Sorry, but you are still stuck in the surgery. We are out and about servicing the community. Your dongle is still stuck on the server. The HIC has doubts about our having dongles on our ASP and they are impossible to deal with.
You and they are still stuck on the surgery server, both. It is like Liz's pencil and you can still only sign it in the surgery. There are many more means of authentication in the real world as there are in the virtual world. David de Bhal Virtual Practice -----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Guest Sent: Monday, January 23, 2006 5:00 PM To: OzdocIT Subject: [GPCG_TALK] Re: The Dreaming David de Bhál wrote: >But the tragedy is that if you do not have the dongle you are confined to >the surgery! > >Imagine not being able to do internet banking if you did not have a dongle, >or your mail etc. This, to me, is the great tragedy of the PKI system as we >have it. It only says that you are in a particular location. The location >cert came as a result of pressures to have the administrator or practice >manager send claims to HIC. > >You are still confined to a place - the old idea of a phone, for example, >being attached to a place rather than, now, a (hand)phone belongs to a >person. > > Oh no David not at all. You're stuck in a very 80s mind set. Having the dongles available anywhere, anytime is exactly the reason I want to keep all our docs' dongles on a USB keychain stuck in the server. Frankly, I don't trust them to not to lose them. With them always safely available in our computer room all they need to do is connect over a secure link and start working. Throw in Horst's blackdog and they can probably do it from an internet kiosk. David -- "UFW. Deb does linux." SIP [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ Gpcg_talk mailing list [email protected] http://ozdocit.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/gpcg_talk
