Posted on 06/20/2013 8:48:59 PM PDT by chessplayer
...The simple fact that the data is encrypted and that the NSA wants to crack it may be enough to let the agency keep it indefinitely.
...In other words, privacy advocates may be facing a nasty Catch-22: Fail to encrypt your communications, and theyre vulnerable to any eavesdroppers surveillance. But encrypt them, and they become legally subject to eavesdropping by the most powerful surveillance agency in the world.
(Excerpt) Read more at forbes.com ...
Bs pbhefr fbzr pelcgb vf gbb rnfl gb penpx
JSzjZj8BITAhITAhLVgQGWPDBZiZITEyIYI8XfIDITkhiC0nBSEwIYhhdGwa646kg5zrf9c=
.- -. -.. ... -— — . .. ... -.-. .-.. .- ... ... .. -.-. .-.-.-
“Wont stop them, but will slow them down as they try to crack randomness.”
As someone with cryptology experience, I say they can decrypt anything, but you are right, computer cycles are not free and they would need lots more of them to try to make sense of random garbage. Trying to parse it would be expensive.
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