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@chaskin.eth
TIL in 1977 the NSA tried to block MIT's public key cryptography research, calling it a modern weapon. 20 yr old Mark Miller secretly copied the paper, shared it nationwide, and told friends: "If I disappear, share this." In 1978, the gov backed down, and encryption went public
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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
The US government's enacting of export controls for cryptographic keys in excess of a certain size in the 1990s is what got me interested in cryptography in the first place. Imagine how much societal and technological progress we would have wasted if if public-key cryptography had been kept secret or banned for years
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Dean Pierce πŸ‘¨β€πŸ’»πŸŒŽπŸŒ
@deanpierce.eth
Imagine if the Internet had gone the way of packet radio. The original visions for the Internet were supposed to go over packet radio, but regulators made encryption illegal, so it could only ever be used as a toy. The Internet was basically the same way before SSL (1994). E-commerce changed everything.
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Anuraj R
@anurajenp
I don’t think the key size has changed since the 90s. I tried to buy a ESP32 with crypto accelerator from Digikey and it was stuck in customs and I had sign end user agreement that I am going to use the MCU for my smol toy, lol. Funny part is ESP32 is a chinese product.
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