FACTOID # 5: China has the most workers, so it's a good thing they've also got the most TV's.
 
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Encyclopedia > Jude Milhon

Jude Milhon (1939 - 19 July 2003) was a hacker and author in the San Francisco Bay Area.


Milhoun coined the term cypherpunk and was a founding member of the cypherpunks. She began programming in 1967, writing software for the Horn and Hardart company. She was a member of Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility, and the author of several books, including The Cypherpunk Handbook (1995) and How to Mutate and Take Over the World (1996) ISBN 0345392167. She was a senior editor at the magazine Mondo 2000. She often wrote under the pseudonym St. Jude.


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  Results from FactBites:
 
Las Vegas City Life (865 words)
If Jude was famous, she was very specifically famous to a particular subset of people -- namely, computer people, especially female computer geeks and hackers.
Jude started programming in 1967, when most people were still unaware of what computers really were.
My entire career, such as it is, has been dedicated to the ideas that I first discovered through her, Sirius and their work: that technology is a tool of liberation first and foremost; that humans can aspire to something better than their natural condition; that information wants to be free.
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