1996-04-12 - Re: No matter where you are, you can lie.

Header Data

From: rkmoore@iol.ie (Richard K. Moore)
To: trei@process.com
Message Hash: d2663d2c383c5e8ca47deec277e6892a37d07b0631cd8cdbc5baf453bc849a44
Message ID: <v0211012aad93e9600833@[194.125.43.36]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-04-12 17:01:21 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 13 Apr 1996 01:01:21 +0800

Raw message

From: rkmoore@iol.ie (Richard K. Moore)
Date: Sat, 13 Apr 1996 01:01:21 +0800
To: trei@process.com
Subject: Re: No matter where you are, you can lie.
Message-ID: <v0211012aad93e9600833@[194.125.43.36]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



4/10/96, Peter Trei wrote:
>Therefore any site that can see the same set of satellites as the site it is
>trying to simulate can do so, buffering less than 50 ms of waveforms and
>pretending to be on the end of a slow link.

        That's what I assumed in the first place.  Thanks, Peter, for doing
the math.  Do you have a solution as satellites cross the horizon, or for
very-distant spoofing?  ...co-conspirator nodes tightly-coupled via laser
or wire?

-rkm
(not on cypherpunks)







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