1996-02-22 - Re: Internet Privacy Guaranteed ad (POTP Jr.)

Header Data

From: IPG Sales <ipgsales@cyberstation.net>
To: Mike McNally <m5@dev.tivoli.com>
Message Hash: 127a1df6f6580ab13b9a638ce6989e9eac1360ad14a73ac89027a2164f1e84ce
Message ID: <Pine.BSD/.3.91.960221151319.3814I-100000@citrine.cyberstation.net>
Reply To: <9602211404.AA16345@alpha>
UTC Datetime: 1996-02-22 01:08:50 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 22 Feb 1996 09:08:50 +0800

Raw message

From: IPG Sales <ipgsales@cyberstation.net>
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 1996 09:08:50 +0800
To: Mike McNally <m5@dev.tivoli.com>
Subject: Re: Internet Privacy Guaranteed ad (POTP Jr.)
In-Reply-To: <9602211404.AA16345@alpha>
Message-ID: <Pine.BSD/.3.91.960221151319.3814I-100000@citrine.cyberstation.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Mike, the keys are encrypted with an OTP that only the intended recipient 
can open - a special, subsystem used for that purpose only - employing 
the same techniquers, but entirely separate and apart from the primary 
user system -  any inteceptor would have to break trhe system, which we 
claim is impossible.


On Wed, 21 Feb 1996, Mike McNally wrote:

> 
> IPG Sales writes:
>  > We do not keep copies, we would not be in business 30 days if 
>  > we did.
> 
> How do you ensure that the keys are not intercepted, duplicated by a
> man-in-the-middle, and forwarded?
> 
> ______c_____________________________________________________________________
> Mike M Nally * Tiv^H^H^H IBM * Austin TX    * I want more, I want more,
>        m5@tivoli.com * m101@io.com          * I want more, I want more ...
>       <URL:http://www.io.com/~m101>         *_______________________________
> 





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