Re: Mixmaster On A $20 Floppy?
On Jan 06, 1996 12:16:57, 'Laszlo Vecsey <master@internexus.net>' wrote:
Question 1: Can you fit linux, pgp, mixmaster, etc. on the 135 Mb disk and have enough useful space left over for a useful amount of data?
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But if I can squeeze everything I need to turn an arbitrary PC into a secure (modulo hardware) login session into 1.44 MB + boot image,
I don't think there's a problem putting all the stuff you want on a 135MB disk. Hell, the _hard disk_ on my Linux box is only 80MB...
Someone can get one of those tiny devices that slips on the end of a keyboard connector and captures all the scan codes - you're better off bringing the whole computer (laptop) along with your floppy.
First, I am not convinced that such devices exist in the real, practical world. They would require either storage hardware or radio transmitters, all in a package small enough to be undetectable to the naked eye. Second, I do not think it practicable that the cosmic-nasties (of one's chosen social bias) could, in the real, practical world, run black-bag jobs on tens of thousands of surburban garages as a prophylactic measure against teenagers "playfully" setting up Mixmaster sites. The software costs of quality crypto approach nil thanks to the terrific folks who brough us things like linux and pgp. It is, I think, easy for us to miss the giantic steps forward that these technologies represent. Imagine talking to an IBM-mainframe priest of not-too-many years ago about the idea of something like linux; imagine the same thing with an NSA bureaucrat about the development cost of a security concept/package like pgp! Move hardware costs downward and user-interface upward, and Mixmaster isn't a "black art" of cypherpunks. It is a parlor game for teenage slumber parties. That's the type of world I want to see. -- -- tallpaul -- Any political analysis that fits on a bumper sticker is wrong.
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tallpaul@pipeline.com