[from
the then-large number of Usenet VAXen with names of the form foovax] Originally,
a fictitious Usenet site at the Kremlin, announced on April 1, 1984 in
a posting ostensibly originated there by Soviet leader Konstantin Chernenko.
The posting was actually forged by Piet Beertema as an April Fool's joke.
Other fictitious sites mentioned in the hoax were moskvax and kgbvax.
This was probably the funniest of the many April Fool's forgeries perpetrated
on Usenet (which has negligible security against them), because the notion
that Usenet might ever penetrate the Iron Curtain seemed so totally absurd
at the time.
In fact, it was only six years later that the first genuine site in Moscow,
demos.su, joined Usenet. Some readers needed convincing that the postings
from it weren't just another prank. Vadim Antonov, senior programmer at
Demos and the major poster from there up to mid-1991, was quite aware
of all this, referred to it frequently in his own postings, and at one
point twitted some credulous readers by blandly asserting that he was
a hoax!
Eventually he even arranged to have the domain's gateway site named kremvax,
thus neatly turning fiction into fact and demonstrating that the hackish
sense of humor transcends cultural barriers. [Mr. Antonov also contributed
the Russian-language material for this lexicon. —ESR]
In an even more ironic historical footnote, kremvax became an electronic
center of the anti-communist resistance during the bungled hard-line coup
of August 1991. During those three days the Soviet UUCP network centered
on kremvax became the only trustworthy news source for many places within
the USSR. Though the sysops were concentrating on internal communications,
cross-border postings included immediate transliterations of Boris Yeltsin's
decrees condemning the coup and eyewitness reports of the demonstrations
in Moscow's streets. In those hours, years of speculation that totalitarianism
would prove unable to maintain its grip on politically-loaded information
in the age of computer networking were proved devastatingly accurate —
and the original kremvax joke became a reality as Yeltsin and the new
Russian revolutionaries of glasnost and perestroika made kremvax one of
the timeliest means
of their outreach to the West.
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