PGP Is 15 Years Old
An anonymous reader writes "PGP Corporation salutes the 15th anniversary of PGP encryption technology. Developed and released in 1991 by Phil Zimmermann, Pretty Good Privacy 1.0 set the standard for safe, accessible technology to protect and share online information."
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
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Version: 2.6.2
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eW4GDdBfLbJE7VUpp13N19GL8e/AqbyyjHH4aS0YoTk10QQ9
g9VGQxFeGqzykzmykU6A26MSMexR4ApeeON6xzZWfo+0yOqA
AABH78hyX7YX4uT1tNCWEIIBoqqvCeIMpp7UQ2IzBrXg6Gtu
1yt21DYOjuLzcMNe/JNsD9vDVCvOOG3OCi8=
=zzaA
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
It's too bad after 15 years, probably > one percent of internet users have even used it, or any of its OpenPGP standard derivatives (GnuPG) for example. Sort of like the NSA telephone spying fiasco this year in the U.S, you know the various bureacracies are watching all the packets they can. If you want privacy, now is the time to take control of your own. Encrypt your emails and files, IPSEC, SSH, HTTPS wherever possible, and demand it where it is not yet available for you.
I think you're confusing a few things.
Web of Trust (WoT) is a PKI model. Certificate Authorities (CA) is a competing PKI model, and the one apparently you prefer. Have you taken a look at the CA list of trust in your browser lately? I for one prefer WoT, although more work on the part of the user to maintain, the trust model is based on me, not "Staat de Nederlanden" or any other company I've never heard of. Not to mention the stolen Microsoft certificates of a few years ago. There is nothing to stop us from moving to a WoT model for our browser PKI, just as there is nothing stopping us from using the CA model for email, it's just how it's been implemented for us thus far, and which we choose to use.
MIME vs Inline are competing ways of using PKI in email, it appears you prefer MIME which does appear to be the merging standard.
PGPfone does still run under Windows and the source is available. Zfone (also by Phil Zimmerman, is a new secure VoIP program. Gizmo and Skype also have encryption (though they're closed source).
Jeez, will this fairy tail never end? Phil NEVER released PGP. Crap, I was there and I remember it. Phil had to be browbeaten and bribed to give up the software (for which he had already been paid to develop).
There were two people who were hauled up in front of the Federal Grand Jury. Phil was one. Kelly Goen was the other. It was Kelly who paid Phil, who researched the law (so that the release could be done legally) and who had been pushing for developing public key cryptography for years before he ever met Phil. And it was Kelly who had the guts to do the actual release. Phil thought he was completely safe at the time (and legally speaking he probably was, not that innocence has ever stopped the Feds before).
If you want to search, you might be able to find the original Jim Warren articles in Microtimes around, who Kelly kept in touch with during the actual release. Jim thought Kelly was paranoid as hell until the FBI showed up on his door, and he wrote at least one article about it.
For your amusement, Kelly went around the San Francisco Bay area with an old acoustic coupler modem to various pay phones and would upload it onto a different server. Then he'd call Jim to tell him where it was at, in case something happened to him. He was under the impression that the single best thing the NSA could do was to knock him off before he put it on those servers. Looking back at it now, he was quite right.
And no, this isn't being posted by Kelly. Just someone else who was there at the time.
So please, get your facts straight and give Kelly some credit while he's still alive. Thanks.