Ah yes, but aside from breakthroughs in maths (no one noticed, but a couple of weeks ago they discovered a meathod for calculating all prime numbers, which cuts the security of most public key encryption into tiny pieces and burns all but one of said pieces) the major problem is that any moron can monitor a command signal and work back from there.Beowulf wrote:True in theory. In practice, usually not. Twofish or AES with 448 bit keys would last for the lifetime of the system. It's rather computationally infeasible to break the key of a very large key symetric cipher.NecronLord wrote:Anything that can be encrpted can be decrypted.
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I understand that concept perfectly well, and so would the people planning that op. Do you really think they'd be stupid enough not to account for it? Published documents can contain somewhat incorrect info, or are you unaware of this possibility?
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You'd need to have incredible cryptologists at your beck and call to break what would almost assuredly be encryption at the level of nuclear command and control systems. Good luck.NecronLord wrote:Has anyone considered how much of a liability it would be if some enemy got hold of the command system for this thing? Anything that can be encrpted can be decrypted.
Something as "simple" as TripleDES or AES would almost assuredly stop any attacker, nevermind milspec systems.
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OK that was... random.Edi wrote:I understand that concept perfectly well, and so would the people planning that op. Do you really think they'd be stupid enough not to account for it? Published documents can contain somewhat incorrect info, or are you unaware of this possibility?
Edi
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I'm fairly sure that Iceberg knows that. However, published information can be corraborated with actual launch data from DSP/SBIRS. Furthermore, satellite launches, while not rare, aren't everyday things either.Edi wrote:I understand that concept perfectly well, and so would the people planning that op. Do you really think they'd be stupid enough not to account for it? Published documents can contain somewhat incorrect info, or are you unaware of this possibility?
Edi
How long does it take to calculate all those prime numbers? Even the proposed quantum computers only effectively break the keylength in half. Secondly, if you can monitor the command signal you only have a hash of ones and zeros, probably on a spread-spectrum burst-transit system if possible.NecronLord wrote:Ah yes, but aside from breakthroughs in maths (no one noticed, but a couple of weeks ago they discovered a meathod for calculating all prime numbers, which cuts the security of most public key encryption into tiny pieces and burns all but one of said pieces) the major problem is that any moron can monitor a command signal and work back from there.Beowulf wrote:True in theory. In practice, usually not. Twofish or AES with 448 bit keys would last for the lifetime of the system. It's rather computationally infeasible to break the key of a very large key symetric cipher.NecronLord wrote:Anything that can be encrpted can be decrypted.
I seriously doubt that anyone is going to break these codes.
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And China doesn't? I mean with 1/3 of the world population, how hard could it be?phongn wrote:You'd need to have incredible cryptologists at your beck and call to break what would almost assuredly be encryption at the level of nuclear command and control systems. Good luck.
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Your persistence is admirable, Edi, but your intelligence lacks.
If the published info is falsified, then the satellite once released will not settle into the orbit predicted by NASA and the game is up.
You're done in by orbital mechanics. Not only are you in trouble for lying to us and destroying valuable government property, you're ALSO in trouble for displaying your blatant contempt for us by using a tactic so transparent that it might fool a blind man for a second or two if you're lucky.
If the published info is falsified, then the satellite once released will not settle into the orbit predicted by NASA and the game is up.
You're done in by orbital mechanics. Not only are you in trouble for lying to us and destroying valuable government property, you're ALSO in trouble for displaying your blatant contempt for us by using a tactic so transparent that it might fool a blind man for a second or two if you're lucky.
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You can be sure the NSA and their rivals across the world are at it even now. I'd give them a few months. (At most) In any case this has no relavance, as such a system would not be public key, and thus isn't restricted to prime-factoring.phong wrote: How long does it take to calculate all those prime numbers?
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A pathetic comback, but not unexpected considering that you had no real argument in the first place.GrandAdmiralPrawn wrote:Poor, poor, Degan... Did you not notice the word "exactly" printed entirely with capital letters? It was a simple request for greater detail than a muttered "other countries would attack us and stuff."
I also remember the Soviets knocking down one of our U2s and the Cubans downing another one during that period —neither action precipitating a general nuclear war. It's called "proportional response".A serious pre-emptive strike on the United States by a foreign power is impossible unless the attacker is willing to absorb a hail of nuclear warheads in return. You do remember that little "Cold War" thing we had a few years ago, right?
At least in Cuba, there was a plan to go nuclear if a spy plane was shot down, though it was vetoed.Patrick Degan wrote:I also remember the Soviets knocking down one of our U2s and the Cubans downing another one during that period —neither action precipitating a general nuclear war. It's called "proportional response".
Proportional response when dealing with nuclear powers is dangerous. In the case of the Soviet Union intercepting reconnaissance aircraft (e.g. RB-36, U-2) it was a clear violation of airspace, while this orbiting weapons platform is not (another posted noted that airspace only goes up to fifty miles). Things might just escalate out of control and that's a danger no country wants to risk.
Even if it was, it's rather difficult to factor out the key, without holding one of the keys...NecronLord wrote:You can be sure the NSA and their rivals across the world are at it even now. I'd give them a few months. (At most) In any case this has no relavance, as such a system would not be public key, and thus isn't restricted to prime-factoring.phong wrote: How long does it take to calculate all those prime numbers?
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1/6 ish.NecronLord wrote:And China doesn't? I mean with 1/3 of the world population, how hard could it be?phongn wrote:You'd need to have incredible cryptologists at your beck and call to break what would almost assuredly be encryption at the level of nuclear command and control systems. Good luck.
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Maybe so. But proportional response is a better policy than a Tripwire doctrine or "all or nothing". After all, nobody wants to start a general war over the downing of one military unit.phongn wrote:Proportional response when dealing with nuclear powers is dangerous. In the case of the Soviet Union intercepting reconnaissance aircraft (e.g. RB-36, U-2) it was a clear violation of airspace, while this orbiting weapons platform is not (another posted noted that airspace only goes up to fifty miles). Things might just escalate out of control and that's a danger no country wants to risk.
Of course no-body wants to start a war (hence why Kennedy did not flatten Cuba and why Krushchev did not press things very far at all). And while we could argue that the downing of what is arguably a strategic weapons system will only weight a proportional response, nobody is going to take that risk. They'll probably accept the orbiting satellites of doom, and if war ever comes then they'll knock the fool things down.Patrick Degan wrote:Maybe so. But proportional response is a better policy than a Tripwire doctrine or "all or nothing". After all, nobody wants to start a general war over the downing of one military unit.phongn wrote:Proportional response when dealing with nuclear powers is dangerous. In the case of the Soviet Union intercepting reconnaissance aircraft (e.g. RB-36, U-2) it was a clear violation of airspace, while this orbiting weapons platform is not (another posted noted that airspace only goes up to fifty miles). Things might just escalate out of control and that's a danger no country wants to risk.
What do you mean how hard could it be? Even with a sixth of the world population they can only have a relative few trained cryptologists. How much effort did the belligerant powers in World War II pour into crypto for (by modern standards) relatively simple codes? Don't bring up this strawman that "lots of people == not too hard to break codes."NecronLord wrote:And China doesn't? I mean with 1/3 of the world population, how hard could it be?phongn wrote:You'd need to have incredible cryptologists at your beck and call to break what would almost assuredly be encryption at the level of nuclear command and control systems. Good luck.
As for the prime number thing, do you have a link?
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Source?phongn wrote:What do you mean how hard could it be? Even with a sixth of the world population they can only have a relative few trained cryptologists.
Relatively little. Britain did, the others did not. That is a false analogy, cryptology has advanced in the field of cracking codes as well as generating them
How much effort did the belligerant powers in World War II pour into crypto for (by modern standards) relatively simple codes?
Aside from the fact that it has no relevence to this type of encyption, but to commercial encyption. Yes:
As for the prime number thing, do you have a link?
The BBC
Nature
Though frankly this is a minor technicallity, the means of obtaining codes are myriad, the general principle is the same. No code is unbreakeable.
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What about the variation of the unbreakable one time pad? Use two entangled particles, which would vary randomly, but would be syncronized as the entropy to combine with the signals you want to encrypt? Probably too fragile though. Or you could always install a hard drive with hundreds of gigabytes of stuff for the random data, and have a clone of the hard drive on the ground. The satellite will probably stop working by the time you run out of entropy data, and you probably don't need that much if you only need unbreakable encryption for the firing command, not any steering commands or anything like that.
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Among other reasons because both aircraft where violating the airspace of another nation. Satellites don't do so.Patrick Degan wrote:
I also remember the Soviets knocking down one of our U2s and the Cubans downing another one during that period —neither action precipitating a general nuclear war. It's called "proportional response".
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Conjecture, but with the amount of training and the education it requires, it is a highly reasonable assumption. Furthermore, any information on the actual number of crypto people in the PRC is highly like to classified by their government, so I can't give hard numbers here.NecronLord wrote:Source?phongn wrote:What do you mean how hard could it be? Even with a sixth of the world population they can only have a relative few trained cryptologists.
Just because they have a sizable amount of people does not mean that they suddenly have a leg up.
While no code (other than a properly-secured one time pad) is unbreakable, you can make it so difficult that breaking it in any reasonable amount of time becomes impossible.Though frankly this is a minor technicallity, the means of obtaining codes are myriad, the general principle is the same. No code is unbreakeable.
The article does not say that they can find all prime numbers, did it? Only a pattern.NecronLord wrote:Ah yes, but aside from breakthroughs in maths (no one noticed, but a couple of weeks ago they discovered a meathod for calculating all prime numbers, which cuts the security of most public key encryption into tiny pieces and burns all but one of said pieces) the major problem is that any moron can monitor a command signal and work back from there.
*sigh*. No one ever replies to what I say.
ah.....the path to happiness is revision of dreams and not fulfillment... -SWPIGWANG
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Anything worth the cost of a missile, which can be located on the battlefield, will be shot at with missiles. If the US military is involved, then things, which are not worth the cost if a missile will also be shot at with missiles. -Sea Skimmer
George Bush makes freedom sound like a giant robot that breaks down a lot. -Darth Raptor
The articals say nothing about making it easier to find to find primes in general, just in specific cases.
You'd probably not want to use a harddisk in a satelite, do tothe accelerations involved destroying the disk...
You'd probably not want to use a harddisk in a satelite, do tothe accelerations involved destroying the disk...
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Well they have sent laptops up in space. Well if the HDD can't take shock, you could always put some optical drive up there, or store stuff in ROM chips (though you would need a lot of those). There's also that electromechanical storage chip with huge capacity/size coming up. You probably don't need hundreds of gigabytes just for simple firing commands. You would have to devise a way to keep both drives synchronized though, using the same portion of the disk for encryption/decryption, in case some signal doesn't get through. That part should be easy though.Beowulf wrote:The articals say nothing about making it easier to find to find primes in general, just in specific cases.
You'd probably not want to use a harddisk in a satelite, do tothe accelerations involved destroying the disk...
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Perhaps. However, if the decision was made to preemptively knock down a SPECTRE Deathbeam Platform™, it would not be the same as hitting a military base on the opponnent's home territory, nor would it entail any risk to civilians within that territory. Otherwise, the likely response is to place orbital cannisters in the SDP's pathway, which could be detonated anytime. And the cannisters would certainly be a simpler and cheaper deterrent to the weapons platforms.phongn wrote:And while we could argue that the downing of what is arguably a strategic weapons system will only weight a proportional response, nobody is going to take that risk. They'll probably accept the orbiting satellites of doom, and if war ever comes then they'll knock the fool things down.