I've no public opinion on Certicom's patent practices. And the behaviour of the signals intelligence agencies has been IMO deplorable. So I sympathise with some of what you are saying. However, building your case on bogus claims that are not facts as you are pearly doing is a really bad idea. In particular...
On 15/06/14 14:13, ianG wrote: > What is also curious is that Dan > Brown is highly active in the IETF working groups for crypto, That is not correct as far as I can see. In my local archives, I see one email from him to the TLS list in 2011 and none in 2012. For the security area list (saag), I see a smattering of mails in 2011 and 2012 and none in 2013. For the IRTF's CFRG, I see a few in 2010, none in 2011 and some in 2012 and 2013. I do see increased participation over the last year on the the DUAL-EC topic. None of the above is anywhere near "highly active" which is therefore simply false. And I don't believe you yourself are sufficiently active to judge whether or not someone else is "highly active" in the IETF to be honest. Nor do you seem to have gone through the mail list archives to check. You are both of course welcome to become highly active if you do want to participate, same as anyone else. > adding > weight to the claim that the IETF security area is corrupted. And that supposed conclusion, based only on an incorrect claim, is utter nonsense. I would have expected better logic and closer adherence to the facts. Yes, the IETF security area needs to do better, and quite a few folks are working on that. Yes, its almost certain the someone was paid by BULLRUN to muck up IETF work. Nonetheless unfounded misstatements such as the above don't help and are wrong. And the correct reaction is to do better work and not to fall for the same guily-by-association fallacy that the leads the spooks to think that pervasive monitoring is a good plan. S. _______________________________________________ cryptography mailing list [email protected] http://lists.randombit.net/mailman/listinfo/cryptography
