> ... Which goes to imply, as far as I'm concerned, that people are
> getting a bit _too_ paranoid.
At my day job, we're doing our first Internet credit-card based
service. Our motto is "Extreme Paranoia". This was adopted before Visa
published thier 11 Commandments...
> If there were tools bu
On Thu, 07 Sep 2000 08:49:12 EDT, the world broke into rejoicing as
John <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> On 7 Sep 2000, Derek Atkins wrote:
>
> > Robert Graham Merkel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> >
> > > Of course, I hope that anyone who encrypts their gnucash data
> > > remembers to also encrypt
On 7 Sep 2000, Derek Atkins wrote:
> Robert Graham Merkel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Of course, I hope that anyone who encrypts their gnucash data
> > remembers to also encrypt their swap file . . .
>
> Well, if you have enough RAM this isn't an issue... ;)
I've got 256Mb and I _stil
Robert Graham Merkel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> That all sounds quite solid reasoning to me. I've taken a security
> class, which didn't teach us all that much about how to design
> secure systems, but was quite good at showing just how easy it was
> to make insecure ones.
Yea.. I do comput
Christopher Browne writes:
> On 06 Sep 2000 11:59:50 EDT, the world broke into rejoicing as
> Derek Atkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> > Why not just use a crypto filesystem? PGP (and gpg) are useful for
> > encrypting files for transmission, but really should not be used for
> > long-term
On 06 Sep 2000 11:59:50 EDT, the world broke into rejoicing as
Derek Atkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Why not just use a crypto filesystem? PGP (and gpg) are useful for
> encrypting files for transmission, but really should not be used for
> long-term data storage. You should be using data-st