Write Congress what to do about Social Security

2005-02-19 Thread The Pen
This week both sides of the Social Security controversy hit the airwaves. Some are trying to persuade you that there is a crisis that requires privitization of the system now. Others point out that analysts agree the system will remain solvent for 30 years and beyond just maintaining the curr

cadastros de emails por classe social

2005-02-19 Thread nazirajbd_g5a
listas de e-mails divididas por estados, Cadastros para mala direta livre de spam, E-mails segmentados para divulgação - Cadastros de e-mail. Visite agora: http://www.gueb.de/segmails Cadastros de emails mala direta, emails para mala direta segmentada por profissão, cadastros de emails por cla

Re: SHA1 broken?

2005-02-19 Thread Dave Howe
Joseph Ashwood wrote: I believe you substantially misunderstood my statements, 2^69 work is doable _now_. 2^55 work was performed in 72 hours in 1998, scaling forward the 7 years to the present (and hence through known data) leads to a situation where the 2^69 work is achievable today in a reaso

Re: SHA1 broken?

2005-02-19 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Sat, Feb 19, 2005 at 03:53:53PM +, Dave Howe wrote: > I wasn't aware that FPGA technology had improved that much if any - feel > free to correct my misapprehension in that area though :) FPGAs are too slow (and too expensive), if you want lots of SHA-1 performance, use a crypto processor

Ink helps drive democracy in Asia

2005-02-19 Thread R.A. Hettinga
The BBC Saturday, 19 February, 2005, 08:34 GMT Ink helps drive democracy in Asia By Dr David Mikosz In Kyrgyzstan The Kyrgyz Republic, a small, mountainous state of the former Soviet republic, is using invisible ink and ultraviolet readers

Re: SHA1 broken?

2005-02-19 Thread Dave Howe
Eugen Leitl wrote: On Sat, Feb 19, 2005 at 03:53:53PM +, Dave Howe wrote: I wasn't aware that FPGA technology had improved that much if any - feel free to correct my misapprehension in that area though :) FPGAs are too slow (and too expensive), if you want lots of SHA-1 performance, use a crypt

RE: Code name "Killer Rabbit": New Sub Can Tap Undersea Cables

2005-02-19 Thread Tyler Durden
When I was in Telecom we audited pieces of an undersea NSA network that was based on OC-3 ATM. It had some odd components, however, including reflective-mode LiNBO3 modulators and even acousto-optic modulators. (Actually, one of the components started dying which put them into a near-frenzy...i

Yahoo!: Please Verify Your Email Address

2005-02-19 Thread Yahoo! Member Services
Title: Yahoo! Email Verification Help Do not reply to this message. If this account doesn't belong to you, please follow the instructions at the end of this email.