Look, we don't want to waste your time...or ours
You must be determined to earn a bare minimum of $10,000 in the next
30 - 45 days and to develop a net worth of over 1 Million Dollars Cash
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---
The Executive Office Of The President Of The United
States Deploys Kasten Chase's RASP Secure Access
RESTON, Virginia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 1, 2000--Kasten Chase
(TSE:KCA. - news), a leading supplier of
high-assurance data security systems, today announced that it has
supplied RASP Sec
EXPERTS FEAR CYBERWARS SPREAD
Tuesday,October 31,2000
By NILES LATHEM
The growing electronic war between Israeli and
At 12:13 PM 10/31/00 -0500, Tim May wrote:
>How about:
>
>-- no key escrow, no split keys, no trusted third parties
I don't see any way around the fact that some companies will want to have
key escrow of some form for employees who disappear, e.g., car accident,
pickpocket stole the key-carrier,
On Wed, Nov 01, 2000 at 03:56:56PM -0500, David Honig wrote:
>
> At 12:13 PM 10/31/00 -0500, Tim May wrote:
> >How about:
> >
> >-- no key escrow, no split keys, no trusted third parties
>
> I don't see any way around the fact that some companies will want to have
> key escrow of some form for e
At 3:56 PM -0500 11/1/00, David Honig wrote:
>At 12:13 PM 10/31/00 -0500, Tim May wrote:
>>How about:
>>
>>-- no key escrow, no split keys, no trusted third parties
>
>I don't see any way around the fact that some companies will want to have
>key escrow of some form for employees who disappear, e.
from elsewhere:
FORMER NSA EMPLOYEES LAUNCH CYBER SECURITY BUSINESS
http://www.redherring.com/vc/2000/1019/vc-spies101900.html
MEANWHILE, NSA SEEKS NEW EMPLOYEES ON-LINE. (submitted by Jeremy
Compton)
http://www.nsa.gov/programs/employ/index.html
At 03:29 PM 11/1/00 -0500, jim bell wrote:
>What I'd like to see is for a state, any state, to apply some sort of "100%
>State Income Tax for People engaged in violating the right of citizens to
>make and use pot [for medicinal reasons, etc]."
Actually you can sue a government official (cop, cl
At 4:20 PM -0500 11/1/00, Eric Murray wrote:
>On Wed, Nov 01, 2000 at 03:56:56PM -0500, David Honig wrote:
>
> > Are there equivalent methods which don't use escrowed keys, which I
> > am unaware of?
>
>I beleive it was Eric Hughes who at a Cypherpunks meeting about four
>years ago, said "the s
Title: RE: nsa watch
From article:
"Netsec differs from its competitors in that it designs and builds its own hardware- and software-management systems, and it produces its own crypto-acceleration cards, Mr. Harold says. The company installs, monitors, and runs the systems for fees starting at
Title: RE: Zero Knowledge changes business model (press release)
I remember running into a case where there was a system in place that worked somewhat like an encrypted CVS system. There was a central document czar, like you said, and when he left, the company realized how foolish it was to pu
>Radio is cheap and hot. When was the last time you heard a Libertarian
>sentiment on radio (except talk radio). The closest I've heard are the
"Vote
>Freedom" ads by Charleton Heston.
Last week I heard 2 different ads for Indiana LP candidates on a station
that plays hip-hop, alternative, and
On Wed, Nov 01, 2000 at 03:56:56PM -0500, David Honig wrote:
| At 12:13 PM 10/31/00 -0500, Tim May wrote:
| >How about:
| >
| >-- no key escrow, no split keys, no trusted third parties
|
| I don't see any way around the fact that some companies will want to have
| key escrow of some form for empl
David Honig wrote:
>
> Actually you can sue a government official (cop, clerk, etc) who
> violates your rights knowingly, and under 'color of authority'.
> The trick is convincing a jury that it was suitably malicious
> and obvious violation. E.g., false arrest because you look like
> a suspect w
The following comments are meant as a _general_ comment on "how
things are," not as any insinuation that ZKS is in league with the
bad guys.
At 5:59 PM -0500 11/1/00, Adam Shostack wrote:
>
>As to the hypothetical that Tim will ask, we'll work very hard to
>prevent laws requiring key escrow fr
On Wed, 1 Nov 2000, David Honig wrote:
>Although its hazardous if done wrong [cf recent PGP problems], is
>tarnished by the Fedz/Denning/etc, and might have no use in a personal
>privacy tool (your diary dies with you), isn't it too dogmatic to rule out
>key escrow for tools intended for use by
At 5:59 PM -0500 11/1/00, Adam Shostack wrote:
>
>As to the hypothetical that Tim will ask, we'll work very hard to
>prevent laws requiring key escrow from coming into being. We spend
>time and energy maintaining relations with law enforcement in a lot of
>places, explaining to them why we don't
At 7:08 PM -0500 11/1/00, Tim May wrote:
> An ordinary little girl using Freedom, the putative target candidate for
> Freedom, say the ads, is not going to need PipeNet-style traffic
> padding!!!
A little girl wanting to sell nude digital snapshots of herself for
milk(bar) money might. You neve
At 7:56 PM -0500 11/1/00, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>At 7:08 PM -0500 11/1/00, Tim May wrote:
>
>> An ordinary little girl using Freedom, the putative target candidate for
>> Freedom, say the ads, is not going to need PipeNet-style traffic
>> padding!!!
>
>A little girl wanting to sell nude digi
Tim May wrote:
> Anyone know how well Freedom 1.1 operates under Virtual PC 3.0
> running Windows 98 SE with underlying Mac PPP and TCP/IP services?
>
I haven't tried it with VPC on my Mac, but I tried several times (with
two different releases) to get it to work with Vmware on a linux box
http://digitalmass.boston.com/news/daily/11/01/minesweeper.html
By Gareth Cook, Boston Globe Staff, 11/1/2000
The key to solving one of the most vexing and profound problems of modern mathematics
could lie in a most unusual place: Minesweeper, a simple computer game that rivals
solitaire as
At 05:59 PM 11/1/00 -0500, Adam Shostack wrote:
>
>Matt Blaze did some work on non-subvertable key escrow, where you
>escrow keys with random folks, and when you, or Uncle Sam, want the
>key, you announce that, and hope to get the key back. Let me be clear
>that this also is not what we're doing
Tim wrote:
> The real market for robust security and privacy tools is, as
> always, elsewhere.
>
> The _interesting_ market has always been for those who
> are--demonstrably!--willing to pay big bucks to get on a plane to fly
> to the Cayman Islands or Luxembourg to open an offshore account. For
>
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At 08:22 PM 11/1/2000 -0500, Tim May wrote:
> I had always planned to someday get a Freedom account and use my
> "five nyms" for some true tests of how free the free speech they
> advocate really is.
I attempted to do this, but was foiled by bugs. I paid my money, but did
not get my
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