Enzo Michelangeli [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Anyway, IPSEC (plus Kerberos/PKINIT) is the security mechanism chosen by the
PacketCable initiative:
http://www.packetcable.com/
http://www.packetcable.com/specs/PKT-SP-SEC-I05-020116.pdf
Actually, this was chosen only to protect signalling, not
From: Derek Atkins [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Actually, this was chosen only to protect signalling, not the
actual VoIP data. If you read the spec carefully you will notice
that the RTP stream is NOT using IPsec for data protection.
Yup, right. Thanks also to Joseph Tardo, who pointed out that the
At 4:06 PM -0800 1/28/02, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
at least part of the fingerprint as a PIN ... isn't the guessing issue /or
false positives it is the forgetting issue (and the non-trivial number
of people that write their PIN on the card).
Or to state it another way. These cards attempt
in the most recent PC magazine (2/12/2002) on the stands ... there is an
article Why Passords Don't Work (pg. 68
In the article they repeat the recommendation that you never use/register
the same shared-secret in different domains ... for every environment you
are involved with ... you have to
Ben Laurie [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Eric Rescorla wrote:
I don't know exactly what Pegwit does, but most of these schemes
are still vulnerable to dictionary attacks by trying arbitrary
passphrases and seeing if they generate the correct public key.
It's of course slower since the test
To: Electronic Warfare [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Subject: IUFO NEWS: FWD [forteana] Echelon in Yorkshire
http://yorkshirepost.co.uk/scripts/editorial2.cgi?cid=4aid=434459
EU vice-president to claim US site spies on European business
VICE-PRESIDENT of the European Parliament, Gerhardt Schmid, is
We offer Dmitry Sklyarov's Motion to Dismiss Indictment
for Violation of Due Process filed yesterday:
http://cryptome.org/usa-v-ds-mtd.htm
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