1996-03-01 - No Subject

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From: owner-cypherpunks@toad.com
To: N/A
Message Hash: 776b9ac15a480849aa242a877a05b5c24b9db3cf54ee9a2e5f89c19baa545456
Message ID: <QQaffg16863.199603012302@relay3.UU.NET>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-01 23:16:39 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 2 Mar 1996 07:16:39 +0800

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From: owner-cypherpunks@toad.com
Date: Sat, 2 Mar 1996 07:16:39 +0800
Subject: No Subject
Message-ID: <QQaffg16863.199603012302@relay3.UU.NET>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


The database size is really only half the problem I think.  The bigger
problem is managing the database.  I can't quite see it being possible to
have one organization serve as a distribution point for all keys. With
millions of billions of certs, you're going to have having thousands or
millions of database updates on a daily basis.

It does seem though that if you can truly eliminate revocations then things
get a lot easier.  You never have to go back a check with the issuer about
anything. This will probably work for some applications, but there's
certainly others for which it won't.

LL

At 2:21 PM 2/29/96, Carl Ellison wrote:
>At 12:01 2/29/96, Laurence Lundblade wrote:
>>I think a problem occurs when you have 20 billion of
>>these certs (two for every person in the year 2010 or such).  A simple hash
>>into a table isn't going to cut it because you a single database (with
>>replication?) isn't going to be possible.
>
>BTW, at the rate that memory gets cheaper and smaller, it might be quite
>reasonable to have that single database fit alongside your daily appointments
>in your shirt-pocket daily organizer and e-mail terminal, in 2010.
>
>
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