http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns2172
A week after pit bull Sharon pissed on the shrub,fresh evidence of terminal
US decay.
Extract...
The assumption that bullets found at a crime scene can be matched to those
in a suspect's possession has helped convict countless murderers, ro
Most hardware solutions that I'm aware of support 1024-bit modular arithmetic.
I don't know how easy or hard it is to do 2048-bit ops with 1024-bit
primitives, or is there any 2048-bit HW around.
=
end
(of original message)
Y-a*h*o-o (yes, they scan for this) spam follows:
Yahoo! Games - p
I suggest "and".
--
Julian Assange|If you want to build a ship, don't drum up people
|together to collect wood or assign them tasks and
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |work, but rather teach them to long for the endless
[EMAIL PROTECTED] |immensity of the sea. -- An
Your Hotel Web Site is
NOT Being
SEEN
WHY?
NO ONE CAN FIND IT!
YOUR web site is
NOT on many search engines and at the Bottom of their
listings and as a result
YOU are LOSING customers who cannot find
you!
Can this be changed? YES!Regal Telecom
For ONLY £79.97
We
will submit your web
Explosives my arse!
http://www.infoshop.org/inews/stories.php?story=02/04/22/2400080
same story,different page.
Late April, California: More Repression Against Anarchists
posted by breakthechains on Monday April 22 2002 @ 02:48PM PDT
As some of you may have heard, a comrade and fellow anarch
Title: The Investment Journal
The InvestmentIssue 23ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0 JournalÿA0ÿA0ÿA0 April 2002 ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0ÿA0 BIOTECH H
On Tue, 23 Apr 2002, Riad S. Wahby wrote:
>This may take more voltage than you want to use in your process, but you
>can engineer the base-emitter junction if you've got a friend in process
>engineering.
Aren't there dedicated avalanche diodes available with low breakdown
voltages, precisely for
London woman becomes fiftieth hunger striker to die in Turkey By Andrew
Finkel in Istanbul and Daniel McGrory IN HER last, whispered telephone call
to friends in London, Meryem Altun, 25, told them that she was determined
to starve herself to death. A few weeks later, on April 1, after 301 days
Webmaster,
STOP RISKING YOUR AD BUDGET! Cut it down to Zero!
Now you can Send Your Ads FREEEvery Week To
200,000+ Targeted eZine Readers
Plus, Get The Complete Resell Rights
to This
Brand New Product and Keep ALL the Profits for yourself!
Start boosting your sales in under 5 min
Title: Take Control Of Your Conference Calls
Crystal Clear
Conference CallsOnly 18 Cents Per Minute!
(Anytime/Anywhere)
No setup fees
No contracts or monthly fees
Call anytime, from anywhere, to anywhere
Connects up to 100 Participants
"Jim Choate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But that changes the game in the middle of play, the sequence of digits
> in pi is fixed, not random. You can't get a random number from a constant.
> Otherwise it wouldn't be a constant.
PRNG output is fixed/repeatable too - that is a properly you *want*
Peter wrote:
> I have seen hard drives which do sector level encryption, and
> hook into the bios so that the pw request happens before any
> system sw runs. This is a good solution (modulo bios
> hacking)[...]
Any such hard drives that I have seen keep the actual encryption key
utilized in fi
Lucky is to be commended for igniting a neglected aspect
of the crypto wars: what happens to cryptosystems over
time after they have been invented, tested, criticized, vetted
and conditionally trusted, then gradually widely distributed
as the best available under practical usage, then compromised
On Wed, 24 Apr 2002, David Howe wrote:
> "Jim Choate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > But that changes the game in the middle of play, the sequence of digits
> > in pi is fixed, not random. You can't get a random number from a constant.
> > Otherwise it wouldn't be a constant.
> PRNG output is f
It has been suggested by some that a PRNG can be created that is -not-
repeating. There is a property of -all- RNG's that is called
k-distribution.
For a RNG to -be- a RNG it -must- be infinity-distributed. This means that
there are -no- string repititions -ever-. If this can't be guaranteed the
Sampo Syreeni <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Aren't there dedicated avalanche diodes available with low breakdown
> voltages, precisely for this reason? I think they're used in applications
> where zeners could be, except for higher breakdown current.
Sure. I was thinking of an IC design, in which
Get Paid to
Shop
Get Paid to Eat!
Sounds Crazy, But It's True, You can!
Get Paid $10 to $40
an hour to go to your
favorite Mall or Restaurant!
Click Here Now!
You are receiving this email because
you registered at one of our pa
Dear Friend,
THIS IS THE BEST MONEY MAKING SYSTEM OF ALL!! NO SELLING,FOLLOW-UPS
OR INTENSIVE LABOR!! NO RISK AND EASY AS PIE!! READ CAREFULLY!!
$$$"TRUE STORY" SEEN ON ABC's 20-20 "BOY 15 MAKES 71 THOUSAND IN
5 WKS!!!
YOU CAN TO!!"
AS SEEN ON NATIONAL TV: THIS IS THE ONE!
Parents of 15-year-o
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A36532-2002Apr23.html
--
--
The law is applied philosophy and a philosphical system is
only as valid as its first principles.
http://www.Kuro5hin.org/story/2002/4/23/19170/1201
--
--
The law is applied philosophy and a philosphical system is
only as valid as its first principles.
James Patrick
http://www.Kuro5hin.org/story/2002/4/23/174344/154
--
--
The law is applied philosophy and a philosphical system is
only as valid as its first principles.
James Patrick
Jim Choate wrote:
> > PRNG output is fixed/repeatable too - that is a properly you *want* from a
> > PRNG.
>
> No it isn't. You -want- a RNG but you can't have one. Nobody -wants- a
> PRNG, they -settle- for it.
That is nearly true for crypto applications, but it certainly isn't for
some other
=0d=0a=0d=0ato unsubscribe from future mailings, click here=2e=0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a =0d=0a=0d=0aA Software to Fit Your Staffing Effort =0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a =0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0a=0d=0aAn applicant tracking / recruiting application can be a vital tool to the success of your business=2eIf yo
Tim May wrote:
>
> On Monday, April 22, 2002, at 11:23 PM, Joseph Ashwood wrote:
> >
> > From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >> If a RNG runs off Johnson noise, then the ability to predict its
> >> output would imply the ability to violate the second law of
> >> thermodynamics. If it runs off shot nois
On Tue, 23 Apr 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> --
> Jim Choate wrote:
> > > > If you can't develop a RNG in software (ie you'd be in a
> > > > state of sin), what makes you think you can do it using
> > > > -only- digital gates in hardware? You can't.
>
> James A. Donald:
> > > Classic Choa
At 11:55 AM 4/24/02 +0300, Sampo Syreeni wrote:
>On Tue, 23 Apr 2002, Riad S. Wahby wrote:
>
>>This may take more voltage than you want to use in your process, but
you
>>can engineer the base-emitter junction if you've got a friend in
process
>>engineering.
You can also use common guard structure
Save up to 75% on your Term Life Insurance!
Compare rates from top insurance companies around the country
In our life and times, it's important to plan for your family's future, while
being comfortable financially. Choose the right Life Insurance policy today.
Click the link below to compa
"Lucky Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>1) Very, very few applications, and no cryptographic libraries that I am aware
>of, that currently employ RSA perform any kind of sanity check on the size of
>the keys.
There are both applications and crypto libraries which perform fairly extensive
chec
> No it isn't. You -want- a RNG but you can't have one. Nobody
> -wants- a PRNG, they -settle- for it.
I think there is some confusion here - if you are using a PRNG as a stream
cypher, the last thing in the world you want is for it to be truely random -
you need to sync up two prngs in order to d
Optimizzin Al-gorithym <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> You can also use common guard structures to isolate the "HV" part of
> the chip, without dicking with the Delicate Recipes (process) which
> you Don't Want To Do And Probably Wouldn't Be Allowed To Anyway.
> Also helps keep digital switching nois
Title: Untitled Document
En
partenariat avec
Le
dernier sondage avant le second tour des élections présidentielles
I seem to be channeling mathematicians this morning...
Cheers,
RAH
--- begin forwarded text
Status: U
From: Somebody with a sheepskin...
To: "R. A. Hettinga" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: Two ideas for random number generation
Date: Wed, 24 Apr 2002 08:44:41 -0600
Bob,
Tim's examples are
On 24 Apr 2002 at 17:41, David Howe wrote:
> > Maybe for you, I sure as hell wouldn't use it either as a key or as a
> > seed into a known hashing/whiting algorithm.
> its probably a better (if much slower) stream cypher than most currently in
> use; I can't think of any that have larger than a 2
- Original Message -
From: "Morlock Elloi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Most hardware solutions that I'm aware of support 1024-bit modular
arithmetic.
> I don't know how easy or hard it is to do 2048-bit ops with 1024-bit
> primitives, or is there any 2048-bit HW around.
For encryption, you're
I'll probably regret proposing such things, but here goes.
First, I'm not sure there are plausible reasons for GBPS (giga bit per
second) sources of "random" bits. Generating a OTP for a CD-ROM scheme
is certainly not such a situation. Padding a PipeNet link may be one,
but then all your need
- Original Message -
From: "Jim Choate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> For a RNG to -be- a RNG it -must- be infinity-distributed. This means that
> there are -no- string repititions -ever-.
Ummm, wrong. That would imply that in a binary stream, once 0 has been used
it can never be used again. Thi
Below is the result of your feedback form. It was submitted by
melodee ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) on Wednesday, April 24, 2002 at 16:12:51
---
body:
VIAGRA (and many other Prescriptions) ONLINE!
Responsible and Secure!
No waitin
Soon,real soon.Lax e-security aided FBI spy
Karen Dearne
APRIL 23, 2002
A UNITED States commission reviewing FBI security in response to treason by
a former special agent has been shocked at how easily he was able to steal
vast amounts of secret information.
Over 22 years, Robert Hanssen gave th
On 23 Apr 2002 at 18:56, Tim May wrote:
> On Tuesday, April 23, 2002, at 11:18 AM, Ken Brown wrote:
> > Back nearer to on-topic, Tim's explanation why the world could not be
> > predicted even if it were locally (microscopically) predictable sounds
> > spot-on.
>
> It's not my idea, obviously.
Title: $7.95 Power Hosting
Limited Time Offer: Sign up and get FREE DOMAIN and Free setup
150 MB Hosting50 Pop E-MailsSecure Server15 Gigs TransferContent PromoYour-Name.comYou!
r !
own cgi-bin 24/7 FTP AccessDetailed Statistics Plus much more!
Our Equ
40 matches
Mail list logo