"But there are going to have to be some tradeoffs between the right to privacy and the need to be protected from terrorists"
No. Never.
"People who value safety over freedom deserve neither" -- Thomas Jefferson
The men who bled at Lexington and starved at Valley Forge didn't make "tradeoffs," and I refuse to sully everything they fought for by placing the value of my own safety, or even my life, above that of freedom.
Funny you should say that, because Victorian era scientists, like scientists of any time period, didn't use "proofs" in the mathematical sense, they made conjectures based on the evidence they had; based on, as you put it, "Hard proof."
You forgot the best part: the hookers.
CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide-Silicon) refers to the construction of the transistor, not it's possible applications in PC BIOSes.
If this encryption and decryption happens in the hardware, it might not be feasible to reverse engineer it and get the raw stream.
Well darn. Guess it's uncrackable, just like DVD encryption.
"But there are going to have to be some tradeoffs between the right to privacy and the need to be protected from terrorists"
No. Never.
"People who value safety over freedom deserve neither" -- Thomas Jefferson
The men who bled at Lexington and starved at Valley Forge didn't make "tradeoffs," and I refuse to sully everything they fought for by placing the value of my own safety, or even my life, above that of freedom.
Funny you should say that, because Victorian era scientists, like scientists of any time period, didn't use "proofs" in the mathematical sense, they made conjectures based on the evidence they had; based on, as you put it, "Hard proof."