Vint Cerf on Net Security, Hacking, and Acting
ancientribe writes "Father of the Internet Vint Cerf talks candidly in an article on Dark Reading about his being a Googler, and the biggest problems with Internet security and what he sees as the most promising solutions. He says that he's only done a little casual hacking, and that the term 'hacker' no longer comes with the honor it once did. Cerf also reveals in this personal look at the Internet icon that his real dream was to be an actor."
DARPA Revolutions
The Architect - Hello, Al.
Al - Who are you?
Architect - I created the Internet.
Al - Bullshit.
The Architect - Humph. Hope, it is the quintessential human delusion, simultaneously the source of your greatest strength, and your greatest weakness.
Al - If I were you, I would hope that we don't meet again.
The Architect - We won't.
I hope, when they die, cartoon characters have to answer for their sins.
Ah, yes, he has an IMDB page detailing his appearances. So it looks like he got to live at least a tiny bit of that particular dream. Good for him!
The security quote:
It's too bad the reporter injected so much of their own opinion into the article. I'd much rather have heard Cert's own words than interpretations. The result is that it looks like the reporter did not ask the right questions at the time to get clear answers.
Reading and rereading the above, it looks like he's thinking of ways to make the network work without having to trust the clients attached. That would be a neat trick.
Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.
Father of the Internet Vint Cerf WHAT not Al Gore!?
I demand DNS testing!!!
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Hell, *I* remember ARPAnet and the Internet before the Web! BSD 4.2/3 on a VAX 785, Sun 3 and diskless clients, routing email using "host!host!user", ASCII terminals, Xerox LISP workstations and the days before EMACS... [ That last one can be used as either the beginning or end of a camp-fire horror story :-) ]
I'm getting old.
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .