-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Nathan Loofbourrow <loofbour@cis.ohio-state.edu>
Of course, perhaps this encourages someone to steal your card and incapacitate you before you can report it. That's why we have PINs... so that someone can steal your card, threaten you until you reveal your PIN, and then incapacitate you... Hmm...
Even with a weak PIN system for authentication, you can always provide a "duress" PIN, right?
I can think of two purposes for "duress codes": 1. To yield little loot to the thief, thus leaving more of it in your possession and discouraging theft. 2. To summon help in the form of physical force. The first use is susceptible to the "give me more or I cut off your little finger" approach. So we are again faced with the great importance of a good police force. Let us not forget about the value of such when constructing our future visions. Bryce signatures follow "To strive, to seek, to find and not to yield." <a href="http://ugrad-www.cs.colorado.edu/~wilcoxb/Niche.html"> bryce@colorado.edu </a> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 Comment: Auto-signed under Unix with 'BAP' Easy-PGP v1.01 iQCVAwUBMILxb/WZSllhfG25AQFiSwP/YgjCyQG/VfMKg8ervnnirEYxaqTdcTXW AuDmDhVMrtP0J5kr1/7bZVDTY8wNrkptzBM9K8P9TFyhxEZnJZWEfW8PXR2Q28cC nlUgF5PlWBqlPgnA6mZPbGQD8Fef+en4s1Rh1/9OxTxS3kFy1a3gMdkiR5iSKTVR S9gGz3HBHNg= =CmKt -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----