In article <199408240630.XAA26030@netcom4.netcom.com>, Timothy C. May <tcmay@netcom.netcom.com> wrote:
L. Todd Masco writes:
Well... Either that, or they have their own UNIX boxes (an increasing trend in this world of Linux boxes...) or other personal machines that run an MTA and emacs.
Precisely! In fact, I think I cited the Linux phenomenon just a day or so ago...(in a mention of cheap Pentium boxes). When many more locally-controlled boxes are on the Net, conveniently, then things should start to really get going.
Until the "Internet-in-a-box" or TIA-type products are more widespread, many people will be connecting home or office machines to other systems they don't control.
Actually, I expected to get jumped on in a major way for saying that. Linux boxes run X11, with all its security problems. Add to that the increasing frequency of popularity of UNIX and UNIX-alikes, with all their security problems, and you get a picture that's terrifyingly cyberpunk. I can just picture in three years: Job Bob Public sitting at his Linux box, connected by TC/IPng over the local cable IP provider -- scared by a mailing he's recently gotten from the Oregon Driver's Privacy Initiative with information of where his daughter had his lojack-ng equipped car was three days ago when she was supposed to be at football practice -- decides to set up Microsoft PGP 5.7us on his machine (and to wire up the optional personal lojack-ng tracking feature, of course -- brought to you by AT&T). He writes a message that he believes secure -- Of course, he's got his X11R8 server xhost +'d, so that his friend Suzy EveryCheese can send windows to him (she's much too smart to allows other clients to attach to *her* server). He types his passphrase in and his son, Bubba Public, snarfs it from his PC-SeptiumJr. It never hurts to be able to see what the Old Man might be writing. Of course, the entire thing falls apart when the Morris Worm Mk 3 chomps down through the least-secure encryption methods specified in IPng's security specs (they salvaged the old AFS "xor 'flamingo'" "optimization"), but that's another matter. The point? I'm actually not very sure... but it has something to do with there never being an easy way to be secure, especially for the plug-n- players. It also has to do with the way things are going to be extremely unstable when everybody is networked on machines with an OS and windowing environment that evolved to play XTrek efficiently and to support Xeyes with motif. Knowledge and/or effort -- not to mention a good dose of paranoia -- are de riguer, and I doubt that we'll see anything different in the near future (even if technically possible: the rise of MS Windows and UNIX/X11 have me pretty down on the economics of quality these days).
It reeks of fanaticism.
Fanaticism's fine. It's clueless, dogmatic fanaticism that's a problem. -- L. Todd Masco | "Large prime numbers imply arrest." - Previously meaningless cactus@bb.com | grammatically correct sentence. Now...