The following is a page posted by Richard Hillyard to his web site at atlga.com on March 29, 1997. The page has not been altered in any way other than:
  1. adding this explanatory text
  2. adding some anchor references for easier navigation
  3. and removing his font specifications, as he used an incredibly small font for most of the page for some foolish reason.

Here is another post where she admits coming back to my web site. Who is the one obsessed? Interesting in that she admits hacking into my site and then says she does not do things like that. A good pattern of behaviour for Judge Workman.

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From: Technomom@see.sig.for.address (Cynthia Armistead-Smathers)
Newsgroups: mindspring.local.atlanta
Subject: Re: Robert Redmond?
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 1997 20:28:59 GMT
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On Fri, 28 Mar 1997 15:11:39 -0500, Todd Hedenstrom wrote:

>Cynthia Armistead-Smathers wrote:

>> He had a directory called "data" on his new web site that he thought
>> was safe because it wasn't linked from the main page, so he didn't
>> password protect it.

>I had no idea you were a tyro hacker. Aloha. :)

Well, I don't think I'd call myself a hacker--I've never been
interested in getting into things I'm not _supposed_ to see. Hillyard,
of course, has been accusing me of being a hacker since last summer,
but he's simply got really silly ideas about what constitutes private
and public data. If it's on a publicly-accessible web or ftp site
without a password, is is public data. Period.

Hilly boy has added a banner to his main page that says "Hi Cyn!" and
another page called cyn.htm making a big deal out of posting his
access logs, saying that I'll be kicked off MindSpring because I
violated the TOS. He may have wanted his Quicken and other files
private, but he didn't bother to password protect them--so they
weren't, any more than if I put a directory in my web space without
links from the main page and thought it was bulletproof (and I
wouldn't be so foolish).

I've never even had the least bit of desire to hack into anything
anywhere--but being the acting LAN administrator at work has forced me
to be much more security conscious. Interesting stuff, that is . . .

Cyn
--technomom@mindspring.com
http://www.mindspring.com/~cynthia