> Leaving aside the issue of how popular encryption of mail is - we are > faced with the fact that 98 per cent of computer users are completely > ignorant about software and hardware.
"Completely ignorant" is an overstatement. Few people today are completely ignorant about software and hardware. Most people do not have the sort of knowledge about computers that I'd like, but... you know what I realized a few weeks ago? I was watching a janitor mop a floor... without leaving footprints in anything. It struck me because I mopped my kitchen floor recently and wound up with soapy water all over my shoes and tracked it through some of my apartment before I realized what I was doing. I mean to go back to that janitor sometime soon and ask him, "hey, man, you look like you know how to mop a floor correctly: what am I doing wrong?" The janitor probably doesn't know the minimum voltage to flip a transistor (200mV, usually) and couldn't build an adder out of NAND gates if his life depended on it. I can't mop a floor without tracking soapy water throughout my place. Kind of puts in perspective which one of us is the ignorant one, you know? Saying "most people today know very little about computers" is true, and it deserves to be said. But let's be real careful about thinking we are in any way better than other people. We're not. > There is No Microsoft pre-loaded security features built-in Microsoft has a *ton* of security features built into their operating systems. Post-XP, Microsoft radically overhauled their kernel and started enabling a ton of useful features. DEP, ASLR, enabling some of the cool security features of the x64 architecture... In the XP and Win2K days, yes, Microsoft's security was a joke and it deserved to be mocked. It has not been that way for several years now. > After 20 odd years while there has been advances in cryptography and > GUIs there has been an almost zero growth in take up. Considered reading any of the available peer-reviewed papers that have explored why this is the case? > But we have to face the fact that Microsoft has a hold on hard drive > manufacturers - in that they are all sold with a version of "Windows" > on them. No, Microsoft doesn't. Walk into a Best Buy, a Fry's Electronics, or whatever store you choose, and it's *easy* to find hard drives that aren't pre-loaded with Windows. > GNUpg would have a great future if the developers had greater > vision. Then fork the source code and code up your own vision. > The use of gpg will die out because we are ALL getting a bit long in > the tooth. So what? If a new email cryptography standard comes out that's significantly better than GnuPG, do you think Werner is going to sit around drinking Tanqueray straight out of the bottle because nobody's using GnuPG anymore? I don't. I think he'll cheerfully send GnuPG off into maintenance, applaud the new standard, and volunteer to help with a free implementation of the new standard. If GnuPG dies out because nobody cares about privacy, I'm not going to mourn the loss of GnuPG. I'm going to mourn how nobody cares about privacy any more. GnuPG is useful and good only to the extent that it is a useful and good thing for human beings. *People* are the important thing. The authors hope GnuPG will help people. But, by itself, GnuPG is ... really rather pointless. When (not if) GnuPG dies out, the only question will be, "is this on balance good for people?" If so, then let's be thankful GnuPG existed, celebrate its passing, and cheerfully move on. > Perhaps when we are all in our 90's we will say "Oh gpg was a good > idea, pity it did not catch on." The good ideas in computer science are overwhelmingly rejected. The ones that endure are usually really bad ones. Compare the Intel 80x86 architecture against *any* of its competitors, for instance. x86 Assembler makes me bleed through my eyeballs and beg for the sweet sweet release of death. It isn't MIPS or PA-RISC or PowerPC or any of the literally *dozens* of superior architectures I've worked with over the years. And yet, x86 won in the marketplace. I think everyone on this list who has more than ten or so years of experience in the industry will have their own tales of technological woe. Good technologies get rejected, and then ten years later they get rediscovered and renewed. Look at VMS and UNIX. UNIX won the server wars of the '80s and early '90s and completely crushed VMS... up until VMS came back as Windows NT. Now, VMS has won the desktop, where UNIX is completely dead... except for how UNIX got re-resurrected a few years ago as OS X, and as the Mac desktop it's making a strong showing. Good technologies rarely win, but they almost always get re-adopted later. It's a cycle. :) (No, I'm not kidding regarding Windows NT/VMS. The parallels between them are *profound*. The same guy, Cutler, designed both, and the Windows desktops that most people use nowadays are direct descendants of VMS!) _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users