-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- I have a question for any of you that may know the answer. This is for a paper I am giving to the Social Security Administration on Tuesday, so I would appreciate any answer I get. If I generate a personal PGP keypair on some machine it takes a specific period of time to do the intensive calculations, let's assume ten minutes for this example. If I needed 10,000 such individual keyspairs for a unspecified authentication attack, does this have to take 10,000 times 10 minutes (over two months with this CPU), or is there a faster way to generate a large number of keypairs to appear to be a large number of people. The larger question is since 10,000 unique written signatures seems to indicate that 10,000 unique individuals exist, would 10,000 unique PGP signatures also seem to indicate that these are not from the same person? -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: PGP for Personal Privacy 5.0 Charset: noconv iQBVAwUBM5s6qEGpGhRXg5NZAQG0ywIAwM3EOYMTvpxZEJqpsEqGvdAGA35Tjv0I ODzAbs/aoSQ6KWMwmw306GOvfSCGBQDgw5QJ/0ENxFwb+1OFkcA2BQ== =hVvI -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- Robert Costner Phone: (770) 512-8746 Electronic Frontiers Georgia mailto:pooh@efga.org http://www.efga.org/ run PGP 5.0 for my public key