Another dumb question... proving dates
I could not find this anywhere, so I will torture you all again... In the RSA FAQ, it states how one can set up a server to do time and date stamping of documents, but I know of no Internet service that will do this. Is there a way I can send a document to some agency/server and have it time and date stamped with their public key? Thanks in advance,
On Thu, 16 Jun 1994, Douglas R. Floyd wrote:
In the RSA FAQ, it states how one can set up a server to do time and date stamping of documents, but I know of no Internet service that will do this.
Is there a way I can send a document to some agency/server and have it time and date stamped with their public key?
This appeared on alt.security.pgp a while ago. The server works quite nicely... Getting the key for the timestamp server is left as an exercise for the reader. ;) ----- BEGIN INCLUDED FILE: /usr/users/grendel/timestam.ser -----
Douglas Floyd writes:
In the RSA FAQ, it states how one can set up a server to do time and date stamping of documents, but I know of no Internet service that will do this.
Is there a way I can send a document to some agency/server and have it time and date stamped with their public key?
Thanks in advance,
The canonical reference for digital timestamping is the work of Stu Haber and Scott Stornetta, of Bellcore. Papers presented at various Crypto conferences. Their work involves having the user compute a hash of the document he wishes to be stamped and sending the hash to them, where they merge this hash with other hashes (and all previous hashes, via a tree system) and then they *publish* the resultant hash in a very public and hard-to-alter forum, such as in an ad in the Sunday New York Times. In their parlance, such an ad is a "widely witnessed event," and attempts to alter all or even many copies of the newspaper would be very difficult. (In a sense, this WWE is similar to the "beacon" term Eric Hughes used recently in connection with timed-release crypto.) Haber and Stornetta plan some sort of commercial operation to do this, and, last I heard, Stornetta was moving to the Bay Area (where else?) to get it started. This service has not yet been tested in court, so far as I know. The MIT server is an experiment, and is probably useful for experimenting. But it is undoubtedly even less legally significant, of course. --Tim May -- .......................................................................... Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@netcom.com | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero 408-688-5409 | knowledge, reputations, information markets, W.A.S.T.E.: Aptos, CA | black markets, collapse of governments. Higher Power: 2^859433 | Public Key: PGP and MailSafe available. "National borders are just speed bumps on the information superhighway."
participants (3)
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dfloyd@runner.utsa.edu -
Michael Handler -
tcmay@netcom.com