1995-12-20 - Re: King Kong Does e$

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From: Rich Salz <rsalz@osf.org>
To: rah@shipwright.com
Message Hash: 11885fcb34eef3484346f24451b1d0a0bf27b6e34d9f04cd19ebe7445ad481fa
Message ID: <9512200125.AA06259@sulphur.osf.org>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-20 01:28:54 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 19 Dec 95 17:28:54 PST

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From: Rich Salz <rsalz@osf.org>
Date: Tue, 19 Dec 95 17:28:54 PST
To: rah@shipwright.com
Subject: Re:  King Kong Does e$
Message-ID: <9512200125.AA06259@sulphur.osf.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>Speaking of micropayments, Mark Manasse, Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir, and
>Silvio Micali did another talk on Friday which touched on several cool
>micropayment schemes, and a much more cost-effective way to do key
>revocation. Though I got there exactly 6 minutes late, I missed one
>presentation, and didn't take any notes for the rest. Hope someone else
>here did. I saw lots of DCSB/Cypherpunks there... Any takers?

A reference for Mark's paper on Millicent is
    <a href="http://www.w3.org/pub/Conferences/WWW4/Papers/246/">The Millicent
	Protocol for Inexpensive Electronic Commerce</a>
Of all the various payment protocols I've seen, this was one of the few
that studied the available protocol bandwidth before designing a protocol.
Folks with an engineering slant should appreciate the work here.

I would be VERY interested in URL's and summaries of Micali's talk.
(I really wanted to go but after spending most of the week at the WWW4
conference I had to commit serious time to being anchored to the office.)
	/r$





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