Make MONEY using your COMPUTER

2002-10-17 Thread steven2002aa6472j51
Hi - You get emails every day, offering to show you how to make money. Most of these emails are from people who are NOT making any money. And they expect you to listen to them? Enough. If you want to make money with your computer, then you should hook up with a group that is actually DOING it.

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Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Wed, 16 Oct 2002, Harmon Seaver wrote: Does this run on linux? http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuradio/gnuradio.html

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2002-10-17 Thread kigm60mem
"eBay - #1 Rated Work At Home Business Opportunity!" I'm going to provide my closely guarded secrets to making a killing on eBay... If you TRULY want to make money on eBayIf you are capable of having an OPEN MIND and can follow simple directions, then I want to teach you how to make a

QuizID

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Shostack
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2334491.stm and www.quizid.com A credit-card sized device, which could potentially be issued to thousands of citizens, is being heralded as a major breakthrough in the search for establishing secure identification on the internet. ... Users are

Intel Security processor + a question

2002-10-17 Thread Tyler Durden
Intel is moving Security onto its Network processor chips...a quote also follows. http://www.lightreading.com/document.asp?site=lightreadingdoc_id=22749 (Begin quote) For now, Intel is tackling very high- and low-end systems. The IXP2850 is derived from the IXP2800, which targets 10-Gbit/s

Re: Intel Security processor + a question

2002-10-17 Thread Mike Rosing
On Thu, 17 Oct 2002, Tyler Durden wrote: If crypto is performed by hardware, how sure can users/designers be that it is truly secure (since one can't examine the code)? Is there any way to determine whether standard forms of encryption have been monkeyed with in some way (ie, to make those

Re: Intel Security processor + a question

2002-10-17 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Thu, 17 Oct 2002, Tyler Durden wrote: If crypto is performed by hardware, how sure can users/designers be that it is truly secure (since one can't examine the code)? Deterministic algorithms with known internal state and fed with same test vectors generate exactly the same output as their

Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Major Variola (ret)
Does this run on linux? Harmon, it is a radio receiver, not software. That is, it shifts an e.g., 30Mhz carrier down to audio range. (In the 30Mhz and below range, the information bandwidth per channel is well below 10 Khz.) The radio shifts the carrier down to audio, your PC gets to

RE: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Trei, Peter
Branchaud, Marc writes: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Lovely idea of two-factor authentication: The user then enters their user name (something they know) and the 8-digit Quizid passcode

palladium presentation - anyone going?

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Back
Would someone at MIT / in Boston area like to go to this and send a report to the list? Might help clear up some of the currently unexplained aspects about Palladium, such as: - why they think it couldn't be used to protect software copyright (as the subject of Lucky's patent) - are there plans

Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Shostack
On Thu, Oct 17, 2002 at 02:39:55PM -0400, Rich Salz wrote: | Marc Branchaud wrote: | Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem | particularly impressive... | | http://www.quizid.com/ | | Looks like hardware S/Key, doesn't it? | | If I could fool the user into entering a

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Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Nicko van Someren
On Thursday, Oct 17, 2002, at 19:39 Europe/London, Rich Salz wrote: Marc Branchaud wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Looks like hardware S/Key, doesn't it? If I could fool the user into entering a quizcode,

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Morlock Elloi
Pretty much, yes. at least one real world OTP system assumes you will be using three CDRW disks; the three are xored (as you say) together, I have a working OTP system on $40 64 Mb USB flash disk on my keychain. The disk mounts on windoze and macs, and also contains all s/w required to

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Re: XORing bits to eliminate skew

2002-10-17 Thread georgemw
BTW, if the bits are assumed to be independent of each other and you're only concerned with eliminating skew, there's a well known simple scheme to eliminate it entirely: group the bits into pairs if the pair is 00 or 11 toss it if the pair is 01 map it to zero if the pair is 10 map it to 1 this

Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Ed Gerck
This solution, like others based on the same principle, may not scale past ~150,000 users because of clock drift problems. Cheers -- Ed Gerck Marc Branchaud wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Lovely idea

Re: QuizID

2002-10-17 Thread Graham Lally
On Thursday 17 Oct 2002 3:15 pm, Adam Shostack wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2334491.stm and www.quizid.com [snip] The card works in conjunction with the Quizid vault - a large collection of computers that can process 600 authentications per second. The system cost millions

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Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Sam Ritchie
Indeed-- I wasn't incredibly specific, and have been corrected by Bill Stewart on this. According to the November issue of Scientific American (to reference one source), Shor's Factoring Algorithm causes the resources needed to factor a given number to rise polynomially, as opposed to

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Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Rich Salz
Marc Branchaud wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Looks like hardware S/Key, doesn't it? If I could fool the user into entering a quizcode, then it seems like I could get the device and the admin database

Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread codex24
--- Marc Branchaud [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Surely I'm not the only one that gets the allusion of the photo on the home page of the pensive Bond-looking fellow with colored

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Bill Stewart
At 12:16 PM 10/17/2002 -0700, Morlock Elloi wrote: I have a working OTP system on $40 64 Mb USB flash disk on my keychain. Cute. Is it available? How do you prevent other applications from reading the file off your USB disk, either while your application is using it or some other time? That's

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Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Steve Schear
At 08:54 PM 10/16/2002 -0700, you wrote: Does this run on linux? Also, if regular cheapo PC sounboards can digitize 30 MHz (and Nyquist says this requires 60 MHz sampling rate) then some product managers need ... flogging. PC sound cards, which all sample below 100 kHz, are only adequate

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Bill Stewart
At 09:20 PM 10/16/2002 -0400, Sam Ritchie wrote: ACTUALLY, quantum computing does more than just halve the effective key length. With classical computing, the resources required to attack a given key grow exponentially with key length. (a 128-bit key has 2^128 possibilities, 129 has 2^129,

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Make MONEY using your COMPUTER

2002-10-17 Thread steven2002aa2868k11
Hi - You get emails every day, offering to show you how to make money. Most of these emails are from people who are NOT making any money. And they expect you to listen to them? Enough. If you want to make money with your computer, then you should hook up with a group that is actually DOING it.

Make MONEY using your COMPUTER

2002-10-17 Thread steven2002aa8268w43
Good-day - You get emails every day, offering to show you how to make money. Most of these emails are from people who are NOT making any money. And they expect you to listen to them? Enough. If you want to make money with your computer, then you should hook up with a group that is actually

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2002-10-17 Thread Jamie1niv4043w11
Good Morning - You get emails every day, offering to show you how to make money. Most of these emails are from people who are NOT making any money. And they expect you to listen to them? Enough. If you want to make money with your computer, then you should hook up with a group that is

XORing bits to eliminate skew

2002-10-17 Thread Sarad AV
hi, In the book on Applied Cryptography by Bruce Schenier,it goes like this... let p(0) be the probability of occurance of 0 and p(1) be the probability od occurance of one. let p(0)=0.5+e p(1)=0.5-e where e is the bias of the bit towards 0 or 1 ideally e=0 P(0)=P(1)=0.5(no bias

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Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Nicko van Someren
On Thursday, Oct 17, 2002, at 19:39 Europe/London, Rich Salz wrote: Marc Branchaud wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Looks like hardware S/Key, doesn't it? If I could fool the user into entering a quizcode,

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2002-10-17 Thread Gabriel Rocha
I thought this might be amusing for some of our list members as well. --Gabe - Forwarded message from Martin Masse [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Date: Wed, 16 Oct 2002 20:22:33 -0400 From: Martin Masse [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [mises] Soviet propaganda posters List

Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Ed Gerck
This solution, like others based on the same principle, may not scale past ~150,000 users because of clock drift problems. Cheers -- Ed Gerck Marc Branchaud wrote: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Lovely idea

nuketerror hearing in dc today

2002-10-17 Thread Declan McCullagh
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QuizID

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Shostack
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2334491.stm and www.quizid.com A credit-card sized device, which could potentially be issued to thousands of citizens, is being heralded as a major breakthrough in the search for establishing secure identification on the internet. ... Users are

Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Wed, 16 Oct 2002, Harmon Seaver wrote: Does this run on linux? http://www.gnu.org/software/gnuradio/gnuradio.html

Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Major Variola (ret)
Does this run on linux? Harmon, it is a radio receiver, not software. That is, it shifts an e.g., 30Mhz carrier down to audio range. (In the 30Mhz and below range, the information bandwidth per channel is well below 10 Khz.) The radio shifts the carrier down to audio, your PC gets to

RE: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Trei, Peter
Branchaud, Marc writes: Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Lovely idea of two-factor authentication: The user then enters their user name (something they know) and the 8-digit Quizid passcode

Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread David Howe
at Thursday, October 17, 2002 4:54 AM, Morlock Elloi Also, if regular cheapo PC sounboards can digitize 30 MHz (and Nyquist says this requires 60 MHz sampling rate) then some product managers need ... flogging. If I am reading this correctly, they don't need to - a fixed-frequency first mixer

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread David Howe
at Wednesday, October 16, 2002 6:13 PM, Bill Frantz [EMAIL PROTECTED] was seen to say: OTP is also good when: (1) You can solve the key distribution problem. Its certainly usable provided key distribution isn't an issue - if it is also worth the trouble and expense is another matter. (2) You

QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Marc Branchaud
Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem particularly impressive... http://www.quizid.com/ Lovely idea of two-factor authentication: The user then enters their user name (something they know) and the 8-digit Quizid passcode (something they have) into the login screen

Re: Intel Security processor + a question

2002-10-17 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Thu, 17 Oct 2002, Tyler Durden wrote: If crypto is performed by hardware, how sure can users/designers be that it is truly secure (since one can't examine the code)? Deterministic algorithms with known internal state and fed with same test vectors generate exactly the same output as their

Re: XORing bits to eliminate skew

2002-10-17 Thread David Howe
at Thursday, October 17, 2002 4:38 PM, Sarad AV [EMAIL PROTECTED] was seen to say: He wanted to know how I was able to do XOR on P(0) and P(1) when xor is defined only on binary digits. you don't. P(x) is a probability of digit x in the output. ideally, P(0)=P(1)=0.5 (obviously in binary, only

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread David Howe
at Wednesday, October 16, 2002 7:17 PM, David E. Weekly [EMAIL PROTECTED] was seen to say: As for PKI being secure for 20,000 years, it sure as hell won't be if those million-qubit prototypes turn out to be worth their salt. I wasn't aware they even had a dozen-qbit prototypes functional yet -

Re: QuizID

2002-10-17 Thread Graham Lally
On Thursday 17 Oct 2002 3:15 pm, Adam Shostack wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/2334491.stm and www.quizid.com [snip] The card works in conjunction with the Quizid vault - a large collection of computers that can process 600 authentications per second. The system cost millions

Re: QuizID?

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Shostack
On Thu, Oct 17, 2002 at 02:39:55PM -0400, Rich Salz wrote: | Marc Branchaud wrote: | Any thoughts on this device? At first glance, it doesn't seem | particularly impressive... | | http://www.quizid.com/ | | Looks like hardware S/Key, doesn't it? | | If I could fool the user into entering a

Re: commericial software defined radio (to 30 Mhz, RX only)

2002-10-17 Thread Steve Schear
At 08:54 PM 10/16/2002 -0700, you wrote: Does this run on linux? Also, if regular cheapo PC sounboards can digitize 30 MHz (and Nyquist says this requires 60 MHz sampling rate) then some product managers need ... flogging. PC sound cards, which all sample below 100 kHz, are only adequate

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Morlock Elloi
Pretty much, yes. at least one real world OTP system assumes you will be using three CDRW disks; the three are xored (as you say) together, I have a working OTP system on $40 64 Mb USB flash disk on my keychain. The disk mounts on windoze and macs, and also contains all s/w required to

XORing bits to eliminate skew

2002-10-17 Thread Sarad AV
hi, In the book on Applied Cryptography by Bruce Schenier,it goes like this... let p(0) be the probability of occurance of 0 and p(1) be the probability od occurance of one. let p(0)=0.5+e p(1)=0.5-e where e is the bias of the bit towards 0 or 1 ideally e=0 P(0)=P(1)=0.5(no bias

Re: One time pads

2002-10-17 Thread Bill Stewart
At 09:20 PM 10/16/2002 -0400, Sam Ritchie wrote: ACTUALLY, quantum computing does more than just halve the effective key length. With classical computing, the resources required to attack a given key grow exponentially with key length. (a 128-bit key has 2^128 possibilities, 129 has 2^129,

palladium presentation - anyone going?

2002-10-17 Thread Adam Back
Would someone at MIT / in Boston area like to go to this and send a report to the list? Might help clear up some of the currently unexplained aspects about Palladium, such as: - why they think it couldn't be used to protect software copyright (as the subject of Lucky's patent) - are there plans