Tim wrote:
The real market for robust security and privacy tools is, as always, elsewhere.
The _interesting_ market has always been for those who are--demonstrably!--willing to pay big bucks to get on a plane to fly to the Cayman Islands or Luxembourg to open an offshore account. For those who are actively interested in untraceable VISA cards. For those selling arms. For those trafficking in illegal thoughts.
In short, for crypto anarchy.
Not for fluff.
In my view (I suspect this may be in agreement with Tim's comments above, though I naturally do not presume to speak for Tim) ZKS' inability to derive meaningful revenue of the Freedom (TM) product can be explained quite trivially: the product fails to meet market requirements. Those willing to pay cash to protect their Internet activities demand real privacy. Not the watered-down, Mickey Mouse "privacy" Freedom provided. Freedom does not offer the user untracable IP. Hence those seeking untracable IP didn't buy the product. Little surprise here. Freedom's current fate was predicted in detail on this list the moment ZKS' deviated from their initial anon IP promises. It appears that ZKS is yet another company that fell prey to the DigiCash "we know better than the market what the market wants" syndrome. What a shame, really. --Lucky Green <shamrock@cypherpunks.to> "Anytime you decrypt... its against the law". Jack Valenti, President, Motion Picture Association of America in a sworn deposition, 2000-06-06