1994-04-23 - How to explain…

Header Data

From: “Jim Sewell - KD4CKQ” <jims@Central.KeyWest.MPGN.COM>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 668e5ba5365e4b457f1fb30f6ce5b1e39a752c3997adc5fab29f40ee3b1f9ec1
Message ID: <9404231425.AA12751@Central.KeyWest.MPGN.COM>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-04-23 14:25:41 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 23 Apr 94 07:25:41 PDT

Raw message

From: "Jim Sewell - KD4CKQ" <jims@Central.KeyWest.MPGN.COM>
Date: Sat, 23 Apr 94 07:25:41 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: How to explain...
Message-ID: <9404231425.AA12751@Central.KeyWest.MPGN.COM>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Hi folks!

   I have something I'm sure someone on the list can help with.  I need
   to explain to someone who is "mostly-illiterate" about computers why
   it is so difficult to break an RSA or DES type code.  This person is
   a good user and a beginning programmer.  I understand intuitively,
   but not well enough to explain it.  His thinking is that if you have
   formula X to go from plain to crypt then just reverse X and you'll 
   have the decryption algorithm.  He figures that reversing a math
   formula could be difficult, but given a desire and a few weeks that
   nearly any formula can simply be reversed.

   If you can explain it well and simplistically I'd appreciate it.
   (As I said, I intuitively understand, but can't explain it well.)

	Thanks,   
	   Jim

-- 
   Tantalus Inc.        Bringing people together     Jim Sewell-KD4CKQ
2407 N. Roosevelt Blvd.   to have a little fun.  Internet: jims@mpgn.com
Key West, FL  33041                               	  CIS: 71061,1027
  (305) 293-8100    "We keep coding and coding and coding..."	 




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