Perry on random bit rates:
I strongly disagree -- you really want to be able to do as high a bandwidth as possible.
Cryptography is all economics. The economics here is that John Draper is going to try to market this thing, not play with it in the lab. I don't know what experience you have with electronic design, so pardon me if I condescend. You don't sell features that most people don't need. You don't add parts when only a few people are going to use the feature. You make another version if there is sufficient demand for higher performance. One-time pads are expensive to make relative to other forms of security. Period. No argument. George Gleason and I had a long conversation via email over a period of weeks about this. He was convinced. If you don't believe me, ask him. The largest need for random bits right now is for key material. If you want to use one-time pads, fine. They are secure, no problem. The random number generator we are discussing here is not suitable for making one-time pads. If you want one, build it. It's not what most people need right now. In fact, if one-time pads are economical to use, then surely there is a market for one-time pad systems. Of course, if such a market does not exist, then one-time pads don't provide economical protection for the market as a whole. Which do you think? Re: continuous spewing of bits. Perry thinks this is a bad idea because it won't work with workstations well with respect to interrupts. In my previous post, I mentioned powering the device from DTR. DTR, for those of you not familiar with RS-232, is a device control line which is separately assertable. To turn the device off, toggle DTR. Presto! No more power, no more bits. Simple, when you know what DTR does. My original point remains, though: you don't need a power switch. Eric