On 07/08/2021 01:06, Karl wrote:
Would make sharing harder, but
Peter Fairbrother
the point of moot is to give the kind of access to crypto protection that an expert can create to every user.
Hi Peter,
I received your message disordered a little, are you able to rephrase what easy-to-use cryptographic technology you're referring to here?
moot (or m-o-o-t) was (in 2000) (is, in the disassembled-bits-in-the-garage sense) a proposed bootable based-on-OpenBSD OS CD with end-to-end real-time and stored messaging and deniable storage apps under which the user would have to be really dumb to expose content, even under the UK's gimme-the-keys-or-go-to-jail laws. At the time optical storage was bigger than it is now, but it could be adapted to eg a USB key. I later added an undetectable "tweet"ing function. Didn't happen for various reasons, mostly because I am a lazy coder, but its potential existence did have some effect on the UK crypto laws. Peter Fairbrother the laws: 0 It's all about who is in control 1 Someone else is after the stuff you have 2 Stuff you don't have can't be taken from you 3 Everywhere can be attacked 4 Complex systems provide more places to attack 5 Attack methods are many, varied, ever-changing and eternal 6 Only those you trust can betray you 7 Holes for good guys are holes for bad guys too 8 A system which is hard to use will be abused, misused and unused