Since version 2.1, PGP ("Pretty Good Privacy") has been rigged to allow the NSA to easily break encoded messages. Early in 1992, the author, Paul Zimmerman, was arrested by Government agents. He was told that he
hmm, amazing that "Paul" Zimmerman can so easily put a backdoor into a program he no longer maintains :)
After reading this, you may think of using an earlier version of PGP. However, any version found on an FTP site or bulletin board has been doctored. Only use copies acquired before 1992, and do NOT use a recent
wow! they went to every bbs and replaced the files! I wonder what they threatened all of those BBS sysops with? :)
compiler to compile them. Virtually ALL popular compilers have been modified to insert the trapdoor (consisting of a few trivial changes) into
amazing! As if compiler designers didnt have enough problems trying to optimize their code and make their code optimize others! Now they have to put up with inserting backdoors for NSA! Hmm, I wonder what kind of backdoors they are putting into unix these days?
It took the agency more to modify GNU C, but eventually they did it. The Free Software Foundation was threatened with "an IRS investigation", in other words, with being forced out of business, unless they complied. The result is that all versions of GCC on the FTP sites and all versions above 2.2.3, contain code to modify PGP and insert the trapdoor. Recompiling GCC with itself will not help; the code is inserted by the compiler into itself. Recompiling with another compiler may help, as long as the compiler is older than from 1992.
No wonder GCC is so slow!
--**--**-- R X T 1 0 9 @ E M A I L . P S U . E D U --**--**-- Bob Torres | "I don't know what I'm writing about: plato@phantom.com | I'm obscure even to myself." PGP PUB KEY AVAILABLE ** | -C. Lispector, _The Stream of Life_
Thanx for the cross-post Bob! Great humor! Anybody make sure that no idiots over at alt.privacy believe this yet? Thanx for the great software "Paul"!