Daniel H. Renner wrote:
I recall an interview with a highly placed security executive back in the later '90s. In this interview he lamented being in the security business in the United States with a line similar to:
"If you create and announce a security product in the United States, you will very shortly have the NSA entering your premises and demanding 'Ok, where is our backdoor?'"
And remember, eEye was started after one of it's co-founders woke up to federal guns pointed at his head one fine morning, having been mistaken as someone who had penetrated somewhere he shouldn't have.
Not to bash my own country here but, this leads to a question: How can
any security product, sub-product or service created in the U.S. hold
credibility even with the good intentions that the creators may have
originally had?
It's an interesting question, and Immunity answers it in this email we sent to DailyDave a while back.
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/dailydave/2004-q3/0206.html
Dave Aitel Immunity, Inc. _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
