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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Introduced in the latter half of 1950, SrpaNet was developed by SRPA as an elaborate network of computer terminals across America. The network was primarily used for storing and relaying important files and documents relating to SRPA projects. All documents within the system were identified by unique codes, some of which required the user to log in to access; while anyone with the technology could access SrpaNet, only those with registered accounts and a password (such as Capt. Philip Howard and Col. Grant Thompson) could access secret files.

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  • SRPANET
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  • Introduced in the latter half of 1950, SrpaNet was developed by SRPA as an elaborate network of computer terminals across America. The network was primarily used for storing and relaying important files and documents relating to SRPA projects. All documents within the system were identified by unique codes, some of which required the user to log in to access; while anyone with the technology could access SrpaNet, only those with registered accounts and a password (such as Capt. Philip Howard and Col. Grant Thompson) could access secret files.
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abstract
  • Introduced in the latter half of 1950, SrpaNet was developed by SRPA as an elaborate network of computer terminals across America. The network was primarily used for storing and relaying important files and documents relating to SRPA projects. All documents within the system were identified by unique codes, some of which required the user to log in to access; while anyone with the technology could access SrpaNet, only those with registered accounts and a password (such as Capt. Philip Howard and Col. Grant Thompson) could access secret files. In the final months of 1950, version 1.42 of SrpaNet was used to store information pertaining to the test subjects in Project Abraham; any documents relating to them were released once they had been injected. Agents working for the Alliance for American Autonomy used SrpaNet to locate information about the situation in Europe and SRPA projects including the Liberty Defense Perimeter and the experiments of Dr. Fyodor Malikov, using Capt. Philip Howard and Col. Grant Thompson's passwords. This information was then published in the weekly America First - America Only newsletter. Even after the Chimera invaded America, SrpaNet remained operational, and had been upgraded to version 2.19.
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