On Thu, 19 Oct 1995 10:22:40 -0700, Alice de 'nonymous wrote:
From the "Orange Book", one of the volumes of the Department of Defence's "Rainbow Series" more commonly known as TCSEC (Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria) and available from:
U.S. Government Printing Office INFOSEC Awareness Office Superintendent of Documents - or - National Computer Security Centre Washington, DC 20402 9800 Savage Road Fort George G. Meade, MD 20755-6000
which stipulates that:
"... it is required that ADP (Automated Data Processing) systems that "process, store, or use classified data and produce classified information will, with reasonable dependability, prevent:
a. Deliberate or inadvertent access to classified material by unauthorized persons, and
b. Unauthorized manipulation of the computer and its associated peripheral devices."
I used to work in ADP security for the U.S. navy and can tell you that at least the Navy's requirements also include the machine's physical security and the networks that these machines may be connected to. In fact I believe that Secret information can only be stored on a machine in vault or on removable media. These are not things that the average individual is going to do with there computer. Netscape only attempts to secure the information being transferred from a trusted client and a trusted server. I have yet to see Netscape claiming that if you install their software on your machine that you will never again suffer from data loss. Your expectations are ridicules, Netscape cannot be held responsible for the end user not properly configuring their machine. Please stop wasting everyone's time with your ridicules rants. If you must continue to post your idiocy stop using an anonymous remailer so that the rest of us who want to use this mailing list for intelligent discussion can kill file you. Dan Weinstein djw@pdcorp.com http://www.earthlink.net/~danjw PGP public key is available from my Home Page. All opinions expressed above are mine. "I understand by 'freedom of Spirit' something quite definite - the unconditional will to say No, where it is dangerous to say No. Friedrich Nietzsche