Marc de Piolenc wrote:

>Ultra originated in Poland, not Britain. The wartime decryption work was
>of course carried out in Britain, but without the prewar "seed" work of
>the Poles it would probably have been futile.

And not only Ultra is rightfully based on the Poles' original work,
but the computer itself. The latter credit is almost never given
to the three young Polish mathematicians who pointed the
way for using math to reverse engineer mechancial crypto
machines. No doubt that the far greater British human and 
material resources developed the Polish ideas behind Ultra 
and the bombe and grew them into a giant wartime cracking
machine, that machine was and would have been a far
different enterprise without the Polish initiative.

Wartime industries and their succeeding commercial and
governmental inheritors have a way of bestowing credit
on organizations, with a bit of slathering of praise on
exceptional individuals to gild the tin, but what endures
are institutional histories to buttress investments while
the individuals wither and dies, in person and in credit,
at least until they are so long dead they cannot remind
the history writers of what is truth and what bullshit.
Once time comes it's then all bullshit for making
movies.

A movie about public key crypto is not far away, and
might be made before all the developers die and are
canonized for institutional portraiture. What a hoot
Sun's PR release about Whit's elevation to a poster
boy for corporate security.

And, not to be overlooked in the rush to commercial,
institutional grade exploitation, fuck Bruce Schneier for 
saying PGP will endure for a niche market. What the
smell of money will do, slathered with personal envy
of the genuine creators outside the world's beltway.

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