Or in the case of OpenSSL, no one notices the backdoor as it is indistinguishable from an obscure programming error.
On Sun, Aug 17, 2014 at 5:01 AM, ianG <[email protected]> wrote: > On 17/08/2014 05:09 am, Jeffrey Goldberg wrote: > > On 2014-08-16, at 4:51 PM, David I. Emery <[email protected]> wrote: > > > I do think, however, that if there are such backdoors, it would have > > to be known to only a very small number of people. Too many of the people > > who work on Apple security would blow the whistle. So it would have to > > be introduced in such a way that most of the people who actually develop > > these tools are unaware of the backdoors. It’s certainly possible, but > > it does shift balance of plausibility. > > Right. As I understand it, the standard way that this is done is to > create a special features group in another closely-allied country. That > group secures permission from HQ to do some rework for their "special > national needs." > > That group then inserts in the backdoor, then ships the entire patch off > to HQ. Unless the center is reviewing for obfuscated tricks from a > trusted partner, the backdoor slides in, and nobody knows it is there. > > > > iang > > _______________________________________________ > cryptography mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.randombit.net/mailman/listinfo/cryptography >
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