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Re^5: Should I recompile SSL CPAN modules now?by zentara (Archbishop) |
on Apr 10, 2014 at 17:54 UTC ( [id://1081843]=note: print w/replies, xml ) | Need Help?? |
< 2 cents> Oh well, we can't stop the government from snooping, can we? So I'm just glad those programmers in Finland and at Google announced what everyone has been suspecting for a long time .... that 128 bit encryption has been broken by the government. . Of course, people always have the right to setup their own stronger encryption systems. As a matter of fact, it is now recomended that all encryptions be done on a separate computer, which has never been connected to the internet. Then, transfer the already encrypted file to a networked computer for sending. A common sense precaution, it would seem to me, if privacy is an issue for you. I really don't know who wrote the SSL library with the bug, but with all the geniuses at Cat Tech and MIT, they couldn't get a decent team together for this important task? I wonder is BSD or FreeBSD affected by this, and I ask because supposedly they were developed by the University of California at Berkeley, under the supervision of qualified professors. Like I said, it really dosn't matter. They probably have drones now that can silently hover over your office and record your keystrokes thru the square wave pulses they generate. Not to go too far off topic on this, but from what has been going on in the news lately, regarding the government forcing coders into placing backdoors in their software, or be put out of business. I speak of course of that man who had some public key software system going, who closed his company rather than comply. So it seems that if you really do have an unbreakable system, the government shuts you down. Another example, is about 15 years ago, some college professor came up with realtime matrix-on-a-chip system, which worked so well to scramble audio, they shut him down. So.... there does seem to be historical precedense to the fact that the government allows you to encrypt only with tools they can break. It sort of looks obvious to me, and I find it pathetic that they charge the supposedly best coders with sheer incompetence. But that is just my opinion. Like I said, they probably don't care now, as drones can collect better intelligence. Just my 2 cents.
I'm not really a human, but I play one on earth. Old Perl Programmer Haiku ................... flash japh
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