17 Dec
2003
17 Dec
'03
11:17 p.m.
Ben.Goren@asu.edu wrote:
Doo-Doo if they timestampped some piece of thoughtcrime; why should somebody who encrypts be any different?
The service could even be advertised as a different form of timestamping (or notarizing). Not only do you get the file back signed, but you get it back encrypted and signed.
Hmmm.... Of course in some cases one may not want the file to be returned with a signature and timestamp (might be incriminating evidence, depending on what one wants stored and the overall political situation where one is, etc....). Of course that does sound useful.
-- Ben.Goren@asu.edu, Arizona State University School of Music Finger ben@tux.music.asu.edu for PGP public key ID 0x875B059.
Rob <rrothenb@ic.sunysb.edu> Finger for public key