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Thread: Encryption to be banned

  1. #1

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    Retired VBF Adm1nistrator plenderj's Avatar
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    Encryption to be banned

    Quote from www.rotten.com :

    CRACKDOWN ON CIVIL LIBERTIES COMING
    We received quite a bit of hate mail for stating the obvious, that a crackdown on civil liberties will come out of this disaster. Well, it is already happening. Senator Judd Gregg called on the Senate floor today for a total ban on encryption technology. When Bush said the terrorist attack was an attack on Freedom, that is exactly correct. Except it will be the U.S. Congress who tries to take it away from us. Don't let them.
    Microsoft MVP : Visual Developer - Visual Basic [2004-2005]

  2. #2
    Fanatic Member simonm's Avatar
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    Smile Irony

    It is ironic that the only way we can effectively defend against terrorism is to forsake the very freedoms which the terrorists want to take away.

    I can't see how banning encryption technology is going to work though. How are they going to stop it?
    Everything I say is either loose interpretation of dubious facts or idle speculation rooted in irrational sentiment.

  3. #3

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    Retired VBF Adm1nistrator plenderj's Avatar
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    Well if they ban it, then any data stream they cant peek at is encrypted. But they cant really.

    Because that would mean than SSL is no more.
    So therefore people could lose money to credit card fraud.

    Network Operating Systems will lose their C2 secure certificate, eg. Novell's Netware and Intranetware.


    If they do away with encryption.... they might aswell force everyone to release their source code too.
    Microsoft MVP : Visual Developer - Visual Basic [2004-2005]

  4. #4
    chenko
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    ban encryption... one word


    GAY

  5. #5
    Frenzied Member JungleMan's Avatar
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    bah, EVERYONE knows Rotten.com is the sickest joke on the internet, and this is just another one of their antics.
    I'm bringing geeky back...

  6. #6
    Frenzied Member JungleMan's Avatar
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    Originally posted by chenko
    this is me... one word


    GAY
    I'm bringing geeky back...

  7. #7
    chenko
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    you dont mean banned, it was on the front of IT Week, they are calling to step down encryption... thats is all

  8. #8

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    Retired VBF Adm1nistrator plenderj's Avatar
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    I do mean banned. Read the quote.
    Microsoft MVP : Visual Developer - Visual Basic [2004-2005]

  9. #9
    chenko
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    i didnt mean you, i meant THEM

  10. #10

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    *** have you done to your avatar !?
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  11. #11
    Frenzied Member HarryW's Avatar
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    You could see it coming really - it's all the internet's fault.

    Maybe we should ban difficult-to-read handwriting too.
    Harry.

    "From one thing, know ten thousand things."

  12. #12

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    Retired VBF Adm1nistrator plenderj's Avatar
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    Why stop there ?
    Communication is the cause of all this !
    Microsoft MVP : Visual Developer - Visual Basic [2004-2005]

  13. #13
    Frenzied Member Skitchen8's Avatar
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    we should ban life all together
    Government is another way to say better…than…you.
    It’s like ice but no pick, a murder charge that won’t stick,
    it’s like a whole other world where you can smell the food,
    but you can’t touch the silverware.
    Huh, what luck. Fascism you can vote for.
    Humph, isn’t that sweet?
    And we’re all gonna die some day, because that’s the American way
    -Stone Sour

  14. #14
    chenko
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    Eric, i think your sig is a little too long but its cool so that makes up for it

  15. #15
    Helger
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    the sig is childish at best

    ban encryption? great idea! why try politics and diplomacy when it's easier to infringe upon individual rights? who cares if it's a completely useless thing to do anyway....

    helger

  16. #16
    Frenzied Member Skitchen8's Avatar
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    my sig is awesome, i might edit that photo a lil and make it smaller, but for now its staying
    Government is another way to say better…than…you.
    It’s like ice but no pick, a murder charge that won’t stick,
    it’s like a whole other world where you can smell the food,
    but you can’t touch the silverware.
    Huh, what luck. Fascism you can vote for.
    Humph, isn’t that sweet?
    And we’re all gonna die some day, because that’s the American way
    -Stone Sour

  17. #17
    Helger
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    It's terrific indeed

  18. #18
    Banned aknisely's Avatar
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    The NSA has the ability to break any encryption, or so I'm told. Banning encryption sounds like someone wants to get his name in the paper as being proactive, or something; he's likely to get a bad reputation from anyone.

    That's also like saying if we ban guns, terrorists won't use them anymore.

  19. #19
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    As to the NSA being able to break any encryption; anyone can break any encryption. There is not an encryption on this planet that has not been compromised. The problem is, it may take you 30 days with your desktop to decrypt 64bit RSA. Imagine how long it will take you to do 128bit RSA.

    The NSA has a Cray on staff.
    Travis, Kung Foo Journeyman
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    YBMS, but Mozilla doesn't.

  20. #20
    Banned aknisely's Avatar
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    The NSA has multiple Cray on hand. And I hear the IRS also has powerful computers that the NSA uses when it isn't tax season.

  21. #21
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    That is very possible.

    The IRS has traditionally be the forerunner of non-military government computer use. They were the first department to own a computer if I remember correctly.
    Travis, Kung Foo Journeyman
    As always, RTFM.

    WWW Standards: HTML 4.01, CSS Level 2, ECMA 262 Bindings to DOM Level 1, JavaScript 1.3 Guide and Reference
    Perl: Learn Perl, Llama, Camel, Cookbook, Perl Monks, Perl Mongers, O'Reilly's Perl.com, ActiveState, CPAN, TPJ, and use Perl;
    YBMS, but Mozilla doesn't.

  22. #22
    Helger
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    hmmmm - obviously all those crays didn't help much to stop the terrorists from communicating...
    It's the sheer amount of mails that need to be checked that makes the task so hard encryption is a good protection against all spy organizations including NSA since it creates further processor workload. Another form of encryption is: using any other language than English. There's not enough 'experts' in US-organizations to deal with this, as far as I'm informed. Best is Chinese; Arab languages are pretty good protection too but now will increase the likelihood of a mail or document to be thoroughly checked. Nimen tongyi bu tongyi?

    regards,

    Helger

  23. #23
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    Originally posted by CiberTHuG
    Imagine how long it will take you to do 128bit RSA.
    If you think that is bitching, what about 256-bit Twofish...would take approximately 30 billion years with today's fastest computers to crack, or something silly like that...

    Plain text: Hello VBWorlder's!
    256-bit Twofish: DB7820D2803A43BC9C57F0CDBCB795F87A024871967ED22049552DFFE606FBEB

  24. #24
    Frenzied Member JungleMan's Avatar
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    Originally posted by chrisjk
    Plain text: Hello VBWorlder's!
    256-bit Twofish: DB7820D2803A43BC9C57F0CDBCB795F87A024871967ED22049552DFFE606FBEB
    I think you've just proved yourself wrong, whatever can be encrypted can be decrypted. Justlike the age old rule of physics, what goes up must come down.
    I'm bringing geeky back...

  25. #25
    Frenzied Member Skitchen8's Avatar
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    1)he said that it can be decrypted
    2)unless its a cat w/ toast strapped to its back
    Government is another way to say better…than…you.
    It’s like ice but no pick, a murder charge that won’t stick,
    it’s like a whole other world where you can smell the food,
    but you can’t touch the silverware.
    Huh, what luck. Fascism you can vote for.
    Humph, isn’t that sweet?
    And we’re all gonna die some day, because that’s the American way
    -Stone Sour

  26. #26
    Frenzied Member JungleMan's Avatar
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    it didn't take him 30 billion years to encrypt it though...so somewhere out there is a decryption program. (if there was no way to decrypt the encoding, then it would all be useless blobs of text..)
    I'm bringing geeky back...

  27. #27
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    There not going to ban every encryption algorithm out there.
    Most of the encryption algorithms can be cracked. Such as DES
    (Data Encryption Standard, 64 bit block cipher, 56 bit key) or BlowFish(64 bit block cipher,variable key length 32 to 488) designed by Bruce Schneier as a drop in replacement for DES.
    Maybe schemes like RSA(Rivest,Shamir,and Adleman) or DESede
    which are supposed to be currently uncrackable. But as for DES and BlowFish they will be currently in use for the forseeable future.

  28. #28
    Banned aknisely's Avatar
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    Originally posted by CiberTHuG
    That is very possible.

    The IRS has traditionally be the forerunner of non-military government computer use. They were the first department to own a computer if I remember correctly.
    Close. the first computer used by the US Gov't was for the census bureau.

  29. #29
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    Originally posted by jpbtennisman
    it didn't take him 30 billion years to encrypt it though...so somewhere out there is a decryption program. (if there was no way to decrypt the encoding, then it would all be useless blobs of text..)
    Actually it did, i've been here for that time doing it...

    It doesn't take 30 billion years to encrypt because YOU HAVE THE PASSWORD...decryption can only be performed in nanoseconds with the password. The idea of cracking is to find the password, THAT would take 30 billion years.

  30. #30
    Banned aknisely's Avatar
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    Rather off topic, but if you were encrypting something totall abstract, like credit card numbers, how would you know when you found the correct key?

    IE, if your key is 124358 and your credit card number is 285-582-48565, and you try to hack with the key 124359, it brings up 285-582-48566, how would you know you were wrong?

  31. #31

    Thread Starter
    Retired VBF Adm1nistrator plenderj's Avatar
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    Well because of the way most encryption works, if you dont get the right password you just get a load of crap.

    Eg. with RSA you know when you have the right pass because it satisfies certain numeric properties with the cypher etc.
    Microsoft MVP : Visual Developer - Visual Basic [2004-2005]

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