Author Topic: M$ Bull****  (Read 766 times)

KernelPanic

  • VIP
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 1,878
  • Kudos: 222
Contains scenes of mild peril.

sporkme

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 501
  • Kudos: 149
    • http://sporkme.net/
M$ Bull****
« Reply #1 on: 29 August 2002, 01:58 »
quote:
Q: Won't the FBI, CIA, NSA, etc. want a back door to "Palladium"?

A: Microsoft would refuse to voluntarily place a back door in any of its products and would fiercely resist any government attempt to require back doors in products.


ha!

 
quote:
Q: Will "Palladium" really stop spam/prevent viruses for me?

A: Unfortunately, no.


ha!

 
quote:


Q: I've seen claims that "Palladium" will undermine the GPL. Is that true?

A: The claims that we've seen along these lines stem from the fact that the TCPA platform has some features that are accessible only to TCPA-certified software. So if you have source code to a piece of software that uses these features, and if you make changes to the source and recompile, you'd need to obtain a new license for the software from the TCPA: This concern is not an issue with "Palladium" because "Palladium" does not contain any restricted-access functions (except for functions restricted by the user); any nexus loaded into "Palladium" can access all "Palladium" security features for itself. Nexus B cannot access nexus A's secrets stored with "Palladium," but nexus B can always seal its own secrets without needing to hold a special license (from Microsoft or anyone else).


you know... the biggest question you walk away from this is WHAT IS THE FUCKING POINT OF PALLADIUM? AND THE TCPA?

they set up a puppet show to distract us from the underlying issue:  microsoft and intel and friends planned total domination over all computing
just that you do not take an interest in politics does not mean that politics will not take an interest in you.  -pericles 430 b.c.

rtgwbmsr

  • VIP
  • Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 1,257
  • Kudos: 0
    • http://www.akgames.net
M$ Bull****
« Reply #2 on: 4 September 2002, 13:08 »
quote:
Q: Will "Palladium" really stop spam/prevent viruses for me?

A: Unfortunately, no. Despite the hype in the media, "Palladium" will not stop spam or prevent viruses all by itself. But by using "Palladium" as a foundation, there are a number of trust and infrastructure models we can build that will help combat spam and viruses in new and effective ways.

Let's look at spam first. There's been plenty of research on techniques to automatically reject spam e-mail or restrict the ability of spammers to generate it in the first place. These techniques include the following:

    * Simply rejecting mail that isn't authenticated or digitally signed with a "validated" identity (which would block all anonymous e-mail, including desired anonymous e-mail)
    * Forcing spammers to perform some nontrivial computation for each message they wish to send
    * Maintaining per-user whitelists and blacklists of senders
    * Scoring every inbound e-mail message using heuristics that look for common characteristics of spam messages

"Palladium" systems could certainly be used to improve signing-required or computation-required regimes, compared with what's possible today on conventional hardware. (The latter is probably more interesting because "Palladium" provides facilities that would allow a sender to prove to a recipient that the sender performed a particular computation within the "Palladium" environment.) Clearly, the possibilities for antispam measures on "Palladium" PCs is a research area deserving of further study.

With respect to viruses, the contribution from "Palladium" is a little more straightforward. Since "Palladium" does not interfere with the operation of any program running in the regular Windows environment, everything, including the native OS and viruses, runs there as it does today. So we're still going to need antivirus monitoring and detection software in Windows as well. However, "Palladium" does provide antivirus software with a secure execution environment that cannot be corrupted by infected code, so an antivirus program built on top of a "Palladium" application could guarantee that it hasn't been corrupted. This grounding of the antivirus software allows it to bootstrap itself into a guaranteed execution state, something it can't do today.


WELL THEN WHAT THE FUCK IS THE POINT OF THE WHOLE THING? THIS IS THEIR ONE BAD EXCUSE FOR MAKING IT, AND THEY CAN'T EVEN SAY IT WILL ACCOMPLISH THAT!

Convert now or forever be undermined by useless security measures.

HPC GUY

  • Member
  • **
  • Posts: 275
  • Kudos: 101
M$ Bull****
« Reply #3 on: 4 September 2002, 21:35 »
how many bobs are on this thing?!
"if i destroyed you, i would only be perpetuating your legacy" - Me