On Wed, 1 Jan 2003, Eugen Leitl wrote:
On Tue, 31 Dec 2002, Thomas Shaddack wrote:
Is there a way to RELIABLY find the mail was opened?
I have a related question. I have a little server sitting in a wall
closet. Does anyone have an easy solution (preferably low tech) for
figuring out
On Fri, 3 Jan 2003, Thomas Shaddack wrote:
I have a related question. I have a little server sitting in a wall
closet. Does anyone have an easy solution (preferably low tech) for
figuring out that the closet door has been opened?
A switch that shutdowns the server, and a passphrase on
I have a related question. I have a little server sitting in a wall
closet. Does anyone have an easy solution (preferably low tech) for
figuring out that the closet door has been opened?
A switch that shutdowns the server, and a passphrase on the startup.
Remote logging of the power-ups, using
On Wed, 1 Jan 2003, Eugen Leitl wrote:
I have a related question. I have a little server sitting in a wall
closet. Does anyone have an easy solution (preferably low tech) for
figuring out that the closet door has been opened?
from a kids cartoon a couple weeks ago: put a bowl of marbles next
On Tue, 31 Dec 2002, Thomas Shaddack wrote:
Is there a way to RELIABLY find the mail was opened?
There are a variety of plastics and such that will change color and
break-down; the new time-limited DVD's that become unplayable after
some short period of days after opening the air tight
On Tue, 31 Dec 2002, Thomas Shaddack wrote:
Is there a way to RELIABLY find the mail was opened?
I have a related question. I have a little server sitting in a wall
closet. Does anyone have an easy solution (preferably low tech) for
figuring out that the closet door has been opened?
hi,
Thank you for the reply.
they didn't really explain why; I think it was
leftover
regulations from wartime censorship during World War
II
or the Korean Police Action.
I think so.
Also, in the US, the police can request a mail
cover
(which means recording who all your snail mail
At 03:07 AM 12/21/2002 -0800, Sarad AV wrote:
hi,
Don't encrypt, post it by snail mail.
I remember reading this in pgp's help document.
It addresses why we glue over our envelope and seal it.
It ofcourse is concealing (for the govt) and privacy (for the user).
The govt. never asks letters not to
Also, in the US, the police can request a mail cover
(which means recording who all your snail mail is from)
with much less legal formality than a search warrant,
and if they get a warrant to open all your incoming mail,
I don't think they're required to notify you.
Is there a way to
At 03:07 AM 12/21/02 -0800, Sarad AV wrote:
Don't encrypt,post it by snail mail.I remember reading
this in pgp's help document.
It addresses why we glue over our envelope and seal
it.It ofcourse is concealing(for the govt) and privacy
(for the user).The govt. never asks letters not to be
glued and
hi,
Nothing serious, just throwing a quick thought out...
It has been mentioned that you should always use
crypto. If you wait
until
you actually have something private to send, then an
adversary will
know
exactly which message is important.
Don't encrypt,post it by snail mail.I remember
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