In message Wed, 2 Mar 1994 10:38:55 -0800 (PST), tcmay@netcom.com (Timothy C. May) writes:
I connect to the Net from my home Mac IIci or PowerBook 170 over a 14.4 modem line to Netcom, an Internet service provider many of you are familiar with. Once on Netcome, I have access to a wide range of standard UNIX tools. However, I do NOT run PGP on these machines!
Rather, I run MacPGP (or PGP on my DOS machines, in emergencies, or even "MailSafe" in rare circumstances) on my *home* machine, after first downloading the mail with "Eudora 2.0," a nice off-line mail reader. It still takes several steps, as most of you can imagine.
I use a similar system to Tim's, except that I use NUpop on a "PC" to download 150+ messages a day from cypherpunks and a bunch of other lists. We have to move the tools to the user's controlled, secure environment. For some that may be Unix, but for close to 98% of the 'net community, a controlled computer is a Mac or PC. At GMU, a few supported grad students have personal Suns or other workstations, maybe 50 students out of 22,000. But nearly all of the students in the techy schools have at least a PC or mac that is under their personal control. Multi-user Unix solutions don't cut it. More importantly, if all 700+ of us on this list used encrpytion for _every message every day_ it would be only an insignificant portion of the net volume. We have to get encryption out to the masses. Pat Pat Farrell Grad Student pfarrell@gmu.edu Department of Computer Science George Mason University, Fairfax, VA Public key availble via finger #include <standard.disclaimer>