One of the mags I get for free is called _OEM_. It recently ran an interview with Marc Anderssen from Netscape. I'll key in a few crypto-relevant passages. ... Q. Everyone's looking for ways to make money on the World Wide Web. What is the future for advertisers on the Web? A. Advertisements in an interactive medium definitely function best as a service; really, the line between advertising, informational marketing and direct sales blurs incredibly quickly. I expect a lot of creativity to be devoted to pulling people into commercial sites and keeping them there, including continuing sponsorship of innovative content. Q. Do you see many small transactions as a possible model for making money on the Web? A. Tiny transactions will be a part of the grand scheme of things. They'll make possible the 2-cent joke of the day and lots of appropriate forms of content. Q. How will people deal with getting costs down for each transaction to eke out a profit? A. That's the challenge for the companies that intent to make money processing tiny transactions. I can't wait to see who does it first. Q. Now that the InterNIC has started to charge for domain names, do you, as an Internaut, miss the anarchistic, "anything goes" community the Net once was? A. The Internet was never really anarchistic and "anything goes". It was always a cooperative venture that everyone derived benefit from. That's pretty much the case. In fact, I still get a thrill -- more now than ever -- when I go through directories like Yahoo. There's much more out there on the Net now. Everything is accelerating. ... Q. Do you think that the Netspace's Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) is the de facto standard for Internet security now? A. SSL is a de facto standard, widely adopted throughout the industry by Microsoft, Novell, Apple, IBM, Sun, Digital Equipment, Intel, MasteCard, Visa, etc. The security space is a very broad space, though, and SSL solves a specifically defined set of problems: encryption and authentication for a secure data channel over TCP/IP. There are many other problems yet to solve. Other protocols will play a role in solving those problems, and we will support them. Q. What happened to the deal with Enterprise Integration Technologies and its Secure Hypertext Protocol (S-HTTP), which was Netscape's only real competition in the area of secure server software? A. Early this year, we announced that Netscape (along with IBM/Prodigy, America Online and Compuserve) became an investor and partner in Terisa Systems, which was previously a joint venture of EIT and RSA Data Security. All Parties agreed to support both SSL and S-HTTP. Unfortunately, Terisa has been unable to ship its toolkit, so things haven't gone as well as we had all hoped. In the meantime, virtually everyone is supporting SSL [but not S-HTTP]. Q. Do you think that your server software, and especially your protocol Secure Courier, will lessen the public perception that credit-card entries aren't safe on the Net? A. I think it's happening. We're in the middle of a broad shift in consumer behavior, and there will be a lot of exciting things happening over the next few years as a result. Things are definitely warming up right now. Of course, one of the great things about doing business on the Net is that it's a lot cheaper for the merchant than doing business in the "real" world. One of the broad trends we're starting to see is that a lot of entrepreneurial companies will be coming up on the Net. They, more than anyone, will help drive the shift in consumer behavior by offering innovative goods and services and innovative ways. ... --- Dr. Dimitri Vulis Brighton Beach Boardwalk BBS, Forest Hills, N.Y.: +1-718-261-2013, 14.4Kbps