<[email protected]> writes: >The (U.S.) medical records system that started at the Veterans' >Administration and has now spread to all but all parts of the U.S. Federal >government that handle electronic health records is ASCII encoded, and >readable. Called "The Blue Button,"[1] there is even an HL7->Blue Button >file converter.[2] > >Score one for human readable.
Things like HL7 and EDIFACT/X12 (and ASN.1 in DER/BER form) were never meant to be human-readable, they're meant to be easily machine readable and processable. This is why you have viewers to turn them into human-readable form in any format you want. The problem with formats like XML is that it's never been quite sure what it wants to be, so that the result is neither easily human-readable nor easily machine-readable. Trying to get back on track, I think any attempt at TLS 2 is doomed. We've already gone through, what, about a million messages bikeshedding over the encoding format and have barely started on the crypto. Can you imagine any two people on this list agreeing on what crypto mechanism to use? Or whether identity-hiding (at the expense of complexity/security) should trump simplicity/security 9at the expense of exposing identity information)? Peter. _______________________________________________ The cryptography mailing list [email protected] http://www.metzdowd.com/mailman/listinfo/cryptography
