Hushmail Passing PGP Keys to the US Government
teknopurge writes "Apparently Hushmail has been providing information to law enforcement behind the backs of their clients. Billed as secure email because of their use of PGP, Hushmail has been turning over private keys of users to the authorities on request. 'DEA agents received three CDs which contained decrypted emails for the targets of the investigation that had been decrypted as part of a mutual legal assistance treaty between the United States and Canada. The news will be embarrassing to the company, which has made much of its ability to ensure that emails are not read by the authorities, including the FBI's Carnivore email monitoring software.'"
the authorise overlords
How do you possibly get "authorise" from "authorities"?
Remove the second t, second i, and reverse the e and the s.
(the summary was C/P'ed from TFA, so this is all I got...)
>that's 2.15805661 × 10^29 years, based on my quick envelope-back numbers.
I know this is slashdot but I refuse to define a quick back-of-an-envelope calculation as having 8 significant digits.
The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
I hope no one's figured out a way to factor any primes. I've gotten used to the job security of being a math teacher :)
When the axe came to the forest, the trees said, "Look out - the handle was once one of us."