From: Matt Blaze <mab@crypto.com>
To: Mike Ingle <cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 153b13d5211a8f3727e070e26af36a28a4d047215c1526673b6783574e735bf9
Message ID: <9405071432.AA21937@crypto.com>
Reply To: <1994May7.070245.13922@crypto.com>
UTC Datetime: 1994-05-07 14:36:03 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 7 May 94 07:36:03 PDT
From: Matt Blaze <mab@crypto.com>
Date: Sat, 7 May 94 07:36:03 PDT
To: Mike Ingle <cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: iPower card info from NatSemi
In-Reply-To: <1994May7.070245.13922@crypto.com>
Message-ID: <9405071432.AA21937@crypto.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
>iPower: The Card That Ate Your Privacy
>
>I got a "Technology Fact Sheet" on the National Semiconductor iPower
>(Tessera) card today. It's pretty grim. They have big plans for this
>little monster, which go way beyond just tapping the telephones of a
>few Mafiosi. It's too long to key in the whole thing - if you want one,
>call them at 1-800-272-9959. They are very helpful. Here are a few
>interesting excerpts:
My understanding is that NSC plans to release a Tessera version for
the federal market and a DES version for the rest of us. This is probably
reasonable - the federal (defense message system) Tessera market is pretty
big. I don't know if they actually got the federal contract; I seem
to recal hearing last week that the DoD contract for Tessera cards went to
someone else, but I don't remember who.
BTW, I've been playing with a prototype Tessera card for the last couple
of weeks; cute little thing. Comments to follow shortly...
-matt
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