In article <444bp8$sd4@life.ai.mit.edu> Adam writes:
Naturally, this works with programs other than Quicken.
By leveraging on the popularity of Quicken and people's insecurities about their financial data cypherpunks might be able to spread PGP and SecureDrive technology more rapidly. If I were a marketing manager at a startup selling SecureDrive, for example, I'd suggest trying to exploit the above by selling my product as "QuickxxSecure" which would install after Quicken, make the secure drive, move quicken there, etc. It would then sell in a box with a graphical design (e.g. white stripe on red box, to blend nicely with Intuit's red on white) that Egghead would want to put it on the shelf right next to Quicken. Cypherpunks with a crypto-anarchic agenda might "package" shareware in a way that would exploit the same principles. Surely, a bigger market than people using EMACS RMAIL. --- Concurrent VLSI Arch. Group 545 Technology Sq., Rm. 610 MIT AI Lab Cambridge, MA 02139 (617)-253-0972
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