The public slap in the face our agenda received the other day on the crypto export issue should be proof enough that our enemies will accept nothing less than the total surrender of our right to personal privacy. It's time to stop being nice. When you go after the King, you shoot to kill.
I'm sure there are those scanning this liFrom owner-cypherpunks Mon Jun 20 01:18:06 1994 Return-Path: <owner-cypherpunks> Received: by toad.com id AA11875; Mon, 20 Jun 94 01:18:06 PDT Received: from gw1.att.com by toad.com id AA11869; Mon, 20 Jun 94 01:18:00 PDT Received: from anchor.ho.att.com by ig1.att.att.com id AA11807; Mon, 20 Jun 94 04:17:35 EDT Received: by anchor.ho.att.com (bind.920909) id AA03886; Mon, 20 Jun 94 04:16:53 EDT Date: Mon, 20 Jun 94 04:16:53 EDT From: wcs@anchor.ho.att.com (bill.stewart@pleasantonca.ncr.com +1-510-484-6204) Message-Id: <9406200816.AA03886@anchor.ho.att.com> To: pfarrell@netcom.com Subject: Re: Hardware generators Cc: cypherpunks@toad.com Sender: owner-cypherpunks@toad.com Precedence: bulk
The problem with the serial port dongles are:
3) PCs typically don't have a spare serial port. 1) while parallel port dongles are known technology, making it work on a serial port is more problematical.
Only if you're trying to share the port with other functions, like, ummm, modems, which you'll probably want at about the same time you want your random number generator. But if you've got a spare slot to put a random number generator in, you could just as well put *it* in the spare slot, and save $20 or whatever the current price difference between internal and external modems is. Except for laptops, where slots are generally not available (except PCMCIA),