-- On 3 Feb 2005 at 22:25, Anonymous wrote: > Now, my personal perspective on this is that this is no real > threat. It allows people who choose to use the capability to > issue reasonably credible and convincing statements about > their software configuration. Basically it allows people to > tell the truth about their software in a convincing way. > Anyone who is threatened by the ability of other people to > tell the truth should take a hard look at his own ethical > standards. Honesty is no threat to the world! > > The only people endangered by this capability are those who > want to be able to lie. They want to agree to contracts and > user agreements that, for example, require them to observe > DRM restrictions and copyright laws, but then they want the > power to go back on their word, to dishonor their commitment, > and to lie about their promises. An honest man is not > affected by Trusted Computing; it would not change his > behavior in any way, because he would be as bound by his word > as by the TC software restrictions.
The ability to convincingly tell the truth is a very handy one between people who are roughly equal. It is a potentially disastrous one if one party can do violence with impunity to the one with the ability to convincingly tell the truth. --digsig James A. Donald 6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG 6B7i0tiB4vUHqQnAP6nXT2z+B+zLB8624+K6+ENU 47fFHg6cY0KInzxMe/l+L2c7LqmPZyrwOSZepYIR3