On Wed, Jul 24, 2013 at 09:27:44PM +0200, Melvin Carvalho wrote: > Yes, but the key is not the person. The person has a key. When you > overload he key and the person to mean the same thing (known as an > 'indirect identifier') you have to be quite careful. The advantage of not > overloading identifiers that the same identifier in one system means the > same in another, which helps with inerop with other systems that might not > have made the same design decisions as you.
Well, since there is currently NO system that fulfils all our privacy requirements, there is nothing to interop to. I presume once there is a tool that does everything right, it will be at the center of a big bang - that means all variations will derive from it and thus be compatible to it. All that went before will continue to fulfil its niche jobs but slowly become irrelevant. Like Myspace. It doesn't make sense to interop with something that is going to lower your degree of privacy or security. It's like asking to downgrade the cipher. So the challenge of interopability does not factually exist IMHO. Lorea, for example, is doing a great job - but there is a danger of getting prismed. If Lorea users want to go the next step, they simply start using something like Retroshare in parallel to the Lorea websites. There is no use in having any interop and thus damaging the stronger security tool. To me the question is, will Retroshare spark the big bang? Or does gnunet with secushare have a chance? Or are we actually late and the technology leading the way is already out there.. tor hidden services? Or will something else along these lines appear out of nowhere? In all of my thinking I am just hoping humanity will not once again fall for some half-baked insecure solution.. like giving money to heml.is. So that's the only scenario I am not taking into consideration: the ability of humanity to settle for something that will not do the job. -- »»» psyc://psyced.org/~lynX »»» irc://psyced.org/welcome »»» xmpp:[email protected] »»» https://psyced.org/PSYC/
