1996-04-22 - Re: RSA-130 Falls to NFS - Lenstra Posting to sci.crypt.research

Header Data

From: Matts Kallioniemi <matts@pi.se>
To: Bruce Marshall <cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: c42d1002b9e06c259f4c77ca375b72f9dd252a156401c4092b796e71df3821c0
Message ID: <2.2.32.19960422062019.00386aec@mail.pi.se>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-04-22 08:22:06 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 22 Apr 1996 16:22:06 +0800

Raw message

From: Matts Kallioniemi <matts@pi.se>
Date: Mon, 22 Apr 1996 16:22:06 +0800
To: Bruce Marshall <cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: RSA-130 Falls to NFS - Lenstra Posting to sci.crypt.research
Message-ID: <2.2.32.19960422062019.00386aec@mail.pi.se>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


At 09:08 1996-04-16 -0500, Bruce Marshall wrote:
>On Mon, 15 Apr 1996, Vladimir Z. Nuri wrote:
>> I have been wondering about malicious hackers getting into these
>> pools. would it be possible for them to contribute false data
>> that screws up the end results? or are such anomalies easily
>> discarded or disregarded by the final processes?
>
>    I guess I would have to ask you why you think hackers would be 
>interested in these projects in the first place?  Your typical hacker 
>would care very little about such a project and in fact may be interested 
>in seeing it succeed.  

The hacker might be a Netscape shareholder. A successful cracking of ssl
means that his shares lose value.

Matts






Thread