From: Jonathan Cooper <entropy@IntNet.net>
To: Black Unicorn <unicorn@access.digex.net>
Message Hash: 43851b1f6e8e047943708896a9a9cb595b9f198ca7278157b5c1095689ec6be1
Message ID: <Pine.SV4.3.91.950118141055.7755A-100000@xcalibur>
Reply To: <Pine.SUN.3.91.950117154344.11572B-100000@access4.digex.net>
UTC Datetime: 1995-01-18 19:26:02 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 18 Jan 95 11:26:02 PST
From: Jonathan Cooper <entropy@IntNet.net>
Date: Wed, 18 Jan 95 11:26:02 PST
To: Black Unicorn <unicorn@access.digex.net>
Subject: [ DH Code ]
In-Reply-To: <Pine.SUN.3.91.950117154344.11572B-100000@access4.digex.net>
Message-ID: <Pine.SV4.3.91.950118141055.7755A-100000@xcalibur>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
> Are there implemented DH codes running around anywhere?
DH code is easy - using PGP and perl you can build a simple one in a
matter of hours.
But: where's the market? The only people I've ever known to need a
'data haven' were a group of people who'd obtained the source code to a
major commercial operating system and used a freenet account and ftp to
transfer it. (40 mB+, I gather).
I can see building one - it doesn't seem at all difficult. But I
don't see how I could be reimbursed for the disk space and bandwidth.
-jon
( --------[ Jonathan D. Cooper ]--------[ entropy@intnet.net ]-------- )
( PGP 2.6.2 keyprint: 31 50 8F 82 B9 79 ED C4 5B 12 A0 35 E0 9B C0 01 )
( home page: http://taz.hyperreal.com/~entropy/ ]---[ Key-ID: 4082CCB5 )
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