1997-06-19 - Re: HACKERS SMASH U.S. GOVERNMENT ENCRYPTION STANDARD

Header Data

From: Rabid Wombat <wombat@mcfeely.bsfs.org>
To: sameer <sameer@c2.net>
Message Hash: d4be8bcd1ba70a3db88a708b2369294b0992f19723801152e7505f329cb2a7d6
Message ID: <Pine.BSF.3.91.970618211910.28358K-100000@mcfeely.bsfs.org>
Reply To: <199706190155.SAA08785@gabber.c2.net>
UTC Datetime: 1997-06-19 02:55:05 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 19 Jun 1997 10:55:05 +0800

Raw message

From: Rabid Wombat <wombat@mcfeely.bsfs.org>
Date: Thu, 19 Jun 1997 10:55:05 +0800
To: sameer <sameer@c2.net>
Subject: Re: HACKERS SMASH U.S. GOVERNMENT ENCRYPTION STANDARD
In-Reply-To: <199706190155.SAA08785@gabber.c2.net>
Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.3.91.970618211910.28358K-100000@mcfeely.bsfs.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain





On Wed, 18 Jun 1997, sameer may have penned some advertising:

> 	  HACKERS SMASH U.S. GOVERNMENT ENCRYPTION STANDARD
> 
> Oakland, California (June 18, 1997)-The 56-bit DES encryption
> standard, long claimed "adequate" by the U.S. Government, was
> shattered yesterday using an ordinary Pentium personal computer

... and quite a few other assorted systems that didn't happen to 
search the "lucky keyspace." Was anyone on DESCHALL using a Trash-80? ;)

> INetZ vice president Jon Gay said "We hope that this will encourage
> people to demand the highest available encryption security, such as
> the 128-bit security provided by C2Net's Stronghold product, rather
> than the weak 56-bit ciphers used in many other platforms."

Of course.






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