This approach sounds like fun :) Try that.

Thanks,

Matt Dunkin

Paul wrote:
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 .....

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