[asterisk-biz] Copy protect your Asterisk Box

Paul ast2005 at 9ux.com
Thu Dec 21 20:22:10 MST 2006


Matthew Rubenstein wrote:

>On Thu, 2006-12-21 at 19:45 -0500, Paul wrote:
>  
>
>>Trixter aka Bret McDanel wrote:
>>
>>    
>>
>>>On 12/22/06, *Paul* <ast2005 at 9ux.com <mailto:ast2005 at 9ux.com>> wrote:
>>>
>>>    See my post saying I was joking. Anyway, a battery or supercap takes
>>>    care of that. It doesn't take long to erase something as short a a key
>>>    pair. Another approach is to trigger some thermite and let the heat do
>>>    the job. Or maybe the EMP from a nuclear explosion .....
>>>
>>>
>>>ust have to make sure that you cant read the data after erasure.  
>>>Magnetic media (hard drives for example) typically can be read via
>>>automated means to get several generations of the data that was
>>>there.  The cost is suprisingly low to get data off a harddrive given
>>>its level of automation currently.  Temper that against hte cost of
>>>making such a system ...
>>>
>>>As for the emp of a nuclear explosion, a small nuke placed within the
>>>case to create the emp is likely to damage the equipment first, so the
>>>emp would be useless ...  Why not use a flux compression generator,
>>>that way you arent shipping nuclear material that could be stolen and
>>>used in a power plant somewhere, we cant have that can we? 
>>>      
>>>
>>Design a dynamic photonic memory device. The data is stored in dancing
>>photons. Opening the case turns on a lamp which floods the dance floor
>>with more photons. They bump into each other and lose the beat. A riot
>>breaks out. Photonic cops arrive with a nuclear device .....
>>    
>>
>
>	Use a time-flux capacitor to go "back" and stop yourself from
>installing the system, once you've finished using it.
>  
>
Only Kilgore Trout would know the best thing to do.



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