Peter Gutmann wrote:
No they won't. All the ones I've seen are some variant on the build a big
wall around the Internet and only let the good guys in, which will never work
because the Internet doesn't contain any definable inside and outside, only
800 million Manchurian candidates waiting to
I view link encryption for SMTP -- i.e. SMTP over TLS -- as having two
functions.
1) It frustrates vacuum cleaner mail tapping efforts to some degree.
2) It can be used effectively for authenticating the posting of a
mail message from an MUA to the first hop MTA.
I don't see it as being
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/06/02/politics/02CHAL.html?th=pagewanted=printposition=
The New York Times
June 2, 2004
Chalabi Reportedly Told Iran That U.S. Had Code
By JAMES RISEN and DAVID JOHNSTON
ASHINGTON, June 1 - Ahmad Chalabi, the Iraqi leader and former ally of the
Bush administration,
An article on passwords and password safety, including this neat bit:
For additional security, she then pulls out a card that has 50
scratch-off codes. Jubran uses the codes, one by one, each time she
logs on or performs a transaction. Her bank, Nordea PLC, automatically
sends a new
At 05:15 AM 6/2/2004, Ben Laurie wrote:
SPF will buy me one thing forever: I won't get email telling me I sent
people spam and viruses.
Unfortunately, that won't work for me.
My email address is at pobox.com, the mail forwarding service
where the main proponent of SPF works,
but my SMTP service