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Tue, 04 Oct 2005
Special Delivery: Secure E-mail

Months ago I was asked to teach a “secure e-mail session” for an Infosecurity “Security Leadership Conference.” I delivered a presentation in May in Washington, but I warned that there is not really anything new and exciting in this area. I was right, and they agreed and so I did not deliver the talk after the DC event. I’ve put the slides here.

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Mon, 19 Sep 2005
E-mail Clients I Have Known

Recently, I’ve been blogging about my move from PC to Mac (see PC2Mac. In my next entry, I’ll talk about selecting an e-mail client. E-mail is very important to me. (See what I wrote about this in Disconnect.) So, I started thinking about all the e-mail clients (user-end programs) I used over the years. At the risk of revealing my advanced years, here is the list.

West Hempstead High School, NY
I don’t remember the name of it, but it was the local e-mail system on the DEC-10 timesharing system to which we connected via an acoustical coupler using a Teletype teleprinter. (That’s a papertape reader/writer on the left.) Practically speaking, there was no one to e-mail (except the system manager). There was no Internet. (But, we were happy.)

University of Dayton
I don’t recall e-mail. Maybe. We used a Univac Spectra 70/7 timesharing machine. (It is mentioned and pictured in this personal history from my classmate, Ken.)

NSA
/bin/mail on a (pre-TCP/IP) networked 6th Edition Unix system. This is essentially the same mail program on the command lines of Unix systems today.

Digital Equipment Corporation

  • VMS MAIL, from the command line.
  • ALL-IN-1 e-mail on VMS (an early Outlook- or Entourage-like character-cell e-mail program. (Like Outlook, it ignores standards.)
  • Berkeley Mail on Ultrix
  • MH, when I grew up.
  • Emac mail, for a while
  • xmh, when I got a workstation and X11

TIS
xmh

Avolio Consulting

    Eudora
  • Now, on the Mac… I’ll post something soon.
Holy cow!

After I wrote this and I was re-reading it, I took a detailed look at the web page I point to above under University of Dayton. I had discoverd the site simply by Googling for “Univac Spectra 70/7.” So, I did not actually read it in detail. When I did I had a few “Whoa now!” moments. I noticed that my computing environment at the University of Dayton was similar to this guys. I mean even the picture of the CRT terminal. But, then how many of them where there? 1976… interesting.

Then — yipes! He mentions one of my UD profs—the guy that taught my first programming class, Ed Krall. And then he mentions another guy I knew, Dr. Mike May.

Then I looked at the bottom, the first time the author’s name appeared. Ken Koehler… he and I graduated together, used those same computers, and were in many of the same classes from freshman year on. Haven’t seen or communicated with him since gradutation…until now, when I dropped him a note.

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Mon, 01 Aug 2005
Email Security: Threats, Countermeasures, Tactics

I’m doing a members only briefing on email security for The Institute for Applied Network Security on August 9, 2005 as part of their Institute Virtual program.

I am also speaking on the topic of email security in December. See my Speaking and Teaching Calendar for details.

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Fri, 13 May 2005
Schneier on Spam

Last week at Interop, at Secure E-mail Day, one of the discussion topics was spam. I’ve written on the subject, for example here, here, and here.

Bruce Schneier writes about e-mail spam and VoIP spam in Combating Spam.

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Wed, 16 Mar 2005
WINNING NOTIFICATION/FINAL AWARD!!!

You would think that notification of big winnings in an international lottery (for example, the HEMALOTERIJ NL,/INTERNATIONAL PROMOTION PROGRAMES.NL) would come in something more official than an email message.

The burning question I have is not why it took so long to get these “long awaited results.” Nor, do I wonder why it slipped through my spam filter (scoring a measly 3.6 — though it did end up in my “Maybe Spam” folder). No, I wonder why these lottery people — why not one of them — know how to correctly punctuate a sentence. I know English is a second language to the officials in the “INTERNATIONAL PROMOTIONS DEPT.” But, in most languages — at least western ones–doesn’t everyone leave a space or blank after a period or comma and between words? And doesn’t everyone capitalize the first word of a sentence?

Anyway, I guess I won’t care once I claim my prize of “1,000,000.00Euros (ONE MILLION EUROS.) in cash” (in cash?!?!) using my claim number and contacting “MR MARK DUFFMAN Foreign Transfer Manager.” Hmmm, I’ve already written too much. I would not want someone to claim this prize! Thank you, “Mrs. Liliana Remoud!”

I wonder how much 1 million Eurodollars in cash weighs.

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