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On the subject of network monitoring, Bruce posted a copy of an NSA technology transfer which described a database searching algorithm that looked fairly sophisticated (I don't have the actual posting handy.) Did anyone (Bruce?) obtain a copy of the algorithm, and if so, were there any distribution limitations on it? It looked like just the thing that the NSA would use as their "watchword" scanner, and even if not, it looked like a very useful design all the same.
I took the time to contact the "office symbol" listed in the NSA announcement. The NSAoid's name was Dennis Sysko. He was a little nonplussed that Bruce had posted the announcement. I was required to write a letter to them, on Intergraph letterhead, requesting further information; after receiving it, Sysko promised to send me an NDA that I could sign and return to get further information. Someone else posted in t.p.c that they'd sent in a letter and been told that NSA would not license this technology to individuals. That sort of echoes the argument that there are some munitions appropriate for government but not for individuals. - -Paul - -- Paul Robichaux, KD4JZG | "Information is the currency of democracy." perobich@ingr.com | - some old guy named Thomas Jefferson Of course I don't speak for Intergraph. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6 iQCVAgUBLiKphqfb4pLe9tolAQG8lgP8CjSOkoIppXrMie5kLJqH4HiMIFS/jPbH woj8Lb0yPVAaf2qMDuVx/wKpgYjXToaeeEBk7rzQshqeL4SrqQKgXEl2tyn0B2Nk fuM0dI3onmyEldDk3zQnCLNGZiDMRKS7REwAgpN5fqzEuvc1HIV/kwE4FEddP9W9 5d5GXBC8OxA= =/syA -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----