RE: NSA Threatens To "OUT" Republicans Over Hubbell Investigation
Yes, I assumed as much. But it is electronic circuits that are EMP/nuclear hardened, not the "encryption technology." We have a populace that doesn't understand what cryptography is, such reckless statements don't help, especially putting nuclear and encryption in the same sentence. For as much as I hate Clinton, encryption is mathematics, period. National security fearmongering to spite Clinton does not help the encryption awareness/freedom campaign. Matt
-----Original Message----- From: Harvey Rook (Exchange) [mailto:hrook@exchange.microsoft.com]
An advanced, nuclear hardened encryption device, is an encryption device that will still work after a nuke has gone off in the vicinity. Nuclear bombs emit EMP's which destroy sensitive electronics.
Harv.
-----Original Message----- Uh, what in the hell is "advanced, nuclear hardened, encryption technology"
On Mon, 9 Nov 1998, Matthew James Gering wrote:
Yes, I assumed as much. But it is electronic circuits that are EMP/nuclear hardened, not the "encryption technology." We have a populace that doesn't understand what cryptography is, such reckless statements don't help, especially putting nuclear and encryption in the same sentence.
But what a fab marketing campaign, the nuclear-hardened bozz-bangle mind-fuzzer, for those people who don't understand. But it keeps them listening, in addition to being extremely informative for them which do. How'd'ya make a nuclear-hardened circuit, Tim? Mark
At 08:57 PM 11/9/98 -0800, Matthew James Gering wrote:
Yes, I assumed as much. But it is electronic circuits that are EMP/nuclear hardened, not the "encryption technology." ...... , encryption is mathematics, period. National security fearmongering to spite Clinton does not help the encryption awareness/freedom campaign.
Encryption is NOT just "mathematics, period". It's mathematics, plus operations, password management, key distribution, keeping track of who's allowed to see what, plus hardware and operating systems to run the mathematics on, and unless you're running it in wetware, it's also computer security to protect the hardware and operating systems. And it's black operations to go out and steal the other guys' hardware and keys and yellow-sticky-notes and crack their OSs. In some contexts, especially real people's contexts, your PC may be a fine place to run the encryption, but in an NSA / DoD context, especially when there's a war on, the safest way to manage many of these things is to use dedicated tamper-resistant hardware with the users on one side and the communication network on the other, where you don't have to worry about the user virusing their PC or using their girlfriend's name as the new password every other week, because it's in a black box that just works (or just works if you have the right key token and the right PIN.) EMP hardening has the pleasant side effect that it generally provides TEMPEST quieting/shielding as well. Also, in military environments, using special hardware instead of crypto software running on vanilla PCs is that rampant theft _is_ a problem, but that supply sergeant who'd be happy to requisition that PC for use in more remunerative environments isn't going to steal and sell the crypto bump-in-the-wire box; it's bad enough to lose any classified or sensitive information that was on the PC without also losing the encryption/signature keys. Thanks! Bill Bill Stewart, bill.stewart@pobox.com PGP Fingerprint D454 E202 CBC8 40BF 3C85 B884 0ABE 4639
participants (3)
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Bill Stewart
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Mark Hedges
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Matthew James Gering