2008/10/5 ropers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > 2008/9/23 ropers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> 2008/9/23 guede <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >>> ropers wrote: >>>> >>>> Lots of interesting stuff there: http://www.phiral.net/ >>>> Especially the last link on that page. I thought I'd never see that >>>> again, as it's vanished from the Web virtually everywhere else. >>> >>> >>> ??? >>> >>> Hasn't vanished at all. >> >> Sorry, maybe I was mistaken. I seemed to recall that some really cool >> Fravia content got pulled from everywhere. Either the entire site got >> restored everywhere, or that particular content is still offline but >> apart from that the entire Fravia/Searchlores stuff remains available. >> It doesn't help that I don't remember anymore what that content was... >> >> Sorry for the noise. > > As it turns out, I was not entirely mistaken after all, and Wikipedia > has some info of what I was referring to: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fravia > >> Fravia is a pseudonym/handle for a European cracker (his real name, >> according to his autobiography, is Fjalar Ravia) who is probably best known >> for his web archive of reverse engineering techniques and papers. Mirrors of >> the old web site (fravia.org) still exist (see, e.g., Internet Archive), >> though Fravia has publicly requested their removal in favor of his new >> web-searching-centric sites. > > However, I was not entirely right either, as it appears as if the > Fravia mirror at phiral.net doesn't have the old reverse engineering > goodies either. It goes without saying that if someone knows where > this info can still be found, I would be more than grateful for any > pointers. >
Answering to myself here, for the benefit of the archives: I was overeager with the Send button before; it turns out that Wikipedia still had a link to a mirror of the reverse engineering stuff: http://woodmann.com/fravia/

