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Yahoo-Interview mit CEO Graham Andrews von ABSOLUTEFUTURE (AFTI)
http://vision.yahoo.com/dw/pl?.rand=971124420
Dann bei Encryption E-mail and Safemessage das Kästchen markieren und unten auf Play Selected klicken.
WKN: 931033
Viel Spaß.
Fred
Jetzt investieren beim zukünftigen Marktführer für Email- und Internetsicherheit....einem der Kerngebiete der nächsten Jahre. Internetsicherheit gehört die Zukunft.
Nomen est omen: AFTI = absolutefuture.com
Homepage: www.safemessage.com
www.absolutefuture.com
Bitte noch UNBEDINGT das hier lesen:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/cti557.htm
(USA TODAY article on SafeMessage)
http://vision.yahoo.com/dw/pl?.rand=971124420
Dann bei Encryption E-mail and Safemessage das Kästchen markieren und unten auf Play Selected klicken.
WKN: 931033
Viel Spaß.
Fred
Jetzt investieren beim zukünftigen Marktführer für Email- und Internetsicherheit....einem der Kerngebiete der nächsten Jahre. Internetsicherheit gehört die Zukunft.
Nomen est omen: AFTI = absolutefuture.com
Homepage: www.safemessage.com
www.absolutefuture.com
Bitte noch UNBEDINGT das hier lesen:
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/cti557.htm
(USA TODAY article on SafeMessage)
Hier ist der USA-Today Artikel....
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/cti557.htm
New software `shreds` e-mail
SafeMessage troubles law-enforcement authorities
By Jon Swartz, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — Law-enforcement authorities are troubled by a new kind of software being released Wednesday that sounds like something out of Mission: Impossible. It can make e-mail messages self-destruct in 10 seconds.
Someone with the software, called SafeMessage, can transmit correspondence that, once opened, will vanish off the receiver`s hard drive without a trace after a period of time set by the sender.
SafeMessage is a ``guaranteed shredding machine,`` says Graham Andrews, CEO of AbsoluteFuture, which designed it. ``Footprints (on PC hard drives and computer servers) are obliterated.``
That troubles police. They and others say that SafeMessage and similar programs could provide a digital cover for communication between crooks, including terrorists.
Incriminating messages, even those that are deleted on one computer, often resurface on other PCs. Law-enforcement officials say tracing e-mail is critical to curb wrongdoing in an age when e-mail is becoming as common as phone calls and traditional mail.
``In the face of rapidly evolving technology, there will always be a continuing challenge for law enforcement to keep pace and maintain the ability to protect public safety,`` FBI Assistant Director John Collingwood says about such programs as SafeMessage. ``Unless we are prepared to ignore public safety and national security, we have no alternative but to address that challenge.``
But SafeMessage will please those who want to protect their privacy. A handful of software-encryption programs, including Disappearing E-mail, Zixmail and ZipLip, have cropped up in the past year. An oil executive in Houston, who asked not to be named, says he uses a beta version of SafeMessage to keep private e-mail from competitors.
Many object to police efforts to track e-mail, for example through the FBI`s controversial tool, Carnivore.
Civil liberties groups say police searches for e-mail constitute an unreasonable search and seizure of electronic information.
``You have to ask yourself if this electronic wiretap will lead to abuse,`` says David Sobel, general counsel of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. ``Is there another Nixon administration or J. Edgar Hoover in the future? Probably. This puts law enforcement in the dangerous position to view everyone`s e-mail.``
Still, privacy groups favor legislation outlining fair-information practices similar to the federal Privacy Act of 1974.
``We`re watching an escalating arms race unfold,`` says Carl Shapiro, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley and author of Information Rules. ``As soon as one side comes up with a way to trace e-mail, another comes up with a way to block it.``
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/tech/cti557.htm
New software `shreds` e-mail
SafeMessage troubles law-enforcement authorities
By Jon Swartz, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — Law-enforcement authorities are troubled by a new kind of software being released Wednesday that sounds like something out of Mission: Impossible. It can make e-mail messages self-destruct in 10 seconds.
Someone with the software, called SafeMessage, can transmit correspondence that, once opened, will vanish off the receiver`s hard drive without a trace after a period of time set by the sender.
SafeMessage is a ``guaranteed shredding machine,`` says Graham Andrews, CEO of AbsoluteFuture, which designed it. ``Footprints (on PC hard drives and computer servers) are obliterated.``
That troubles police. They and others say that SafeMessage and similar programs could provide a digital cover for communication between crooks, including terrorists.
Incriminating messages, even those that are deleted on one computer, often resurface on other PCs. Law-enforcement officials say tracing e-mail is critical to curb wrongdoing in an age when e-mail is becoming as common as phone calls and traditional mail.
``In the face of rapidly evolving technology, there will always be a continuing challenge for law enforcement to keep pace and maintain the ability to protect public safety,`` FBI Assistant Director John Collingwood says about such programs as SafeMessage. ``Unless we are prepared to ignore public safety and national security, we have no alternative but to address that challenge.``
But SafeMessage will please those who want to protect their privacy. A handful of software-encryption programs, including Disappearing E-mail, Zixmail and ZipLip, have cropped up in the past year. An oil executive in Houston, who asked not to be named, says he uses a beta version of SafeMessage to keep private e-mail from competitors.
Many object to police efforts to track e-mail, for example through the FBI`s controversial tool, Carnivore.
Civil liberties groups say police searches for e-mail constitute an unreasonable search and seizure of electronic information.
``You have to ask yourself if this electronic wiretap will lead to abuse,`` says David Sobel, general counsel of the Electronic Privacy Information Center. ``Is there another Nixon administration or J. Edgar Hoover in the future? Probably. This puts law enforcement in the dangerous position to view everyone`s e-mail.``
Still, privacy groups favor legislation outlining fair-information practices similar to the federal Privacy Act of 1974.
``We`re watching an escalating arms race unfold,`` says Carl Shapiro, a professor at the University of California at Berkeley and author of Information Rules. ``As soon as one side comes up with a way to trace e-mail, another comes up with a way to block it.``
Ooops...kleiner Hinweis: oben auf der yahoo-Seite bei dem Archiv noch Oct 9 anklicken, dann funktioniert es! Sorry, aber die haben die Page aktualisiert und einen Direktlink gibt es nicht :-( Aber die Mühe lohnt sich!
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