does anyone know of an open source, freeware, GPL, cryptanalysis s/w like
evercrack, except for windows?
i couldn't find window binaries for evercrack.
thanks.
g.
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On Wed, Sep 5, 2012 at 9:51 AM, StealthMonger
wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>
> Can there be a cryptographic "dead man switch"? A secret is to be
> revealed only if/when signed messages stop appearing. It is to be
> cryptographically strong and not rely on a trusted other party.
>
On 9/19/2012 2:17 AM, Zack Weinberg wrote:
I've seen claims that quantum key agreement lets both parties detect a
man in the middle with no prior communication and no trusted third
party. If that's true it would obviously be huge.
Whispering in someone's ear, or, equivalently, near field commu
On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 4:48 PM, James A. Donald wrote:
> On 9/19/2012 2:17 AM, Zack Weinberg wrote:
>>
>> I've seen claims that quantum key agreement lets both parties detect a
>> man in the middle with no prior communication and no trusted third
>> party. If that's true it would obviously be hu
Doh, don't know why I brought public-key crypto into this. There isn't
a need for it. Just pick, say, an AES key and give the trustee some of
the key's bits so they only have to brute force part of the key.
On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 4:48 PM, mhey...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Wed, Sep 5, 2012 at 9:51 AM
But you can't revoke his ability to keep bruteforcing the message.
- Sent from my tablet
Den 19 sep 2012 23:01 skrev "mhey...@gmail.com" :
> Doh, don't know why I brought public-key crypto into this. There isn't
> a need for it. Just pick, say, an AES key and give the trustee some of
> the key's
On Sep 19, 2012, at 4:48 PM, "mhey...@gmail.com" wrote:
> Every three months I, the Grantor, encrypt my secret in a new
> secret-encrypting-key and place that secret in my box. (I keep my box
> away from others - maybe put it in a safe).
>
> I also encrypt that secret-encrypting key in a public ke
On 2012-09-19 17:01:02 -0400 (-0400), mhey...@gmail.com wrote:
[...]
> > If I should die, I will stop re-encrypting the secret and the trustee
> > (that I never really trusted) can break the public key and get to the
> > secret.
[...]
And how does the trustee get access to the encrypted form of th
On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 2:08 PM, The Fungi wrote:
> ...
> And how does the trustee get access to the encrypted form of the
> secret?
presumably you get it to him "securely".[0]
>... If he has a copy of it encrypted with the old key, how do
> you ensure he throws it out when you reencrypt with t
On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 4:32 PM, coderman wrote:
> ...
> presumably you get it to him "securely".[0]
s/him/her/. or other; perhaps a trained sea mammal.
avoid those honeypot vulns fueled by testosterone...
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