
On Fri, 29 Nov 1996, Mark Rosen wrote:
I have written an encryption program called Very Good Privacy
Trademark violation here. Probably not a good thing.
95/NT. It supports drag-and-drop encryption using the following algorithms: ASCII (Caesar), BlowFish, DES, IDEA, NewDES, RC4, Safer SK-128, and Vigenere. After the files are encrypted, the user has the option of
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Good Privacy is only "pretty good" but Very Good Privacy is "very good."
I'm not sure how an encryption product that uses encryption algorithms weaker than Pretty Good Privacy can be described as being better than PGP. Especially when all the algorithms listed have known problems of one kind, or another. << And yes, I know that the known problems -- in some instances --- are entirely theoretical in nature. >> xan jonathon grafolog@netcom.com SpamByte: The amount of spam Sanford Wallace sends to AOL in one 24 hour period. Roughly 1 000 Terabytes sent every 24 hours. T3 Connection: The connection that AOL needs to deal with the spam Sanford Wallaces send to them in one day, so that legitimate users can contact people at AOL.