Major-league guffaws.
A lot of people think that PGP encryption is unbreakable and that the NSA/FBI/CIA/MJ12 cannot read their mail. This is wrong, and it can be a deadly mistake. In Idaho, a left-wing activist by the name of Craig Steingold was arrested _one day_ before he and others wee to stage a protest at government buildings; the police had a copy of a message sent by Steingold to another activist, a message which had been encrypted with PGP and sent through E-mail.
Craig Steingold indeed. Looks so much like Craig Shergold, of infamous dying-boy-wants-Guiness-record fame, that I had to read it twice.
Since version 2.1, PGP ("Pretty Good Privacy") has been rigged to allow the NSA to easily break encoded messages. Early in 1992, the author, Paul Zimmerman, was arrested by Government agents. He was told that he would be set up for trafficking narcotics unless he complied. The Government agency's demands were simple: He was to put a virtually undetectable trapdoor, designed by the NSA, into all future releases of PGP, and to tell no-one.
Paul, not Phil (his actual name).
After reading this, you may think of using an earlier version of PGP. However, any version found on an FTP site or bulletin board has been doctored. Only use copies acquired before 1992, and do NOT use a recent compiler to compile them. Virtually ALL popular compilers have been modified to insert the trapdoor (consisting of a few trivial changes) into any version of PGP prior to 2.1. Members of the boards of Novell, Microsoft, Borland, AT&T and other companies were persuaded into giving the order for the modification (each ot these companies' boards contains at least one Trilateral Commission member or Bilderberg Committee attendant).
Oh, no, not the Trilateral Commission again!
It took the agency more to modify GNU C, but eventually they did it. The Free Software Foundation was threatened with "an IRS investigation", in other words, with being forced out of business, unless they complied. The result is that all versions of GCC on the FTP sites and all versions above 2.2.3, contain code to modify PGP and insert the trapdoor. Recompiling GCC with itself will not help; the code is inserted by the compiler into itself. Recompiling with another compiler may help, as long as the compiler is older than from 1992.
Right. Every commercial compiler has code that recognizes every version of GCC source since 2.2.3 and inserts into the generated object code some new stuff that makes the freshly compiled GCC recognize every version of PGP released since 1992 and inserts into *its* object code magic breakage that creates an NSA trapdoor. I hereby nominate this message for the Cypherpunk's Paul Bunyan award, 1993, in the category of "Biggest Whopper". (Oh, yeah. While I'm at it - Detweiller's Medusa theories, in conjunction with his pseudospoofed distribution techniques, are hereby nominated for the Goebel's Memorial award for "Best Big Lie" of '93.) Jason Zions "Wish I really were Eric Hughes or Tim May, or at least that sharp"