>> Cryptography is not like virginity, where once you lose it it's >> gone forever. > > I think they mean that your private key material is compromised, > meaning "þey"[1] can decrypt any future messages encrypted to that > key. Sloppily formulated, but I don't think they mean you've lost > your crypto virginity <grin>.
First, I love the Thorn Letter Agency: I'm going to have to steal it. I don't know whether it should be used sincerely as an "insert agency here", or snarkily as a "oh, right, *þey* are out to get you". Maybe both. :) Second, I dunno, man. I read that paragraph a few times just trying to understand what they meant before I tore into them, and I came up with realizing that not only didn't I know what they meant, but I doubted they knew either. The troubling line for me was, "Using these browsers for cryptography, even once, leaves these companies full power to forever break your cryptography." So if I use Google Chrome, and it's not compromised, and I use it only once, after that I switch to Firefox and use that for all my web needs... and then, later on, Google decides to toggle the evil bit... suddenly Google Chrome is going to jump in the TARDIS, travel back to when it was trustworthy, and become evil then, and send my key material forwards in time? I mean, taken at their word, that's what they seem to be saying, right? You could be right. Absolutely you could be. But their language is so weird that I don't think I'm willing to give them the benefit of the doubt. _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list Gnupg-users@gnupg.org http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users