On 10.09.13 10:48, Jason White wrote:
> Russell Coker <[email protected]> wrote:
>  
> > Next if the NSA wanted to put some hostile code in the kernel then surely 
> > they 
> > would use a random gmail account to submit patches and not do anything bad 
> > under their own name.
> > 
> 
> Agreed. Further, if any government wanted to subvert cryptography they could
> do it by trying to sneak code into OpenSSL, NSS or GNUTLS - and the
> vulnerability would have to be subtle enough to escape notice by the
> maintainers.

Given the media reports of the NSA using several supercomputers to crack
SSL traffic (with some degree of success apparently) it may be that they
don't have anything but brute force and possibly a few cryptology
tricks, so far. (Depending on how much credence is to be given to
anything heard in the media.)

Erik

-- 
I sense much distrust in you. Distrust leads to cynicism, cynicism leads to
bitterness, bitterness leads to the Awareness of True Reality which is referred
to by those-who-lack-enlightenment as "paranoia" I approve.  - fortune
_______________________________________________
luv-main mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.luv.asn.au/listinfo/luv-main

Reply via email to