Re: Interesting article

2005-07-11 Thread Jack Lloyd
On Fri, Jul 08, 2005 at 01:32:34PM -0400, Tyler Durden wrote: That is interesting. One wonders if in certain circles of Russia people are much more careful with their data and encrypting it. Who knows? A country like that might evolve some fairly rigorous privacy procedures. Here in the US

RE: Interesting article

2005-07-08 Thread Tyler Durden
That is interesting. One wonders if in certain circles of Russia people are much more careful with their data and encrypting it. Who knows? A country like that might evolve some fairly rigorous privacy procedures. Here in the US it's, Our data is safe because people will go to jail if they hack

Re: Interesting article

2005-07-08 Thread Jack Lloyd
On Fri, Jul 08, 2005 at 01:32:34PM -0400, Tyler Durden wrote: That is interesting. One wonders if in certain circles of Russia people are much more careful with their data and encrypting it. Who knows? A country like that might evolve some fairly rigorous privacy procedures. Here in the US

RE: Interesting article

2005-07-08 Thread Tyler Durden
That is interesting. One wonders if in certain circles of Russia people are much more careful with their data and encrypting it. Who knows? A country like that might evolve some fairly rigorous privacy procedures. Here in the US it's, Our data is safe because people will go to jail if they hack

Re: interesting

2004-09-15 Thread Brisamar Blacknall
I was perfectly up in the subject which was the question of the day no msg No person except a natural born citizen, or a citizen of the United States, at the time of the adoption of this Constitution, shall be eligible to the office of President; neither shall any person be eligible to

Re: interesting

2004-09-14 Thread Kristin Hamill
It made the round of the frigate, which was then making fourteen knots, and enveloped it with its electric rings like luminous dust no msg No state shall, without the consent of Congress, lay any duty of tonnage, keep troops, or ships of war in time of peace, enter into any agreement or

fw: re: Interesting article ...

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Re: interesting pattern

2003-12-11 Thread Thomas Shaddack
It's a test if you aren't running an open proxy. Its purpose is antispam. On Thu, 11 Dec 2003, An Metet wrote: I have noticed this lately: When someone sends mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] , shortly thereafter a query comes from the ISP that runs the outgoing SMTP and loads

Re: interesting pattern

2003-12-11 Thread Thomas Shaddack
It's a test if you aren't running an open proxy. Its purpose is antispam. On Thu, 11 Dec 2003, An Metet wrote: I have noticed this lately: When someone sends mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] , shortly thereafter a query comes from the ISP that runs the outgoing SMTP and loads

re: interesting

2003-06-15 Thread Santos Cooke
paragraph%RANDOM_WORD discovery tap

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-03 Thread Tim May
On Monday, March 3, 2003, at 08:17 AM, Steve Schear wrote: At 09:38 PM 3/2/2003 -0800, you wrote: No, I don't use that quote...though it's been floating around the Net for many years. I realize you are referring to Tim May included quoted text from Steve Schear who used a quote by Heinlein,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-03 Thread Bill Frantz
At 7:43 PM -0800 3/1/03, Tim May quoted: A human being should be able to change a diaper - yes, plan an invasion - does another group of 4th grader's club house count?, butcher a hog - yes, conn a ship - small ones, design a building - small ones, write a sonnet - no, balance accounts - yes,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-03 Thread Tim May
On Sunday, March 2, 2003, at 08:12 PM, Bill Frantz wrote: At 7:43 PM -0800 3/1/03, Tim May quoted: A human being should be able to change a diaper - yes, plan an invasion - does another group of 4th grader's club house count?, butcher a hog - yes, No, I don't use that quote...though it's been

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-03 Thread Steve Schear
At 09:38 PM 3/2/2003 -0800, you wrote: On Sunday, March 2, 2003, at 08:12 PM, Bill Frantz wrote: At 7:43 PM -0800 3/1/03, Tim May quoted: A human being should be able to change a diaper - yes, plan an invasion - does another group of 4th grader's club house count?, butcher a hog - yes, No, I

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-03 Thread Tim May
On Monday, March 3, 2003, at 08:17 AM, Steve Schear wrote: At 09:38 PM 3/2/2003 -0800, you wrote: No, I don't use that quote...though it's been floating around the Net for many years. I realize you are referring to Tim May included quoted text from Steve Schear who used a quote by Heinlein,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Bill Frantz
At 7:43 PM -0800 3/1/03, Tim May quoted: A human being should be able to change a diaper - yes, plan an invasion - does another group of 4th grader's club house count?, butcher a hog - yes, conn a ship - small ones, design a building - small ones, write a sonnet - no, balance accounts - yes,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Tim May
On Sunday, March 2, 2003, at 08:12 PM, Bill Frantz wrote: At 7:43 PM -0800 3/1/03, Tim May quoted: A human being should be able to change a diaper - yes, plan an invasion - does another group of 4th grader's club house count?, butcher a hog - yes, No, I don't use that quote...though it's been

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Tim May
On Friday, February 28, 2003, at 01:35 PM, Sunder wrote: This was slashdotted - sorry for the spam if you've already seen this, but it's damned interesting reading - especially contrasted to current US media reports on various topics including war on terror and economics. -- Forwarded

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Sunder
Some background on this. This wasn't meant for public consumption, rather a post to her friends - one of whom spilled it to the net. This message turned into a debate about the dangers of email - i.e. as secure as postcards, trust of friends, etc. I found the contents of her email (the

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Tim May
On Saturday, March 1, 2003, at 10:11 AM, Sunder wrote: As to the identity of said journalist, here is an excerpt from the above Yale link: Laurie Garrett is a science journalist and Pulitzer prize-winner; her best-known work is The Coming Plague. She's a medical and science writer for Newsday,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-02 Thread Neil Johnson
I think Tim hit the nail on the head: http://research.yale.edu/lawmeme/modules.php?name=Newsfile=articlesid=938 -- Neil Johnson http://www.njohnsn.com PGP key available on request.

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-03-01 Thread Tim May
On Saturday, March 1, 2003, at 10:11 AM, Sunder wrote: As to the identity of said journalist, here is an excerpt from the above Yale link: Laurie Garrett is a science journalist and Pulitzer prize-winner; her best-known work is The Coming Plague. She's a medical and science writer for Newsday,

Re: interesting (fwd)

2003-02-28 Thread Tim May
On Friday, February 28, 2003, at 01:35 PM, Sunder wrote: This was slashdotted - sorry for the spam if you've already seen this, but it's damned interesting reading - especially contrasted to current US media reports on various topics including war on terror and economics. -- Forwarded

Re: Interesting KPMG report on DRM

2002-10-07 Thread Graham Lally
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Peter Gutmann wrote: | KPMG have a report The Digital Challenge: Are You Prepared? available at | http://www.kpmg.com/news/index.asp?cid=660 [snip] | Media companies have so far failed to pioneer new business models that would | rob piracy of its

Re: Interesting new cipher patent

2002-03-02 Thread Major Variola (ret)
Quoth George: The full text is available at the PTO [Ed note: it is possible to retrieve the images without the plug-in, if you Use the Source, Luke] As I understand it, in essence it's pretty much equivalent to the old idea of using a real random number generator to make a OTP, then sending

Re: Interesting new cipher patent

2002-03-01 Thread georgemw
On 28 Feb 2002 at 12:39, Sunder wrote: So it's while(...) { r=rng(); // read block from the rng p=plaintext(); // read block of plaintext c1=cypher1(plaintext,key1); // encrypt plaintext c2=c1 ^ r; // xor c1 with rng block c3=cypher2(r,key2); //

Re: Interesting new cipher patent

2002-02-28 Thread Eugene Leitl
A question: assuming, you have a class of random number generators with lots of internal state (Lots: like 10^6 bits) Let's say the evolution through state space of that generator is provably reversible (or nearly reversible), and that the Hamiltonian of the system is stochastic (system evolution

Re: Interesting new cipher patent

2002-02-28 Thread Morlock Elloi
A question: assuming, you have a class of random number generators with lots of internal state (Lots: like 10^6 bits) Let's say the evolution through state space of that generator is provably reversible (or nearly reversible), and that the Hamiltonian of the system is stochastic (system

Re: Interesting new cipher patent

2002-02-28 Thread Eugene Leitl
On Thu, 28 Feb 2002, Morlock Elloi wrote: As for PRNGs, if you can exchange million bits securely, the desired unicity distance (based on your paranoia level) will determine how often you must re-key Given system lifetime of a decade, and the rate of traffic (clearly a TBps router leaks more