Heading Graphic

Read the whole context! Want to find the entire post or thread?

 Home
 Quotes!
 PGP
 Style
 Privacy
 Posts?
 Mailing List
 Advocacy
 Lookups

Where does he post?

Mr. Sternlight posts most frequently to comp.security.pgp.discuss and alt.privacy and has posted a very large number of posts to USENET (per query to DejaNews™) on various subjects including  patents, licensing, cryptography, and public policy on those matters. His prolific and frequent public policy advocacy in crypto newsgroups focuses primarily on the US government policy, currently in robust public debate, regarding strong encryption and privacy issues, but also on patent, copyright, trademark and licensing issues.

DejaNews™ search facilities are an excellent means of locating specific quotes from this prolific USENET poster. Use these search facilities to read the entire context!

Mr. Sternlight is listed as "editor" on one web site, which at the time of this writing includes an editorial over his name, with the title, "Editor-in-Chief". He also has a personal web site where he displays his picture.


This FAQ is NOT authorized, endorsed, reviewed, authored nor supported in any way by Mr. Sternlight. It is an independent compilation of quotations gleaned from Mr. Sternlight's newsgroup posts, opinion and public dialogue related to this prolific newsgroup poster and famous "net personality" and public policy advocate. Interested readers are invited and encouraged  to read the entire context of Mr. Sternlight's quotes, using search engines such as DejaNews. (Note there is a newsgroup named "alt.fan.david-sternlight".) Mr. Sternlight posts most frequently to comp.security.pgp.discuss and alt.privacy and has several  thousand posts on USENET public newsgroups, as reported by DejaNews search, on various subjects including  patents, licensing, cryptography, and public policy on those matters. His prolific and frequent public policy advocacy in crypto newsgroups focuses primarily on the US government policy, currently in robust public debate, regarding strong encryption and privacy issues, but also on patent, copyright, trademark and licensing issues. All product and service names are the property of their owners.