IPG Sales writes:
Mike, the keys are encrypted with an OTP that only the intended recipient can open - a special, subsystem used for that purpose only - employing the same techniquers, but entirely separate and apart from the primary
Could you please learn how to spell? You cannot possible send your keys to the recipients encrypted in a one time pad, because a one time pad can be used only once. Every bit of keying material you would send your clients would use up one bit of the material they had. That would mean that you could never send your clients new keying material this way. The phrase one time pad is a fraud, plain and simple. I mean that in the most technical, legal sense. Advertise using that term and the FTC can and will throw you in jail. What you have here is some sort of conventional stream cipher conked up from a PRNG. You've solved no key management problems. What you've done is simply generate lots of hype. When I see the PRNG I suspect that I'll discover that the thing is nothing more than some sort of multi-pass linear congruential generator that cracks open like an egg.
user system - any inteceptor would have to break trhe system, which we claim is impossible.
On Wed, 21 Feb 1996, Mike McNally wrote:
IPG Sales writes:
We do not keep copies, we would not be in business 30 days if we did.
How do you ensure that the keys are not intercepted, duplicated by a man-in-the-middle, and forwarded?
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Mike M Nally * Tiv^H^H^H IBM * Austin TX * I want more, I want more, m5@tivoli.com * m101@io.com * I want more, I want more ... <URL:http://www.io.com/~m101> *______________________________ _