Users, competitors say McAfee unnecessarily raised concern about theoretical threat. Sam Costello, Boston Users and antivirus vendors are questioning the...
Can anyone out there give us more information on this or a guess as to how it works? 11:00 - 02 July 2002 Pioneering research into technology that will give...
I think most of which written in the article is baloney. Pgp provides all of this already and is as suitable for an individual as it would be for a large firm....
D.Hinton
box2031@...
Jul 3, 2002 5:43 am
176
Happy Birthday, America. Before the days of the CIA, the Internet, and even the telephone, how did the soldiers of the Revolutionary War transmit military...
By John Leyden Posted: 03/07/2002 at 12:10 GMT Phil Zimmermann is calling on Network Associates to open source portions of the PGP encryption program he sold...
This is tantalizing, isn't it? 6.2.6 What is Fortezza? The Fortezza Crypto Card, formerly called Tessera, is a PC card (formerly PCMCIA, Personal Computer...
Saturday July 06, 2002 - [ 11:16 AM GMT ] Topic - Security - - By Grant Gross - When the activists at Hacktivismo.com announced they were releasing a ...
Not if I can help it, we won't. Unfortunately, when one chooses to quote or site an article, one must remain absolutely true to the headline no matter how...
Greetings: On the front of your home page J. Edgar Hoover is quoted. I've read several published reports that the FBI boss was a homosexual through and...
Hi, Yes, J. Edgar's passtimes and living situations have been noted many times since his death. It does seem that his exploits were not a secret when he was...
It is true that Hoover was a transvestite. Although he claimed to hate homosexuals. He was seen once at a party in drag. Doubt that the mafia had photos of him...
D.Hinton
box2031@...
Jul 8, 2002 7:23 am
185
Greetings: Thanx for the response, but see what I mean - a split decision; rg says it's true, the FBI boss was gay; Hinton says that he was a...
As one who tracks down conspiracies, I find it strange that you should want concrete confirmation, or even expect it. If our government, or any government,...
Jul 10, 7:16 PM (ET) By TED BRIDIS WASHINGTON (AP) - The world's most popular software for scrambling sensitive e-mails suffers from a programming flaw that...
Wednesday, July 10, 2002 By QUENTIN ROUX, Staff Writer In this latter-day age of heightened security - not least in the realm of Internet e-mail communications...
Yahoo! has admitted using an automated filtering system that alters text in personal emails. The system targets a handful of words that could be used by...
*chuckles!* Maybe I'm missing something here... ...but if Yahoo! is censoring the words 'mocha' and 'medieval' from emails, how did they come through...
By SARA ROBINSON Three Indian computer scientists have solved a longstanding mathematics problem by devising a way for a computer to tell quickly and...
Was just sitting here thinking that I hadn't seen any postings from the group in my inbox for quite a while - then opened it up, and sure enough, right on cue,...
Well, you are correct. There have been no postings on the forum for about two weeks. That is largely my fault. My daughter is down in Florida and she is...
By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet Writer NEW YORK (August 12, 2002 12:10 a.m. EDT) - Snoopers on the Internet could decode sensitive e-mail messages simply by...
There are books about how the Japanese cypher worked. If memory serves me well their coding system was very similar to the german Enigma method. I doubt very...
[The two following pieces are from reviews of "Day of Deceit" by Robert Stinnett. They are not excerpts from the book itself. The first is from a site called...
Excellent research. Thanks for doing that. Well, this is a very interesting discussion that generates more questions than it answers. The first question is...
Regarding the Enigma and japanese Purple codes I am able to tell a little. However I haven't any books on hand to consult so I have to give a sketchy version...
Thing is, the US did have SIGINT intercepts before 12/7/41 but SIGINT analysis was, in a word, JANFU. Too much information but not enough trained analysts to ...
Even today, I'll bet being in intelligence analysis has to be very frustrating. I am in the business of data processing and, for many years now, the trend has...