A fresh tissue of lies...
Now available from S.A.’s dupes… … and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS … What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai: “Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012) A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
At least he didn't "out" our secret handshake. http://vashiva.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Invention-of-Email-At-Newark-T...
Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
… and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS …
What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai:
“Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012)
A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options at http://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
Hi, If I go to bbn.com, I find in small letters in the right column a link to "The first network email". When I follow that link, I get to http://www.raytheon.com/news/rtnwcm/groups/public/documents/content/rtn12_to... I don't think it is claimed there that BBN invented email. I don't know what may be claimed on some other Raytheon site. In the decades I was at BBN, lots of us tried to stop BBN people who didn't know any better from saying that BBN or Ray Tomlinson invented email. Back in those days we were worried about being fair to the people who prior to Ray's demonstration of networked email already had what today we call email running within single computers, e.g., within time-sharing systems. -Dave On 3/24/2016 10:51 AM, Dag Spicer wrote:
Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
… and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS …
What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai:
“Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012)
A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options at http://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
-- 12 Linden Road, East Sandwich, 02537 landline=508-888-7655; cell=774-205-3203 website=walden-family.com
PS, in addition to the nice "letter" from Ray in the box, see the short Q&A with him that goes down the left margin of the webpage well beyond the bottom of the boxed letter. On 3/24/2016 12:19 PM, Dave Walden wrote:
Hi, If I go to bbn.com, I find in small letters in the right column a link to "The first network email". When I follow that link, I get to http://www.raytheon.com/news/rtnwcm/groups/public/documents/content/rtn12_to... I don't think it is claimed there that BBN invented email. I don't know what may be claimed on some other Raytheon site. In the decades I was at BBN, lots of us tried to stop BBN people who didn't know any better from saying that BBN or Ray Tomlinson invented email. Back in those days we were worried about being fair to the people who prior to Ray's demonstration of networked email already had what today we call email running within single computers, e.g., within time-sharing systems. -Dave
On 3/24/2016 10:51 AM, Dag Spicer wrote:
Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
… and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS …
What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai:
“Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012)
A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are athttp://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options athttp://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
-- 12 Linden Road, East Sandwich, 02537 landline=508-888-7655; cell=774-205-3203 website=walden-family.com
-- 12 Linden Road, East Sandwich, 02537 landline=508-888-7655; cell=774-205-3203 website=walden-family.com
Oops, the headline does say "inventor of email". I will write to the BBN marketing department about that. On 3/24/2016 10:51 AM, Dag Spicer wrote:
Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
… and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS …
What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai:
“Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012)
A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options at http://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
-- 12 Linden Road, East Sandwich, 02537 landline=508-888-7655; cell=774-205-3203 website=walden-family.com
Hello SIGCIS, I’d say “fresh tissue” is overselling it. The material here (and in two other new “ebooks” posted to Ayyadurai’s propaganda site http://vashiva.com/) is largely remixed from his book, website content, and the series of posts that the Huffington Post pulled from its “blogger-generated” PR section after an internal inquiry confirmed “factual and sourcing issues.” All the substantive assertions are already evaluated at www.sigcis.org/ayyadurai <http://www.sigcis.org/ayyadurai> . So this particular tissue is more than a little stale –like one of those tissues that is used to mop up something sticky and then gets lodged between sofa cushions or under a pillow until it is rediscovered months or years later. You might be tempted to reuse it in an emergency, but probably better to treat yourself to a new one from the box. I’ll avoid the impulse to repeat myself on this case, but there were a few thoughts that came to mind as I skimmed through: 1. Team Ayyadurai has made an attempt to dress this up as scholarly work by including a bunch of in-text author/year citations. Yet they continue to ignore the existence of the most prominent works of Internet and network history: Abbate’s Inventing the Internet, Hiltzak’s Dealers of Lightning, Waldrop’s The Dream Machine, Hafner’s Where Wizards Stay Up Late, Russell’s Open Standards and the Digital Age. That’s even more prounounced in the other “eBook,” “Invention of EMAIL in Newak NJ (1978)” which finds dozens of blog posts to reference, from such authoritative sources as ask.com, historyofemail.com (another Ayyadurai domain), and innovationcorps.com (yet another Ayyadurai domain). It’s hard to escape the feeling that one is reading a story that takes place in a different universe in which only a handful of paid hacks have ever suggested that email was the most widely used application on the ARPANET by the mid-1970s. 2. TA still refuses to cite me properly! Many of the alleged “misuses” are taken from www.sigcis.org/ayyadurai <http://www.sigcis.org/ayyadurai> , which has a title, a date, a URL, and an author. But, unlike all those vital sources from inventorofemail.com, it’s cited merely as “SIGCIS blog.” Could it be that they’re scared people might follow the link and be convinced by my careful and well supported analysis? In fact some of the “Misuses” where the quoted text comes from my page are misattributed to Compuserve and to Dave Croker. 3. As science fiction fans know, any imagined universe needs to be internally consistent. TA doesn’t manage that. They continue (p. 39) to dismiss the XEROX PARC email system Laurel for lacking the relational database found in Ayyadurai’s system. In the other “eBooks” the same authors mention that Ayyadurai’s system used a network (i.e. non-relational) database. As well as the nuggets on SIGCIS that Dag found, here are a few more: This manuscript itemizes and exposes these misuses, many of which are deliberately perpetuated by a cabal of “historians,” who promote this false narrative as their allegiance, in spite of the overwhelming and overt facts, is to the larger narrative that great innovations, such as email, can only emerge from the military-industrial-academic complex (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012). and What is unfortunate is that even scholarly “historians,” like Mr. Thomas Haigh, a leader of the SIGCIS group, and others either purposely wanting to deny the facts of email’s origin from 1978 at UMDNJ, or unconsciously cutting and copying the Gizmodo article, believing Biddle’s sensationalistic article to be the truth, continue to use Biddle’s article as a primary and scholarly source reference to deny email’s invention by Ayyadurai in Newark, New Jersey. Such tabloid articles are referenced as the primary source on Wikipedia and some major media to attempt to perpetuate false assertions that RFCs are email, and predate Ayyadurai’s invention. And Mr. Haigh leads SIGCIS, which is a group of computer “historians” that denies the invention of email in 1978 at UMDNJ, in spite of the clear facts. Their disinformation and historical revisionism is based on equating “electronic messaging” with “email.” These “historians” had already written “email history,” prior to Smithsonian’s acquisition of Ayyadurai’s artifacts on February 16, 2012. The fact is “email” was already clearly defined in 1978 as the electronic interoffice, inter-organizational paper-based mail system, and formally recognized in 1982 by the issuance of the U.S. government’s issuance of the first Copyright for “Email” to Ayyadurai. Such an attempt to provide a revisionist definition of “email” by industry insiders, in 2012, served one purpose, to allow them: Tomlinson, Van Vleck and Crocker, who worked with the early messaging systems SNDMSG, MAIL and MS, respectively, to retroactively define their work as “email” so as to ensure their primacy to “email,” which they did not create, and had no intention of creating, while misappropriating credit from Ayyadurai. And Concomitant with these efforts, as the timeline shows of attack on Ayyadurai (Abraham, 2014) industry insiders, supported by SIGCIS “historians,” Ray Tomlinson, BBN supporters, and ex-BBN employees continued to perpetuate a false history of email by discrediting Ayyadurai's invention as well as character assassinating him as an inventor and scientist. They used historical revisionism and confusion to redefine and misuse the term email. Not to mention (from the other “eBook”) “Historians,” loyal to Raytheon/BBN and the ARPAnet community, prior to the Smithsonian acquisition of Ayyadurai’s papers, had already written a “history” that attributed the credit of email’s invention to members of the militaryindustrial- academic complex (Judy, 1995; Leiner, et. al., 1999; Partridge, 2008). The acquisition of Ayyadurai’s artifacts into the Smithsonian and its worldwide disclosure had thrown the proverbial “monkey wrench” (W. Uricchio, personal communications, 2012) into this false and revisionist history. To discredit the facts and misinform journalists and bloggers, the cabal of “historians” and industry insiders collaborated to present a listing of false claims of email’s existence prior to 1978 (‘SIGCIS blog’, 2012; Song and He, 2014) Also The deplorable and insidious collusion of those claiming to be “historians” who deliberately supress or argue these facts, deserves a serious public inquiry as public funds are granted to such “historians” to tell the truth of human progress. The struggle to share these facts demonstrates how “historians” have become sophisticated public relations agents that manufacture and package “histories,” no different than clever propaganda, to perpetuate lies of the pre-eminence of the military-industrial-academic complex. The account given there of the process whereby Ayyadurai’s box of materials found its way to NMAH may also be of interest to some on this list: Following his mother’s death on January 7, 2012 (‘Meenakshi Ayyadurai Death Records’, 2012), he contacted Dr. Deborah Douglas, curator of the MIT Museum, with the intention of donating the historical materials to MIT, his alma mater. After consideration, Dr. Douglas wrote to Ayyadurai (Ayyadurai and Douglas, personal communications, February 1, 2012): “I wanted to follow-up with you but first I'd like to extend my sympathies to you and your family. The loss of one's mother is often a great blow…. Naturally, I and my assistant are always interested in learning about pioneering science and technology projects, so it may be worthwhile for us to meet. Have other stories besides the Time magazine article been written? We'd love to get materials for our bio files.” Once Dr. Douglas realized the extensive nature of the artifacts, and though she was excited for MIT to own and house the artifacts, Dr. Douglas wrote to the Smithsonian and the Computer History Museum (Douglas, Molella and Bedi, personal communication, February 2, 2012), stating: “Shiva generously offered this collection to the MIT Museum and while part of me wants to acquire this, I honestly think it deserves to be at a place like the Smithsonian or the Computer History Museum. I also mentioned the Lemelson Center (which caused him to perk up as he has won a Lemelson-MIT prize!).” This led to the both the Smithsonian and Computer History Museum communicating directly with Ayyadurai vying to have the materials housed at their respective museums (Ayyadurai, Kidwell and Weber, personal communications, 2012). Ayyadurai finally chose to allow the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History (NMAH) to acquire the artifacts that his mother had archived. His decision to place it in the NMAH was based on discussions and an understanding with the Smithsonian that the NMAH would create a special exhibit that would inspire and educate other young innovators on the possibilities for innovation (Ayyadurai, Kidwell, Oswald, Molella and Edwards, personal communications, February 2-20, 2012). Based on these discussions and agreements, Ayyadurai did not charge the Smithsonian anything for the acquisition. The abstract of the other “eBook” does an interesting job of attempting to thread the needle by portraying Ayyadurai, whose promotional materials prominently featured his claimed status as an MIT “faculty member” and holder of many MIT degrees, to portray himself as an underdog outsider victimized by elites of the kind associated with MIT. Abstract: The invention of email in Newark, New Jersey reveals fundamental truths about the nature of innovation and exposes the “histories” and propaganda of the “golden triangle” of the military-industrial-academic complex whose multitrillion dollar brand advertises itself as the source of all revolutionary innovations. Such propaganda are constructed and packaged by those consecrated as “historians” who hone this branding to brainwash humanity that war brings good things to life. This cabal anoints and exalts its “innovators,” predominantly whites, and a few persons of color, who pledge to its hegemony of innovation. The indisputable facts of the invention of email in 1978 by V.A. Shiva Ayyadurai, a 14-year-old, dark-skinned, lower-caste, Indian immigrant prodigy, working as a research scholar at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) in Newark, defy such “histories.” The boy’s invention, the first electronic system replicating the complex and myriad functions of the interoffice, inter-organizational paper-based mail system (inbox, outbox, memo, address book, etc.), which he named “email,” was motivated by his desire to create and to do the “impossible.” Email was invented to digitize this entire system of civilian office communications and not just to exchange text messages reliably for military battlefield communications. Email was the first end user software application that made the digital revolution accessible to ordinary people who had never experienced the computer keyboard or terminal. Ayyadurai’s evolution as an inventor and scientist continued, far beyond email, to his completing four degrees at MIT, receiving worldwide acclaim, and being exalted as an innovator during his thirty-three years at MIT, while within the triangle. He served their needs as a penultimate ambassador and “model minority” to enhance their brand’s image of “inclusivity,” “diversity,” and “equality.” However, when the Smithsonian requested and obtained artifacts documenting email’s origin in 1978, in Newark, on February 16, 2012, and when Ayyadurai accepted this great American honor, he unwittingly pitted himself against their brand. The cabal unleashed disinformation claiming email was created before 1978. When these claims were debunked and Ayyadurai continued sharing facts, the attacks escalated to a public “lynching” revealing an insidious side of racism, which exalts persons of color when needed, and expels and annihilates them when they challenge false histories and propaganda. Email did emerge from “collaboration,” but not from their triangle, but organically in a local, and indigenous ecosystem of a small medical college, where a brilliant young boy, committed teachers, a loving family, and a dedicated mentor, solved a civilian problem, exemplifying countless other innovations across millennia, inspired to advance life not retrofitted from technologies intended to maim and kill. Such histories are deliberately not documented to perpetuate lies that war is good and to mask its rapacious profits. Documenting the invention of email in Newark, New Jersey, therefore, is a historical imperative towards breaking this diabolical trance to reveal a fundamental truth: innovation can occur, anytime, anyplace by anybody, and war and profit are not its necessary and required impetus. Best wishes, Tom From: Members [mailto:members-bounces@lists.sigcis.org] On Behalf Of Dag Spicer Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2016 9:52 AM To: members@lists.sigcis.org Subject: [SIGCIS-Members] A fresh tissue of lies... Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
The Raytheon/BBN marketing person I emailed says they will remove ", the inventor of email" from the subtitle of that webpage I pointed to earlier today. The rest of the webpage seems fine to me. I'll watch to see if the change happens.
I did find the first commercial use of email even though it was not defined with that term. In 1969 Scientific Time Sharing Corporation STSC used a program called MAILBOX for communication among the employees and customers. There is information about that system on pages 501 and 508 of the Delphi Method book which is free on my website. the book was published in 1975 and the last chapter covered a bunch of online systems that could be used to help out with a Delphi process on line. The early message systems of that time period from 1967 on really had all the qualities of what became email even if the name was not used. we had people at the medical school in newark on our system beginning in 1975 before "email" was invented at that medical school in newark, EIES was probably the first social network system and it had a complete message subsystem in addition to conferencing, shared notebooks and a variety of tailored systems for different user groups. you can find user manuals at http://library.njit.edu/archives/cccc-materials/index.php you could sign message or conference comments (all asynchronous or simultanious) with pen names or anonymously so it was easy to set up Delphi discussions. each user could take on a unique pen name and choose when writing a message or comment to use his or her real name, pen name, or anonymity. On Thu, Mar 24, 2016 at 10:51 AM, Dag Spicer <dag.spicer@gmail.com> wrote:
Now available from S.A.’s dupes…
… and a special thanks to all of us at SIGCIS …
What also needs to be investigated, by likely an independent professional ethics body, is the biased, unscholarly, and defamatory attacks on Ayyadurai(‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012),and the clear conflict of interest, as exemplified in the list of individuals in Mr. Haigh’s “Acknowledgements” section thanking those who helped him in denigrating Ayyadurai:
“Acknowledgements: Thanks to the dozens of people who sent me hundreds of messages after learning that I was working on a response for the Post. Many helped to read and shape earlier drafts. In no particular order: Evan Koblentz, Catherine Lathwell, Peter Meyer, Dave Walden, Debbie Deutsch, Marie Hicks, James Sumner, Ken Pogran, Tom Van Vleck, Dag Spicer, Mark Weber, JoAnne Yates, Murray Turoff, Al Kossow, Ramesh Subramanian, David Alan Grier, Paul McJones, Nathan Ensmenger, David Hemmendinger, Jeffrey Yost, David Moran, Peggy Kidwell, Debbie Douglas, Alex Bochannek, Bill McMillan, Len Shustek, Petri Paju, Elizabeth Finler, Dave Crocker, Ray Tomlinson, Pierre Mounier Kuhn, James P.G. Sterbenz, Ben Barker, Jim Cortada, and Craig Partridge.” (‘SIGCIS Blog’, 2012)
A significant cluster or coalition of the individuals listed in the Acknowledge- ments have a direct and indirect, and/or close affiliation to Raytheon/BBN, who claims they “invented email,” as evident on their website (Raytheon/BBN, n.d.), which brandishes the ‘@’ logo with its numerous press and marketing releases claiming that it is the home of the “inventor of email,” Mr. Ray Tomlinson.
_______________________________________________ This email is relayed from members at sigcis.org, the email discussion list of SHOT SIGCIS. Opinions expressed here are those of the member posting and are not reviewed, edited, or endorsed by SIGCIS. The list archives are at http://lists.sigcis.org/pipermail/members-sigcis.org/ and you can change your subscription options at http://lists.sigcis.org/listinfo.cgi/members-sigcis.org
-- *please send messages to murray.turoff@gmail.com <murray.turoff@gmail.com> do not use @njit.edu <http://njit.edu> addressDistinguished Professor EmeritusInformation Systems, NJIThomepage: http://is.njit.edu/turoff <http://is.njit.edu/turoff>*
participants (5)
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Dag Spicer -
Dave Walden -
Evan Koblentz -
Murray Turoff -
Thomas Haigh