before they threw it out, but they didn't
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and I found out a lot of stuff and and
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I I still go there, but there there's not the same because people now know
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The value of computers, so they they're more
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They know what what it's useless and what's useful so they
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They I don't know it's not the same
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Uh-huh, okay, so do you have any news?
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Uh, no, no actually it's it's well the only
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I don't know like
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One thing that I have to have to kind of uh, you know get off my chest or just just mention or whatever. Yeah, is that uh
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like I've been I've been um
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It's kind of strange because uh I just got to work. I'm just I'm just starting uh like a it's been a month since I've been working at this uh
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government
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program like educational program for indigenous uh kids
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Uh
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So um, I'm I'm in like like I'm I'm like out in the
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Like in the rear really rural parts of Mexico and I don't have a uh
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Uh, 3G modem or anything
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Like that. I mean, I don't have I don't have any I don't have any way of connecting
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Like so Monday to Friday. I'm like totally without internet really and it's yeah, and it's and it's kind of really
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It's I mean, I'm gonna get you know, I'm gonna solve that eventually
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But you know these these past weeks. It's been it's been kind of it's been kind of a torture also like
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It's really hot. It's really hot. It's really dusty and uh, you know, there's kids
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I mean, I don't have a lot of privacy so kids come kind of come come up to me or I mean
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I'm just I'm just in this like kind of like a shack working and then the kids I mean there's no door
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There's like two doors, but they don't have like it's there's two passageways. They don't have they I can't close the doors
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There's no there's there's doors without doors. I don't know the English language is kind of weird
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But I mean they don't they don't they don't close they don't have the stop thing
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Whatever. Yeah, so uh, so they just come in and I think they can like
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Interrupt me so it's kind of
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The only time I can I can work is like late at night when there's when the wind blows from the jungle to the to the sweet or whatever
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So there's no dust in the wind and it's like cool enough so that it's so that the machine doesn't like
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Melt while I'm using it and all the kids are asleep. So I can I can kind of like, you know, just just do stuff
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But uh, you know by that by by then I'm really like really tired. I can't concentrate as well
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So yeah, I mean, I mean you're talking like
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Something from another century. I mean
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Wow
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Yeah, so it's so I'm kind of a little bit out of touch and I kind of want of it's kind of like a challenge to find the
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the adequate
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Discipline and sort of like kind of hack
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In a certain way like hack time or hack space and space and time, you know kind of find the correct configuration of how to like
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get be able to still
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work
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Because you know, I mean, I do work. I mean, I teach these kids and all the you know
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preschool and primary school
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But I mean do it, you know, do my personal projects
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Computer related personal projects while I'm while I'm in this small town
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It's three families, so it's really it's more like a hamlet than a small town
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Okay, so yeah, so that's that's that's my big excuse for not being uh, you know, in touch with what's what's going on
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So it'll be my kids like it's already 20 minutes, but um I
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I want to do 10 more minutes and okay, but I have to go really so I only wanted to say this
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what um
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Right now I was work last week. I was working on what is
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defining what is
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hacker practice
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what makes
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hacking
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Unique because hackers have access to the same technology that every user has access to
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There there has to be something different that that makes hacking
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Unique it's not only using you know technology. It's not
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And so I finally came to
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Satisfactory definition of what hacking is and I did that through several
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You know authors that have approached
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The subject, but none of them has given a real definition of what hacking is
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Everybody talks about hacking, but nobody knows knows what it is of course if you ask a hacker and you you ask him
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What is hacking? He's he's gonna answer you without much trouble. I mean he's gonna say hacking is you know
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Creativity or maybe making technology do something unexpected or something, but right, but if I'm on the
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academic field
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I have to really make a good definition so people that are not hackers
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Know what hacking is even if they have never seen hacking before and I think that hacking has to do with technology
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but it's mostly about
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Your attitude towards technology. I mean hacker does not only use this technology
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He questions technology. I mean if
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Steve Jobs says that you can't use
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You know apps for the iPhone that
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Apple computers have not has not approved
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Most users they don't make a fuss about it. They just accepted, you know
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That's the way it is that's the rules
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That's it, but a hacker
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knows that that's only a restriction
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Oh
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For business purposes not really because the iPhones can't handle it mostly because Apple computers doesn't want you to
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Use your
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iPhone freely
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so that's that's one of the
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Things that hacker do and
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That's one important component of hacking the other component. I believe it's that
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It's not it's made for fun
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you know
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It's mostly made
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Because of the challenge and
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you're kind of
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um
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enjoying
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Solving a problem. It's not because your boss told you to or it's not because it's an a school assignment
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It's more for in your own motivation and exploration
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Right
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There are several things I have
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Identify maybe you believe that I'm not
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Making a big breakthrough because it this sounds obvious for something inside of
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Uh the hacker community, but it's not obvious for authors about the subject
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You know a lot of people that
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um
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Right about hackers. They write about
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Criminal aspects or maybe about fraud or maybe about other stuff that
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It's it's there. I can say it's not but
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Mm-hmm. It's not central to hacking. It's more like the view of some
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Somebody from the outside
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Well and viewing viewing the consequence some sort of consequence instead of the the practice itself somehow exactly and I think that
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Also a lot of emphasis has been put on hackers themselves and I think that hackers
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That's not for me at least that's not the important stuff because
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Hacker practice is what makes a hacker and
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Right there are you you are what you do and not who you think you are
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Exactly exactly and also um if
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Maybe you do hacker practices maybe you hack
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But maybe you're not a hacker. I mean there are a lot of people that do
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Stuff that could be consider hacking, but they are not hackers and they don't feel
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They don't think
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Um
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Yeah, they don't they don't identify identify themselves as such
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Exactly anybody else and I don't think that's important to
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To know to feel I'm a hacker you're not a hacker. I'm a hacker again. That's not important. I mean the important stuff is what
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you do
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and I think that's
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Note many
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Authors have at least in the academic field have
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Approach the subjects this way, so
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I'm what what was what was your handle
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My handle
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Bad yeah, well at least for the show. Bad bit I never
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I never said what okay bad bit that's my handle and I have to go
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No, wait, wait, hold on, okay
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We are at least I think it leads you should uh
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Sort of explain because I mean it's this is really real interesting stuff
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But I already know what kind of work you're doing
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But I think all the listeners probably don't really go and look hard up to that
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So why don't you describe your you know this this academic project you're doing and what can what feel this anthropology or something?
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It's sociology or what close to anthropology it's uh field
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Relatively new field called cultural studies
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And cultural studies began in the 1950s so for
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Social sciences. It's quite new and
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Cultural studies
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I don't know where to begin
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but
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The approach they can they can they can work they can work you pity that but yeah, but okay
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That's how long how long have you been working on this hacker cultural studies and and what focus does it have specifically
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What well this is
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This is a project for my masters my masters in cultural studies. I began in last summer and I my I want to know
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If
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Or why hacker practice
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Or how hacker practice is used for
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Political means
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That sounds really crazy for a hacker but because they most of them they they don't relate to politics or or they are politicized
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But they don't see hacking as something political
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But I think
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Sometimes it is not always because
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Let me put you an example
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I mean okay
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This guy Phil Simmerman
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PGP
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Do you know him
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Do you have you have you used PGP you know pretty good privacy
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The creeps
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Yeah, yeah, I mean, I'm familiar with it, but I haven't used it for a while. Okay. Okay. I'm not I'm not really interested in it too much
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Okay, okay
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Phil Simmerman he saw that there was going to be a legislation
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Prohibiting
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Citizens to use encryption. So he's he didn't think that was fair
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So he said okay, I'm gonna develop a good software that you know
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Normal people could use to protect their information and he released it before
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You know that legislation was to place yeah, yeah to
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um
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Make it difficult for it to be approved because he didn't think about air and he said that
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Every citizen should be should have the right to protect his own information
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for
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From everybody. I mean not even the government has
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The right to
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To look at your private information
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So it was a long
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A long process in the legal process
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Finally PGP prevailed and still here. It still works and
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You know, I think it that's a big achievement and you know
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He programmed he created that model of encryption or that system and
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You know that hacking for a political
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means, you know political
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ends so
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That's you know only one of many examples
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So that's why why I'm doing this research. I'm focusing on South California. No North
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Baja California. So I'm trying to see differences and similarities between
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Mexico and the United States. So if you you think you can help
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You're welcome
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They can write to you or what? Yeah, of course my email
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I'm always have a lot of trouble with my email spelling it in even in Spanish
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So can you put a link in the show notes or something? Yeah, yeah, let's let's do that
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So how how what are we gonna call this show then?
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We can do it like every two weeks because I'm going to what the mile for about a week or so
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So we could probably record when I get back
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Yeah, I actually could are we gonna call I was thinking about something like spics on tech or something like that something cheeky and
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Baby, I don't know. I don't know. I'm not very good at
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Well naming stuff. Well, you're you're handled pretty cool. So I thank you, but I chose it when I was 14
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Well, it's still a cool. It's stuck and
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Mm-hmm. I don't know hacker something
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Silicon border. Yeah, all right. Okay, cool. So
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So you recorded this so you'll send it you'll send it back, right? Yeah
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Okay, cool. All right, so
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You got to go right? Yeah, I have to kind of okay, I have to yeah, if by the way
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By the way, I haven't told you this I found one or maybe I did I found a hacker spacing and it's another
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Really? Yeah, I mean
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Haven't I told you this now you haven't we haven't talked for for for a while. We've been
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I'm going tomorrow
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Yes, and there's um, you know kind of a workshop
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Called electronics for artists. So I'm going to go the first two classes. So
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Let's see what what it is and I was really excited because I never believed their
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Packer space could be could exist here. So
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And now that's a pretty cool city. Yeah, that's true that the
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It has the biggest number of
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um, scientists
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Um in Mexico, you know
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There's a research institute there, right? How does scientist ratio in the in Mexico?
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Hmm, wasn't there like a research there's a research institute there right for nuclear physics or oceanography and several several
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You know, I really you know physics
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Several stuff. Yeah, there are a lot of people a lot of scientists there
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Yeah, I should buy a house there. Yeah
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I don't know what money, but you know what? I don't know with what money, but uh, yeah
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Okay, so that I like this so I think that
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Next episode we should plan a little yeah, we should plan. Yeah, yeah
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Okay, I'm John for who is going to listen to this but okay
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Probably nobody, but all right
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Well, okay, all right, it's true. Take care man
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Same to you
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All right, okay, see you
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Thank you for listening to Haftar Public Radio
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