Trixter aka Bret McDanel wrote: > > > On 12/22/06, *Paul* <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote: > > See my post saying I was joking. Anyway, a battery or supercap takes > care of that. It doesn't take long to erase something as short a a key > pair. Another approach is to trigger some thermite and let the heat do > the job. Or maybe the EMP from a nuclear explosion ..... > > > ust have to make sure that you cant read the data after erasure. > Magnetic media (hard drives for example) typically can be read via > automated means to get several generations of the data that was > there. The cost is suprisingly low to get data off a harddrive given > its level of automation currently. Temper that against hte cost of > making such a system ... > > As for the emp of a nuclear explosion, a small nuke placed within the > case to create the emp is likely to damage the equipment first, so the > emp would be useless ... Why not use a flux compression generator, > that way you arent shipping nuclear material that could be stolen and > used in a power plant somewhere, we cant have that can we?
Design a dynamic photonic memory device. The data is stored in dancing photons. Opening the case turns on a lamp which floods the dance floor with more photons. They bump into each other and lose the beat. A riot breaks out. Photonic cops arrive with a nuclear device ..... _______________________________________________ --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com -- asterisk-biz mailing list To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-biz
