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Re: Could E.M. Cordian be Matt Blaze in Disguise? (Nah!)




:-)
--- begin forwarded text


To: Vin McLellan <[email protected]>
cc: Robert Hettinga <[email protected]>, [email protected]
Subject: Re: Could E.M. Cordian be Matt Blaze in Disguise? (Nah!)
Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1998 05:33:22 -0500
From: Matt Blaze <[email protected]>

That you for CCing the enclosed message.

I must admit that I'm rather puzzled by it.  This is the first I've
head of an "E.M Cordian," or for that matter "M.F. Tones" or
"Mr. Rogue."  I am quite sure, however, that I am none of these
people.  I have also never seen, or claimed to have seen, any
description of the RSA algorithm, other than the the recently
declassified public key historical material from GCHQ, that predates
R, S and A's original paper on the subject.

I don't subscribe to the cypherpunks mailing list (or, for that
matter, DCSB), and I've only just now scanned over the web page
mentioned in your message, so I'm unclear as to what might be going
on.  Perhaps someone is confused about the $7.00 "better DES
challenge" that I offered last year (which was solved this year by the
EFF DES brute force hardware).

Whatever this is about, however, I assure you that any use of my name
in connection with a solicitation for funds for some sort of
"analytical DES cracking" effort, or any suggestion that I'm involved
in such a project, is absolutely false and perhaps fraudulent.

Feel free to forward this as you see fit.

Thanks

-Matt Blaze

>	Out on the Cypherpunks List, "Anonymous" claimed to reveal the real
>identity of E.M. Cordian, the organizer of the DES Analytical Crack. See:
>http://www.cyberspace.org/~enoch/crakfaq.html
>
>>Shouldn't we be using "Mr. Cordian's" real
>>name?  Matt Blaze ([email protected]), also
>>occasionally known as "M.F. Tones", and even less
>>often as "Mr. Rouge" (There should be an accent mark
>>there actually).
>
>	In response, Robert Hettinga <[email protected]> declared:
>
>>Just to clear the air a smidge.
>>
>>If Matt Blaze says he's looking for an algebraic inverse to DES, I tend to
>>believe him...
>
>	Jeeze, Rob! This is your attempt to help "clear the air?"
>
>	I do not for a moment believe that Eric Michael Cordian
><[email protected]> is a pseudonym for Matt Blaze <[email protected]>!
>
>	You should maybe query Matt directly <[email protected]> before
>you endorse E.M. Cordian as Matt Blaze in drag. You could confuse a whole
>lot of people who trust your insider knowledge of these steamy Net Affairs.
>
>	To anyone familiar with Blaze's essays, speeches, & on-line posts,
>a scan of  Mr. Codrian's FAQ and published comments should make it apparent
>that this suggestion is unlikely, if not perposterous.
>
>	The real Matt Blaze would also not be making these absurd and false
>claims that some mysterious "book" describing a cryptosystem identical or
>equivalent to the RSA public key cryptosystem was published "years" before
>Ron Rivest, Adi Shamir and Len Adelman  first published their RSA PKC
>algorithm in April, 1977.  (It's well documented in the Cypherpunk
>archives, Codrian assures us;-)
>
>	There was no such book. Cordian's statement is just not true. The
>real Matt Blaze -- the guy who wrote the pithy Afterward to Schneier's
>Applied Cryptography,II -- would know that this is not true.
>
>	(Actually, I'd bet that even Robert Hettinga knows that this is
>untrue.)
>
>	Mind you, if the real Matt Blaze announced that he was seeking $500
>from twenty people to fund a private research project which he felt had a
>meaningful chance of casting DES as a NP-hard combinatorial problem and
>attacking it with an appropriate combinatorial algorithm, I'd send a check
>off tomorrow.
>
>	The real Matt Blaze would not have 15 donors -- as Mr. Cordian
>reports -- but be stimied on how to get five more.
>
>	I wish Mr. Cordian well in his algebraic attack on DES -- but,
>unfortunately, he is not the real Matt Blaze. Not even a near-clone.
>
>	We could do with a few more professionals with Blaze's talent,
>energy, and integrity in general circulation.
>
>	Suerte,
>
>		_Vin
>
>-----
>"Cryptography is like literacy in the Dark Ages. Infinitely potent, for
>good and ill... yet basically an intellectual construct, an idea, which by
>its nature will resist efforts to restrict it to bureaucrats and others who
>deem only themselves worthy of such Privilege."
>_ A Thinking Man's Creed for Crypto  _vbm.
>
> *     Vin McLellan + The Privacy Guild + <[email protected]>    *
>      53 Nichols St., Chelsea, MA 02150 USA <617> 884-5548
>
>

--- end forwarded text


-----------------
Robert A. Hettinga <mailto: [email protected]>
Philodox Financial Technology Evangelism <http://www.philodox.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'