On Sun, 14 Dec 2003 14:01:02 PST, Paul Hoffman / IMC said:

> This has nearly nothing to do with the technical part of the PKI, and 
> everything to do with the humans.

Right.  And to quote what Keith Moore said at the start of this thread:

> I'd put this a different way.  Until PKIs are able to represent the 
> rich diversity of trust relationships that exist in the real world, 
> they are mere curiosities with marginal practical value. 

That's a true statement whether it's the PKI's fault or not.

The class of buildings known as 'a library' is, without books, a mere curiosity
as well.  It's not the library's fault that nobody is obtaining books to place
on its shelves.

Yes, we can probably make a PKI reflect a trust relationship, if we knew how
to do it.  Doesn't change the fact that until the PKI actually *does* it, it's
a curiosity.

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