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Q.E.D |= Montgolfiering + Inbongis + Fermented Pear Juice
Fermented Pear Juice == Supercilious Pap
There they go again, the imperium, or so they think, of
cryptographic shamans are trying to bamboozle list readers
into believing their warped cryptographic gimcrackery. They
do not need Zadoc to anoint themselves the Solomons of the
cryptographic world. They think that they are perfectly
capable of doing it to themselves. Have they ever
cracked a single meaningful cryptographic system? Have they ever
implemented a significant cryptographic system?
Of course, I am not speaking of Dr. Ron Rivest and other
rightfully honored members, but rather of that ragtag group
of cryptographic medicine men that think they have all the
answers to all the questions, that is, the small cypherlunks
subset of cypherpunks/coderpunks. Despite their trifling
anomalous performances, they have Napoleonically crowned
themselves as the aristocracy of cryptography. They are not
"au fait" august, aureate practitioners, rather "au fond",
they are narcistic harlequins, "fons et origino" of their own
and claque homologated mirages of autistic cryptographic
fantasies.
Remember, how that self appointed College of Cryptographic
Cardinals cannonaded me, and you, with a fusillade of self
serving avowals such as, "we do not do it for money, we do it
for the public good", "it is our duty to expose snake oil
salesmen", "I feel a snake oil attack coming on", "it is a
public service", "we owe it to the public, to protect them
against charlatans," and on and on "ad nauseam," with their
silly putty rodomontades. Now that their pusillanimity has
been exposed for all to see clearly, they have apparently
adopted the opportune, timorous motto of "sauve qui puet."
They have proved themselves to be an alliance of fainaiguers
that change their tunes when called to task. How many of them
want to do it for the public good, now ? How many want to
expose the snake oil salesman, now? How many of them want to
protect the public, now? Not one. Show me, us, one of them
that is not intellectually tremulous. They leaped into the
contest when they sensed blood, but now they realize that it
is their blood to be spilled, they shirk from their
intellectual responsibilities. All of the Sir Galihads and
Sir Lancelots of yesterday, have proved themselves to be
Sir Coward Chickens now, as everyone can plainly discern.
Most of them have chosen the exeunt course and are now hiding
their heads in the sand, hoping that no one will take note of
them.
Where are all those chivalrous cryptographic knights now? I
am sure that if asked, most would reply to the effect that
they are "otherwise engaged," which parses to "nonpossumus,"
and only the most naive could fail to recognize that. What
has become of their chivalry? Quite simply, the impersonate
knights have become loathly benighted.
The cypherlunks, riffraff, were quick to engage in jousting
over OTP logomachy because they thought that all they had to
do was beat their fingers on the keyboard and cite Shannon.
The neologizing of the term "Software OTP," drove them into
an uncontrolled frenzy of attacks. Alas, to do so, did not
tax their notional mental facilities.
On the other hand, when challenged to demonstrate their
cryptanalytical skills, the cypherlunks became panic stricken
and in mass hysteria took flight in frightened awe of the IPG
algorithm. Their knightly bravado and braggadocio were
hastily jettisoned in their wild flight away and superseded
by their otiose nihility.
That flock of cryptographic turkeys, a.k.a. cypherlunks, flew
off to their clangorous roosts. There, though the more
intelligent became quiescent as circumstances dictated, the
court jesters started wildly flapping their wings and
gobbling out their gobbledygook in order to becloud and
confuse people about the proffer of the heretic. Those
clowns were, and are, trying to create the illusion that
their incondite cryptographic skills are irrefutable because
they say it is so, and that makes it so.
I think that those cypherlunk fabulists should adopt the
apropos motto, "Talk very loudly and carry a tiny turkey
feather duster." Their quixotic sallies into cryptanalytics
are quintessential asininities. They are not subduing great
crypto dragons, or giants, or even midgets, not even
windmills; they, even more than Quixote, are merely
fantasizing their efficaciousness. Their only significant
cryptographic artifices are locked forever within the
confines of their convoluted individual and collective minds.
The cypherlunk's nympholeptic calliope of reciprocal
"inbongis" is indicative proof of their total capitulation in
the face of the impregnable IPG algorithm. Their clannish
drum beating, high fiving, and back slapping of each other is
reactionary declamatory histrionics. What a tragic waste.
If there was only some way to channel and divert that energy
atrophy into productive causes. For example, illimitable
outrage against the dissonant alliance of Freeh and Saddam
Hussein in trying to prevent their citizenry from having
unbreakable encryption technologies. Gore and Rashanjanti are
also advocating similar polices with respect to encryption
restrictions.
We must recognize that Gore, Reno, Freeh, Exon, and others
similarly situated believe they are doing what is right. The
fact though is, that by so doing they are becoming welcome allies
of Hussein, Qadaffi, Rashanjanti, Castro and other
human rights oppressors. That is a red flag if there was ever
one. It raises the irreconcilable question of how can
both groups in such an unseemly alliance be right.
Obviously they cannot. Accordingly, that existential
incongruence succinctly points out the dichotomous character of
the question of whether or not unbreakable encryption
technologies should be made openly available to everyone.
In reality, the question though is not even close. While
granted that there may be some criminals and terrorists who
will pervert the use of encrypted communications, the number
is extremely small because most such malefactors are far too
ignorant and in too much of a hurry. If we spent a fraction of
the saved money on openly bribing accomplices, far better
emanations would be forthcoming. Furthermore, even if
unbreakable encryption systems were allowed, law
enforcement would still have an immense arsenal, existing and
developing, of far more efficacious technological weapons
available to them.
Cryptanalytics has become the tiny tail that continues to wag the
immense dog of intelligence gathering. A few powerful oligarchs
are screaming "the sky is falling, the sky is falling," in order
to protect their "Hillistic" empires. Wake up, the sky is not
falling, and it is not going to fall anytime soon. Oh, those
all powerful empire builders think they are doing what is proper
and prudent for our country and its people, but they are
absolutely wrong.
The good far outweighs the bad on the balance scales. We
desperately need unbreakable encryption technologies to aid and
abet freedom fighters against tyranny around the world, and that
is the reason that Hussein, Castro, Rashanjanti, and others of
that persuasion are opposed to unbreakable encryption systems.
We also need it in order to make it possible for individuals to
protect their privacy in the onrushing information age. We also
need it to so that businesses can protect their proprietary and
other vital interests when essentially everything goes online.
Unbreakable encryption will also insure for all people that
governments do not wantonly intrude into their lives.
To paraphrase FDR, "the only thing that we have to fear about
unbreakable encryption systems, is the misplaced fear that it
will do more harm than good." If the Internet and the Information
Age are to achieve their potential to build us a better world,
then unbreakable encryption technologies must be one of the
irreplaceable cornerstones on which such a future can be
built.
We, who favor the advancement of the view that I am advocating,
will not win by adhering to reactionary defensive tactics. We
must go on the offensive. We need to bombard our Representatives
and Senators with e-mail questioning why Castro, Freeh, Gore,
Hussein, Qadaffi, Rashanjanti, Reno, Sung, Jr. and others that
disagree about almost everything else are allies with respect to
denying the public the use of unbreakable encryption technologies.
Also, ask them, how are we ever going to be able to
address the privacy issues in the information age without
such encryption systems. Additionally, tell them about how we
are handing over a multi-billion dollar market to foreign
competitors because of the ITAR export ban, billions of dollars
a year now and growing.
We can win this affray because we are obviously in the right
but we must become much more proactive by making everyone aware
of all of the good things that will accrue to our human
species by doing what we are advocating, That is the only real
way to effectively combat those who mistakenly are taking the
myopic view that we should not do it because it will
help the criminals and terrorists. Guns and explosives
help maleficence elements too, but we do not outlaw them because
they serve other very useful purposes, and the same thing is
obviously true with with respect to unbreakable encryption
technologies.
Back to the IPG system, we believe that you would like to
know that commencing this date, IPG is advertising as
follows:
"In addition to posting the algorithm(s) at our web site:
http://www.netprivacy.com
IPG has also posted the algorithm(s) to a number of other
sites, including Universities in the United States and
Canada, as well as the famed Cypherpunks and Coderpunks
lists. Since the IPG algorithm is impregnable, obviously no
individual, or collection of individuals, from said
Universities, the Cypherpunks, or the Coderpunks has been
able to crack the system. Of course, this inability to do the
impossible applies not only to the present but for all time,
for all eternity."
Of course what we are saying is obviously true, and we thought
you might want to know.
Thanks so very much,
Don Wood