Re: If You Want to Protect A Security Secret, Make Sure It's Public

2004-03-16 Thread John Young
Despite the long-lived argument that public review of crypto assures its reliability, no national infosec agency -- in any country worldwide -- follows that practice for the most secure systems. NSA's support for AES notwithstanding, the agency does not disclose its military and high level system

Re: If You Want to Protect A Security Secret, Make Sure It's Public

2004-03-16 Thread Riad S. Wahby
John Young <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Despite the long-lived argument that public review of crypto assures > its reliability, no national infosec agency -- in any country worldwide -- > follows that practice for the most secure systems. NSA's support for > AES notwithstanding, the agency does n

Re: If You Want to Protect A Security Secret, Make Sure It's Public

2004-03-16 Thread Dave Howe
Riad S. Wahby wrote: > John Young <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Despite the long-lived argument that public review of crypto assures >> its reliability, no national infosec agency -- in any country >> worldwide -- follows that practice for the most secure systems. >> NSA's support for >> AES notwit

Re: If You Want to Protect A Security Secret, Make Sure It's Public

2004-03-14 Thread Justin
R. A. Hettinga (2004-03-15 02:07Z) wrote: > > > If You Want to Protect > A Security Secret, > Make Sure It's Public What is "terrible article titles for $500, Alex"? -- That woman deserves her revenge... and... we deserve