Robots are great at carrying out well defined tasks in controlled environments, but they are still severely lacking in most of the skills that are valued in today's society (creativity, problem solving, teaching, influence, etc)
Although your argument is correct, your conclusion that 2048-bit messages are uncrackable is misleading. RSA claims that 1024-bit keys are likely to become crackable some time between 2006 and 2010 and that 2048-bit keys are sufficient until 2030.
"... effectively defeating the new anti-rootkit/anti-DRM mechanism built into Microsoft's newest operating system." Increased security and anti-DRM? I guess Microsoft is finally listening to what consumers want!
"... effectively defeating the new anti-rootkit/anti-DRM mechanism built into Microsoft's newest operating system."
Increased security and anti-DRM? I guess Microsoft is finally listening to what consumers want!
The DRM on DisplayPort is DPCP (DisplayPort Content Protection).
"It also adds support for verifying the proximity of the receiver and transmitter, a technique intended to ensure users are not bypassing content protection system to send data out to distant, unauthorized users."
Robots are great at carrying out well defined tasks in controlled environments, but they are still severely lacking in most of the skills that are valued in today's society (creativity, problem solving, teaching, influence, etc)
Although your argument is correct, your conclusion that 2048-bit messages are uncrackable is misleading. RSA claims that 1024-bit keys are likely to become crackable some time between 2006 and 2010 and that 2048-bit keys are sufficient until 2030.
"... effectively defeating the new anti-rootkit/anti-DRM mechanism built into Microsoft's newest operating system." Increased security and anti-DRM? I guess Microsoft is finally listening to what consumers want!
The DRM on DisplayPort is DPCP (DisplayPort Content Protection). "It also adds support for verifying the proximity of the receiver and transmitter, a technique intended to ensure users are not bypassing content protection system to send data out to distant, unauthorized users."