From: baum@newton.apple.com (Allen J. Baum)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: b27029d0d18bea947c9408125d2d3639ce42fa85e2cdfa630025104ae99e881c
Message ID: <9402161943.AA22869@newton.apple.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-02-16 19:45:13 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 16 Feb 94 11:45:13 PST
From: baum@newton.apple.com (Allen J. Baum)
Date: Wed, 16 Feb 94 11:45:13 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: New Crypto product & other ramblings
Message-ID: <9402161943.AA22869@newton.apple.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
I think the only way to prevent Clipper is pre-emptively.
The advantages of Clipper are twofold:
Gov't volumes may drive the price down
The Algorithm is fast, and the silicon required to implement it is small.
Modular arithmetic is (belief here, not fact) bigger, slower, and more
expensive.
There is enough knowledge, experience, and money on this mailing list to
design an encryption chip to compete against Clipper.
It would be better if we could just buy them- maybe that will happen.
SGS-Thompson has just announced a smart-card chip with Modular Arithmetic
Processor (ST16CF54) developed by an Israeli company, Fortress U&T Ltd.
It's optimized for 256 and 512bit exponentiations, but can handle 1024 bit.
It sounds like this is just for public key signature verification- it can't
encrypt or decrypt at high speeds.
Anyone know more about this product? (ref. EEtimes 2/14/94 pg 20)
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* Allen J. Baum tel. (408)974-3385 *
* Apple Computer, 20525 Mariani Ave, MS 305-3B *
* Cupertino, CA 95014 baum@apple.com *
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1994-02-16 (Wed, 16 Feb 94 11:45:13 PST) - New Crypto product & other ramblings - baum@newton.apple.com (Allen J. Baum)