I think his comment is can you cannot backup the key. Maybe the answer is that the key is in the processor and you must
1. get a new identity whenever you change processor chips and 2. that moving disks from machine to machine is not possible, only plaintext copy. Seems workable to me :^( On Tue, 2002-07-02 at 16:08, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > In other words, when the MB is fried because of some freak electrical > > surge, I'm screwed, because I can't put the HD into another machine > > and get the data off it? > > What's wrong with your backups? :-) > > This is like a problem Windows already has: if you move a disk onto > different hardware, more often than not you can't boot because the > wrong Hardware Adaptation Layer info is in the disk's boot sector. At > least you can recover the data by mounting it as a second disk. > > /ji > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > The Cryptography Mailing List > Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]