Friend, 01 14 96 Edupage includes: MICROCASH Digital Equipment filed a patent last August for a payment system called Millicent, which enables Web-site operators to charge as little as a tenth of a cent for each customer "hit." The system relies on middle-men --credit card companies or digital banks -- to handle the transactions, but its novelty lies in its cost-effective design geared toward tracking minuscule amounts of cash. To keep disk storage at a minimum, security measures providing privacy and a trail of signed re- ceipts are not included in the system, but proponents point out that would-be cyberthieves would have to crack a lot of trans- actions -- 10,000 at 0.1 cent each -- to make just $10. "There are easier ways to make 10 bucks," says Millicent's inventor. (Business Week 15 Jan 96 p90) Cordially, Jim
My question becomes, "Is it harder to crack one encrypted transaction for $10,000, or 100,000 plaintext transactions for the same amount?" Answer: Don't know. That's why I am posting this message. -James Date: Sun, 14 Jan 1996 20:19:24 -0500 (EST) From: "James M. Cobb" <jcobb@ahcbsd1.ovnet.com> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-cypherpunks@toad.com Precedence: bulk Friend, 01 14 96 Edupage includes: MICROCASH Digital Equipment filed a patent last August for a payment system called Millicent, which enables Web-site operators to charge as little as a tenth of a cent for each customer "hit." The system relies on middle-men --credit card companies or digital banks -- to handle the transactions, but its novelty lies in its cost-effective design geared toward tracking minuscule amounts of cash. To keep disk storage at a minimum, security measures providing privacy and a trail of signed re- ceipts are not included in the system, but proponents point out that would-be cyberthieves would have to crack a lot of trans- actions -- 10,000 at 0.1 cent each -- to make just $10. "There are easier ways to make 10 bucks," says Millicent's inventor. (Business Week 15 Jan 96 p90) Cordially, Jim
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grimm@MIT.EDU -
James M. Cobb