Well, no. The crypto dream is that powerful people will stop being able to retrieve lot of informations on why they exerce power on, and that these people will be able to inform and communicate in a decentralized, horizontal and autonomous manner wathever this autority wants.
Oh, please. If I take you seriously then I'm only concerned about people with power who wish to exert power over me. Nonsense. I'm concerned about *it's nobody's business but mine*. I don't need to subscribe to power-relations theory in order to believe privacy is a good idea; I just need to believe some things are nobody's business but mine.
First, future archeology is pointless argument between our security and our freedom, it sounds a lot more better like kind of an excuse.
I don't know what you're trying to say here.
Second, a reccurent problem in cryptography is we know computers power and algorithms constantly evolves, and that what’s encrypted a way today is not guaranted to always be forever. What’s encrypted with DSA today will maybe be accessible within more time.
We also know, quite precisely, the thermodynamic limits of computation. Power evolves, but is easy to account for. Mathematical understanding is harder to predict.
Because they had no efficient way to keep information in front of the quantity of information producible. The press solved this problem.
No, the printing press didn't solve the problem. Gutenberg invented the printing press in the 15th century, but we've got *great* records going back to the 11th century. And we've also got great records going back to ancient Egypt. It's only a few centuries after the collapse of Rome that are lost to history. They weren't lost for technological reasons: they were lost for human ones.
They’re still accessible. And what’s saying you in the future all hard-disk will die at the same moment with no backup?
Many magnetic tapes from the Viking program (a 1976 effort to put a probe on Mars) were put in storage for later processing. Around 2010, NASA finally got around to processing these tapes... only to discover the machines to read it no longer existed, no one knew what data format it was written in, and not one single person associated with the Viking program was still at NASA. Many of them were dead. It took an enormous amount of resources to reverse-engineer the format, rebuild/rehabilitate old tape machines, and pull the data off. If the data had been less important than "this is stuff we pulled from *MARS*", the entire thing would've been written off as a sad case of knowledge being lost to the ages. In 1086, William the Conqueror ordered the whole of England be surveyed and every plot of land described. That text, the Domesday Book, is still around today. In 1986, to celebrate the 900th anniversary of the Domesday Book, the BBC put together a neat little computer package that was a modern updating of Domesday. Good luck finding it today, though. The UK National Museum of Computing in Milton Keynes is the only place I know of that still has working BBC-Domesday hardware. There have been a couple of attempts to take this project and salvage the data and programs, but so far it's been a big case of not enough money and not enough skilled volunteers. Some of it has been salvaged, but as a whole... no, and it's probably going to be lost to us. Every MLS/MLIS I know is having anxiety attacks over the subject of digital decay. This is a *huge* problem, and it's only getting worse.
I doubt a paper newspaper can subsist more time than a hard disk.
Walk into your local library sometime and ask to see their newspaper collection. You might be surprised. My local library has newspapers going back over a century.
Can you explain in what future generations’ curiosity is more important than this generation’s freedom?
This is just the fallacy of the zero-sum game, so I'm not even going to bother with it. I did not say, "we should not ensure the privacy of our records." I said, "we should consider what we are giving up when we demand eternal privacy." _______________________________________________ Gnupg-users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnupg.org/mailman/listinfo/gnupg-users
