In message [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Peter Gutmann) wrote:
If you're worried about Joe Burglar grabbing your laptop (for the value of the
laptop) and your business data being leaked as collateral damage, or someone
stumbling across your warez or pr0n, then it's probably adequate.
Trei, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
It's a move in the right direction, but I wish they had followed through and
done the right things:
* [AES | 3DES]/CBC
I get the feeling they use ECB for speed (heavy pipelining) rather than
cluelessness.
with a good distribution of IVs
Where would you
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Trei, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
No info on chaining modes, if any, nor of IV handling.
DES/ECB, originally with a 40-bit key, more recently with 56-bit and 3DES.
Keys generated by the manufacturer onto a USB dongle. No easy way to make
Trei, Peter
ABIT has come out with a new motherboard, the
IC7-MAX3 featuring something called 'Secure
IDE', which seems to involve HW crypto in the
onboard IDE controller:
From the marketing fluff at
http://www.abit.com.tw/abitweb/webjsp/english/news1.jsp?pDOCNO=en_0307251
On Wed, Jul 30, 2003 at 04:20:37PM -0400, Trei, Peter wrote:
ABIT has come out with a new motherboard, the
IC7-MAX3 featuring something called 'Secure
IDE', which seems to involve HW crypto in the
onboard IDE controller:
From the marketing fluff at
On Wed, Jul 30, 2003 at 04:20:37PM -0400, Trei, Peter wrote:
ABIT has come out with a new motherboard, the
IC7-MAX3 featuring something called 'Secure
IDE', which seems to involve HW crypto in the
onboard IDE controller:
From the marketing fluff at