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Re: Anonymizer outsourcing customer data?

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On Mon, 2 Aug 2004, J.A. Terranson wrote: Yes, this bugs me. But the person they outsourced it *to* scares me even more! They claim they have over 1 million users. Is a class action suit in order? Their privacy policy clearly states We consider your email address to be confidential

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IRS may use First Data info for help in finding tax evaders

2004-08-04 Thread R. A. Hettinga
http://www.denverpost.com/cda/article/print/0,1674,36%257E33%257E2312378,00.html The Denver Post IRS may use First Data info for help in finding tax evaders By Andy Vuong Denver Post Staff Writer Wednesday, August 04, 2004 - A federal judge has granted the Internal Revenue Service the

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Re: IRS may use First Data info for help in finding tax evaders

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Data-Driven Attacks Using HTTP Tunneling

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http://www.securityfocus.com/infocus/1793 As more traffic across the Internet is coming under scrutiny and network administrators are making efforts to limit the traffic in and out of their networks, the one port that no one is willing to block en-masse is port 80. Users (and administrators)

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Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Hal Finney
MV writes: Yes. They can't break a 128 bit key. That's obvious. (if all the atoms in the universe were computers... goes the argument). Not necessarily, if nanotechnology works. 128 bits is big but not that big. Eric Drexler, in Nanosystems, section 12.9, predicts that a nanotech based

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Jack Lloyd
On Wed, Aug 04, 2004 at 11:04:15AM -0700, Hal Finney wrote: [...] The system will consume 10^25 * 60 nanowatts or about 6 * 10^17 watts. Now, that's a lot. It's four times what the earth receives from the sun. So we have to build a disk four times the area (not volume) of the earth, collect

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Wed, Aug 04, 2004 at 04:44:58PM -0400, Jack Lloyd wrote: If I did my unit conversions right, such a disk would be over 30,000 miles in Drexler's estimate for computers are coservative (purely mechanical rod logic). SWNT-based reversible logic (in spintronics? even utilizing nontrivial

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planet sized processors (Re: On what the NSA does with its tech)

2004-08-04 Thread Adam Back
The planet sized processor stuff reminds me of Charlie Stross' sci-fi short story Scratch Monkey which features nanotech, planet sized processors which colonize space and build more planet-sized processors. The application is upload, real-time memory backup, and afterlife in DreamTime

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Thomas Shaddack
On Wed, 4 Aug 2004, Hal Finney wrote: As you can see, breaking 128 bit keys is certainly not a task which is so impossible that it would fail even if every atom were a computer. If we really needed to do it, it's not outside the realm of possibility that it could be accomplished within 50

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Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 02:23 AM 8/5/04 +0200, Thomas Shaddack wrote: The impracticability of breaking symmetric ciphers is only a comparatively small part of the overall problem. Indeed. Following Schneier's axiom, go for the humans, it would not be too hard to involutarily addict someone to something which the

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Morlock Elloi
The impracticability of breaking symmetric ciphers is only a comparatively small part of the overall problem. I see that it can be done only by brute farce myth is live and well. Hint: all major cryptanalytic advances, where governments broke a cypher and general public found out few *decades*

Re: Al Qaeda crypto reportedly fails the test

2004-08-04 Thread Major Variola (ret)
At 10:18 PM 8/3/04 +0100, Ian Grigg wrote: http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/jihad13chap3.html [Moderator's Note: One wonders if the document on the Smoking Gun website is even remotely real. It is amazingly amateurish -- the sort of code practices that were obsolete before the Second World

RE: On how the NSA can be generations ahead

2004-08-04 Thread Sunder
Some interesting URL's on how this can be technologically achieved. These are just from various news sources, nothing indicating one way or another that the boys in Ft. Meade are using any of this stuff - though DARPA is mentioned in the first link. :)

Re: Anonymizer outsourcing customer data?

2004-08-04 Thread Anonymous via the Cypherpunks Tonga Remailer
On Mon, 2 Aug 2004, J.A. Terranson wrote: Yes, this bugs me. But the person they outsourced it *to* scares me even more! They claim they have over 1 million users. Is a class action suit in order? Their privacy policy clearly states We consider your email address to be confidential

IRS may use First Data info for help in finding tax evaders

2004-08-04 Thread R. A. Hettinga
http://www.denverpost.com/cda/article/print/0,1674,36%257E33%257E2312378,00.html The Denver Post IRS may use First Data info for help in finding tax evaders By Andy Vuong Denver Post Staff Writer Wednesday, August 04, 2004 - A federal judge has granted the Internal Revenue Service the

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Data-Driven Attacks Using HTTP Tunneling

2004-08-04 Thread Poindexter
http://www.securityfocus.com/infocus/1793 As more traffic across the Internet is coming under scrutiny and network administrators are making efforts to limit the traffic in and out of their networks, the one port that no one is willing to block en-masse is port 80. Users (and administrators)

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Jack Lloyd
On Wed, Aug 04, 2004 at 11:04:15AM -0700, Hal Finney wrote: [...] The system will consume 10^25 * 60 nanowatts or about 6 * 10^17 watts. Now, that's a lot. It's four times what the earth receives from the sun. So we have to build a disk four times the area (not volume) of the earth, collect

Re: On what the NSA does with its tech

2004-08-04 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Wed, Aug 04, 2004 at 04:44:58PM -0400, Jack Lloyd wrote: If I did my unit conversions right, such a disk would be over 30,000 miles in Drexler's estimate for computers are coservative (purely mechanical rod logic). SWNT-based reversible logic (in spintronics? even utilizing nontrivial