Month: October 2013

party politics

The Shutdown problem

The republican party has a big problem: How to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. The government has, without quite realizing it, accepted piecemeal funding of everything except Obamacare. There is no shutdown. There is just the government doing occasional bits of petty spitefulness and nastiness to express its hatred of its subjects. Since …

party politics

Republicans not folding yet

A week ago I predicted that the Republicans would fold like a cheap deck chair, and and issue a grovelling apology for their evil attempt to implement their election platform merely because they won the House of Representatives. Some of them are apologizing, but so far, no folding.

crypto

The underground economy continues

I, and others, have been assuming that the takedown of Silk Road represents competent action by the NSA. Outside In, however, points out the interesting coincidence that the takedown of Silk Road follows, rather than precedes, the appearance of competition to Silk Road. Atlantis, however, appears to have skedaddled with its user’s money, thus this …

crypto

Cryptography standards

If everyone was to do their own thing in cryptography, that would be very bad. But committees are less intelligent than their individual members and are prone to evil and madness.  IEEE 802.11 was stupid. If NIST was not stupid, it was because evil was calling the shots behind the scenes, overruling the stupid. Linux …

crypto

Moving away from NIST

Jon Callas, a leading cryptographer, is issuing a new version of Silent Circle, which by default uses only non NIST cryptography. It was necessary to change the curves, since the NIST curves are probably backdoored. It was arguably not necessary to change the symmetric encryption and the hash, since they are unlikely to be backdoored. …

party politics

The fake shutdown confrontation

Whichever party yields, winds up being blamed for any disruption caused. Therefore, the party with the weaker hand should always yield swiftly, and the party with the stronger hand should never yield.  And since the constitution gives the party that controls the house of representatives the overwhelmingly stronger hand, the Republicans would win – except …