posted on Nov, 19 2003 @ 04:01 PM
Huuum, I wonder if my firewall will be usefull or not in this specific case. I'm pretty happy that I didin't install SETI@HOME.
Microsoft may have to fork up big bounty bucks trying to unearth future hackers, particularly when they are light years away on distant worlds.
ADD ONE MORE worry to the computerized world of the 21st century. Could a signal from the stars broadcast by an alien intelligence also carry harmful
information, in the spirit of a computer virus? Could star folk launch a �disinformation� campaign � one that covers up aspects of their culture?
Perhaps they might even mask the �real� intent of dispatching a message to other civilizations scattered throughout the Cosmos.
These are concerns that deserve attention explains Richard Carrigan, Jr., a physicist at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory in Batavia,
Illinois. Those engaged in the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI), he contends, should think about decontaminating potential SETI
signals.
The so-called �SETI Hacker� hypothesis, Carrigan argues, is an issue of interstellar discourse that should be taken seriously. We should exercise
caution when handling SETI downloads, he said.
Link
[Edited on 19-11-2003 by ultra_phoenix]