As someone who's been around for a few years, replies like this cause me to sit up and ask "who let you on?"
People, believe it or not, before there was Dubya, before there were mad rag heads disgracing one of the world's most civilized religions, before Sir Tim Berners-Lee <Gack> 'invented' the Web, there was a network of people who shared information pretty freely and who, occasionally, would shell out of an app and gain root somewhere. All in all, it wasn't bad at all. Now we have "no unencrypted links" which is a nice way of saying "I bet I can keep you off my swings". Funny how someone with a citigroup.com email is making such bold security claims. Two words - Vladimir Levin. In case you haven't figured it out yet from the caustic replies you've received, around here the only credibility is clue. Abbreviations and boasting count for diddly. G On or about 2004.08.23 13:10:12 +0000, Clairmont, Jan M ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said: > Having worked on NATO security specs and other highly secured > networks. It wouldn't be that hard, just no unencrypted traffic > and no unencrypted interprocess communication. Spammers and bozos would have to work > a lot harder for their fun. > > You can laugh all you want happy boy, but that is what is coming > next. Get used to it. -- 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
