On Wed, 1 Jan 2003, Eugen Leitl wrote:
> On Wed, 1 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > What's the latest news on Adelman's cryptological
> > soup? Once his DNA crypto was touted as a
> > substantial breakthrough for crypto, though since
> > overshadowed by quantum crypto smoke-blowing.
>
> DN
On Wed, 1 Jan 2003, Michael Cardenas wrote:
> People do break cyphers, by finding weaknesses in them. Are you saying
> that you think that current cyphers are unbreakable?
>
> Also, what about using biological systems to create strong cyphers,
> not to break them?
We do pretty good already don't
On Wed, 1 Jan 2003, Michael Cardenas wrote:
> People do break cyphers, by finding weaknesses in them. Are you saying
> that you think that current cyphers are unbreakable?
People break cyphers by
1) cryptoanalysis (mostly brain, a bit of muscle)
2) brute force (no brain at all, pure muscle)
So
On Tue, Dec 31, 2002 at 12:23:51PM -0800, Tim May wrote:
> On Tuesday, December 31, 2002, at 11:41 AM, Michael Cardenas wrote:
>
> >How do you all see the future use of biologically based systems
> >affecting cryptography in general?
> >
> >By biologically based systems I mean machine learning, ge
On Wed, 1 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> What's the latest news on Adelman's cryptological
> soup? Once his DNA crypto was touted as a
> substantial breakthrough for crypto, though since
> overshadowed by quantum crypto smoke-blowing.
DNA computes very slowly; it's bound by viscous drag and
What's the latest news on Adelman's cryptological
soup? Once his DNA crypto was touted as a
substantial breakthrough for crypto, though since
overshadowed by quantum crypto smoke-blowing.
http://archives.neohapsis.com/archives/crypto/1999-q4/0257.html
Isn't it a given that crypto is never free o
At 11:41 AM 12/31/2002 -0800, Michael Cardenas wrote:
I only ask this because I'm deciding whether to
study computational neuroscience or cryptography in grad school.
Are you planning to get a PhD and/or do research,
or just a terminal master's degree to do engineering?
If you're planning to do
On Tuesday, December 31, 2002, at 11:41 AM, Michael Cardenas wrote:
How do you all see the future use of biologically based systems
affecting cryptography in general?
By biologically based systems I mean machine learning, genetic
algorithms, chips that learn (like Carver Mead's work), neural
ne
How do you all see the future use of biologically based systems
affecting cryptography in general?
By biologically based systems I mean machine learning, genetic
algorithms, chips that learn (like Carver Mead's work), neural
networks, vecor support machines, associative memory, etc.
It seems to m