Seeds which depend on machine states

Patrick Horgan patrick at Verity.COM
Fri Sep 22 08:23:07 PDT 1995


> 
> Miguel Diaz writes:
> > It is my suspicion that seeds which depend on machine 
> > states(ie state of your computer at a specific instance of 
> > time) would always be subject to scrutiny and de-cryption.
> > As long as the software used to encrypt is not self-modifying, 
> > the machine state can (through careful manipulation involving 
> > temperature, clocks, processes etc)always be replicated and 
> > fixed to an acceptable degree.
> 
> Try getting a human to type with the same timing, to microsecond
> precision, the same way twice.
> 
That assumes that you have someway of measuring the timing to microsecond
precision.  On most machines I've been on, if you get something time-
stamped, even if there is a microsecond portion of the timestamp it's
meaningless because it wasn't based on a timer with the required precision.
If a timer can only resolve milliseconds, the microseconds don't have any
meaning.

Patrick
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