On Wed, Apr 07, 1999 at 09:47:52PM -0400, Nelson Minar wrote:
Eventually someone will write a trojan which searches memory for
Interesting Things left there by other apps or pretends to be a
trusted app to the user.
Can you name an operating system in common use today that doesn't
suffer
Eventually someone will write a trojan which searches memory for
Interesting Things left there by other apps or pretends to be a
trusted app to the user.
Can you name an operating system in common use today that doesn't
suffer from this problem? I see you have a PGP key - are you running
it a
OTOH, a Palm isn't quite a 'secure' OS, either.. Sure, you can at
least see what you are signing, but there is no secure key storage
available. A trojan application could easily steal your credentials
off a PalmPilot. I don't know if this is the case for an iButton.
Too bad the source code for PalmOS isn't available An OpenSource
Secure PalmOS would be kind of cool. ;)
-derek
Dan Geer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
OTOH, a Palm isn't quite a 'secure' OS, either.. Sure, you can at
least see what you are signing, but there is no secure key
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
"Derek" == Derek Atkins [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Derek Too bad the source code for PalmOS isn't available An
Derek OpenSource Secure PalmOS would be kind of cool. ;)
Err, isn't it? I thought the whole src was included in the SDK.
- -JimC
-
In article v04020adeb33016fecdf7@[139.167.130.249],
Robert Hettinga [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do any of the ipsec folks out there have any idea whether the Palm III has
the oomph to do IPSEC?
The secret word is "proxy".
I'm thinking about that active badge stuff, where you beam yourself an
: IPSEC on a Palm III?
In article v04020adeb33016fecdf7@[139.167.130.249],
Robert Hettinga [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Do any of the ipsec folks out there have any idea whether the Palm III has
the oomph to do IPSEC?
The secret word is "proxy".
I'm thinking about that active badge stuff,