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Or, we could impliment an "external protocal" like zmodem. This would simply take keystrokes, buffer them, then encrypt/decrypt them.
Make the source portable, and obtainable.
I'm doing something like this for my Thesis (i.e., wait a couple of weeks.. ;-) It's based upon Kerberos, but it will securely get you a TGT on a server machine that is on the Internet from a client terminal that is dialled up to it... Moreover, you can extract the session key from the protocol, which would allow for DES encryption of the session. While I haven't yet implemented the encryption of the session, I have been able to obtain kerberos tickets securely.... More info on request, or you can wait to read my thesis when it's done... Enjoy! - -derek PGP 2 key available upon request on the key-server: pgp-public-keys@toxicwaste.mit.edu - -- Derek Atkins, MIT '93, Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Secretary, MIT Student Information Processing Board (SIPB) MIT Media Laboratory, Speech Research Group warlord@MIT.EDU PP-ASEL N1NWH -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.2 iQBuAgUBK8NMvzh0K1zBsGrxAQFQwwLECieud4DvqHhkxsjwmrHt4Unpq2eR9hlT DKuKF2CqCfYVabks11r7TaZvrsSQ9Vs5zZFbXhfihaiQywTpdj2Bp8aSo0B+7paR ukzbY3GT1RLcSRrK+6KjPGw= =lzg8 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----