On 2013-05-09 17:51, Googlemail: Dave Walker wrote:
Now, there are good reasons not to use this in practice in a Trusted Extensions environment - all involving the fact that Google Voice is an untrusted, not protectively marked service - but for other contexts, I can imagine it being useful, with improved recognition (probably on newer and higher-end devices). I haven't upgraded to the new SRS 5.4 yet, but wouldn't expect it to have much bearing on how well this works.
I'd suspect that really trusted implementations need a trust-certified stack - including user and server hardware, OS, application software, networking components (or certified VPN between trusted hosts), etc. While I guess SRSS running on Sun Rays and Oracle HW/OS Servers might provide that level of paper protection against regulation enforcements if that's required (usually is the reason for Trusted stuff), you need to be careful about using any other pieces in the puzzle (check that they comply) - the solution might lose its trusted-stack status due to weak links in the chain. Likely, a random consumer phone/tablet won't be acceptable; some "military/law-enforcement editions" might be. Take care, //Jim Klimov _______________________________________________ SunRay-Users mailing list [email protected] http://www.filibeto.org/mailman/listinfo/sunray-users
