
wichita@cyberstation.net writes:
Do not belive it, it will never happen. It is impossible, and we can prove it to your satisfaction.
No, you can't. It's impossible to prove an algorithim unbreakable. You can only say that it hasn't been broken yet, but you can't predict the advances in cryptoanalysis. If, in two or three years, no one's broken it then maybe it'll seem like a reasonably-secure algorithim. Of course when someone does break it you'll just say "oh, that wasn't the real algorithim" like you did last time.
Please be advised that effective immediately any U.S. or Canadian corporation (ltd), organization or government group may now receive a free IPG demonstration system, it has some limitations but it does allow users to see how easy it is to use the system compared to existing antiquated systems. It will also allow users to prove to themselves that the security is truly peerless.
This offer does not apply to individual users.
Why not? Not giving it to individuals will keep a number of people from examining it. If it's as secure as you say then you wouldn't care who or how many people look at it, would you? You could always make the demo time-limited. -- Eric Murray ericm@lne.com ericm@motorcycle.com http://www.lne.com/ericm PGP keyid:E03F65E5 fingerprint:50 B0 A2 4C 7D 86 FC 03 92 E8 AC E6 7E 27 29 AF