I flamed Mr. rude off list, but there is one point that I would like to respond to on list...
The original poster asked whether a development was due to an unofficial government policy. Aside from all the nastier parts of the PATRIOT act (and Magic Lantern and the other stuff that's already been mentioned), and given the complexity of modern software, backdoors from vendors and strategic agreements between government and private industry, whether for their own use or as part of a 'comic-book neo-con conspiracy', are real. 'nuf said. G On or about 2004.02.12 12:18:36 +0000, cptnug ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said: > My own opinion is that most software is so bad security-wise there's just > no need for explicit backdoors. The US government TLAs can trust software > developers (and if not them, the users) to make enough mistakes that they > don't need to force or ask them to put in backdoors on purpose. -- Gregory A. Gilliss, CISSP E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Computer Security WWW: http://www.gilliss.com/greg/ PGP Key fingerprint 2F 0B 70 AE 5F 8E 71 7A 2D 86 52 BA B7 83 D9 B4 14 0E 8C A3 _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
