On Tue, 1 Oct 1996 10:26:12 -0800, Timothy C. May wrote:
Personally, I think there's a lot of hype about this whole "infowar" thing. Sure, security measures and vulnerabilities always need to be looked at, but a lot of the rhetoric is being driven by journalists looking for lead stories.
This is certainly the case with 99% of the computer industry press! I certainly have no problem believing that a group of well-supplied professionals could, with enough time and [political] support, take down a single target. For instance, if the CIA,FBI and NSA wanted to hose the 1st Bank of China, I have a feeling that they would - eventually. I have strong doubts that someone would come up with a non-nuke that could destroy stuff indiscriminately within a useably large area. # Chris Adams <adamsc@io-online.com> | http://www.io-online.com/adamsc/adamsc.htp # <cadams@acucobol.com> | send mail with subject "send PGPKEY" "That's our advantage at Microsoft; we set the standards and we can change them." --- Karen Hargrove, Microsoft (quoted in the Feb 1993 Unix Review editorial)