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How To Enable Mom w/ Encrypted E-Mail?

mad.frog asks: "Given the recent revelations of the Bush administration spying on US citizens without warrants -- and their promise to continue doing so -- it's clearly high time for me to switch to encrypted email, after years of being too lazy to bother. The real question is how I can get all (or at least some) of my email contacts to switch as well; clearly, encryption does me no good if the recipient can't decode it. What are my options, and more importantly, what are the options that will be comprehensible and usable by my parents, and in-laws? (Keep in mind that good solutions must include robust Windows and Mac support...)"

8 of 269 comments (clear)

  1. Stymie the goons in charge by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just sprinkle big, intellectual-ish words like "multilateral," "constitutionally legitimate," and "evolutionary" into your emails. They'll never figure out what you're talking about.

  2. One word by CGP314 · · Score: 4, Funny

    How To Enable Mom w/ Encrypted E-Mail?

    Don't.


    -Colin

  3. Really Simple... by kilocomp · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just go up stairs and tell her what you would have written in the email.

  4. Two things come to mind... by HavokDevNull · · Score: 2, Funny



    1. What are you trying to hide?

    2. Tell me where Osama Bin Laden is

    .

    --
    Sig
  5. Go High Tech by DynaSoar · · Score: 3, Funny

    Develop an encryption table that produces shapes similar to the screen characters created by the ASCII characters you want to transmit*.

    Obtain a molecular transfer device that puts a dark material on semi-permiable surfaces, such as the paper you use in your printer.

    Encode your message by placing dark marks on the paper. Seal it in an opaque layer of similar material and encode the physical address of the recipient on the outside.

    You can then purchase a government document (for less than the cost of a cup of cofee, or of supporting a third world waif for a day) from a government agency tasked with transfering such encrypted information, afix it to the outside of the "envelope", and trick the 3\/1L goobermint into delivering your secret message for you.

    If you REALLY want to be certain of your security, you can seal the "envelope" with the semi-transparent film developed by the security firm "3-M". The adhesive on one side of the film prevents unauthorized opening.

    Of course this is all for naught due to the CIA's "remote viewers" unless you remain in motion. So when you're encrypting/molecular transfering, it's important to run around in circles so they can't focus on you. A tin foil hat won't actually help, but wearing one while running in circles will prevent those around you from asking pesky questions. Remember: shiny side out, otherwise a feedback loop can occur and cause dain bramage.

    * As an alternative, entirely graphical representations can be developed. Pictures created with polychromatic, wax-based molecular transfer devices are especially attactive to moms, who tend to archive them on the outside of their refrigerator.

    --
    "I may be synthetic, but I'm not stupid." -- Bishop 341-B
  6. Who needs encryption! use family sarcasm by chivo243 · · Score: 2, Funny

    If the feds or any other government agency could really interpret what "IS" really meant when my bro says "Christmas is at Aunt Bertha's next year, the kids can't wait, it will be fun for all." --- Translation: "Shit! crazy Aunt Bertha and her big, smelly dogs are hosting christmas this year, we all have to go kids included, that means cousin Steve's terror tribe will be there too, that's gonna suck!"
    So you can see that family sarcasm can easily eliminate the need for encryption.

    --
    Sig Hansen?
  7. Simple solution by nizo · · Score: 2, Funny
    ...encryption does me no good if the recipient can't decode it.

    Simply included an encrypted and plaintext version in every email; problem solved!

  8. no real point by theonetruekeebler · · Score: 2, Funny
    Gene Spafford made a good analogy:
    Using encryption on the Internet is equivalent of arranging an armored car to deliver credit card information from someone living in a cardboard box to someone living on a park bench.
    In other words, it makes no difference how well she encrypted her last e-mail to you when I've already installed a keystroke logger on her machine---and yours.
    --
    This is not my sandwich.