Amorpheous
03-14-2000, 06:25 AM
What does the acronym stand for? does anyone use PGP, btw?
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Click to See Complete Forum and Search --> : RC5? Amorpheous 03-14-2000, 06:25 AM What does the acronym stand for? does anyone use PGP, btw? Richard_Cranium72 03-14-2000, 11:08 AM Assign secure connections Key to the provisioning of Virtual Private Networks is network security. One popular means of providing security is through encryption of the transmitted data. The CMAK enables an administrator to associate with each POP phone number a PPTP configuration status. PPTP is an encapsulation technology that provides multi-protocol portability (IPX/SPX, NetBEUI, TCP/IP) and enables you to address packets for transmission across the Internet. This specification, coupled with support for PPP, Microsoft Point-to-Point Encryption (MPPE), 128/40-bit encryption, RSA RC4 and "RC5", and Microsoft Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP) provides for packet security. http://www.microsoft.com/ISN/misc/datasheet.asp http://www.sysopt.com/forum/smile.gifHope this helps, DrVette Richard_Cranium72 03-14-2000, 06:33 PM Un-Crackable, umm, lets see, once there was a ship designed to be as the engineers warranted to be unsinkable. They failed to notice the air space above each of the ships dividing bulkheads. As the front sank lower, each subsquent compartment filled. Man cannot design anything that another man will not crack.. IMO , http://www.sysopt.com/forum/smile.gifDrVette daveleau 03-14-2000, 07:00 PM I must agree on the crackability of all things. Time is the only variable. Dave Amorpheous 03-15-2000, 12:05 AM What do you think of PGP, drvette? it was developed by MIT and supposed to be uncrackable, at least there is no known way to crack it... Smokey 03-15-2000, 06:39 AM Obviously... RC5 is goin' down! wyvrn 03-15-2000, 07:13 AM nm .. [This message has been edited by wyvrn (edited 03-15-2000).] SysOpt.com
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