Re TEMPEST technology: (Note that TEMPEST is the technology for _protection_ against electronic eavesdropping on your computer emissions. There is presumably a code word for performing such snooping, but it must be secret.) I've read that the worst emitter is your CRT screen. In fact, they say that you can sometimes put a TV-type monitor next to your computer monitor and get a faint, ghosty image of your CRT screen on the second monitor. If you get this much without any amplification, it's under- standable that high-quality equipment can pick up an image from a greater distance. The best way to avoid this, IMO, is to use a laptop. The LCD display of a laptop does not use the large electromagnetic fields that a CRT display does. Laptops also use lower power levels in general so they should emit less. I don't really know whether the "raw" CPU activity of your computer could be picked up and interpreted at a distance. With as many different signals as there are on the address and data busses, along with all the other wires you have, I can't really see how anything meaningful could be picked up with remote monitoring. It would seem that they'd be totally jumbled. So, for BBS use, where the system is operating automatically, I'd say that it would be OK as long as you don't display any cleartext or key/password information on the screen. You could just turn the monitor off when it's operating. For home use, a laptop has the advantage that it can have greater physical security (because it's smaller and more portable), you can carry your decryption keys with you, you can download to it at work or school and decrypt without trusting the multi-user systems they have there, and it should be relatively immune to electro- magnetic snooping. Hal 74076.1041@compuserve.com