of possible relevance...
Mike Just. Designing and Evaluating Challenge-Question Systems. IEEE
SECURITY PRIVACY, 1540-7993/04, SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2004.
=JeffH
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On 07 January 2008 17:14, Leichter, Jerry wrote:
Reported on Computerworld recently: To improve security, a system
was modified to ask one of a set of fixed-form questions after the
password was entered. Users had to provide the answers up front to
enroll. One question: Mother's maiden
Florian Weimer [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
* Jerry Leichter:
I can just see the day when someone's fingerprint is rejected as
insufficiently complex.
It's been claimed that once you reach the retirement age, one person in ten
hasn't got any fingerprints which can be used for biometric purposes.
On Jan 12, 2008 9:32 AM, Alex Alten [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Generally any standard encrypted protocols will probably eventually have
to support some sort of CALEA capability. ...
That's a rather large and distinctly dangerous assumption. Here's the
IETF's official line on the question, the
On Fri, 11 Jan 2008 17:32:04 -0800
Alex Alten [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Generally any standard encrypted protocols will probably eventually
have to support some sort of CALEA capability. For example, using a
Verisign ICA certificate to do MITM of SSL, or possibly requiring
Ebay to provide
From: Alex Alten [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Writing in support of CALEA capability to assist prosecuting botnet
operators etc ...
Generally any standard encrypted protocols will probably eventually have
to support some sort of CALEA capability.
So you havn't heard that the UK has closed down the