That's not a correct analogy. It's a window into the key, allowing the lock to be opened, not a window into a room that is protected by a lock. The point is that security is a defense mechanism, not an absolute…
copied from Reddit No, when properly implemented, it can not be broken. "Properly implemented" pretty much implies a paper version where there are only two copies of any pad page, and both are immediately destroyed…
There's never been a perfectly secure lock in all of history, thousands of years of it. What makes modern day humans think that one can exist in digital form? I think there is a direct connection to the laws of physics…
That's not a correct analogy. It's a window into the key, allowing the lock to be opened, not a window into a room that is protected by a lock. The point is that security is a defense mechanism, not an absolute…
copied from Reddit No, when properly implemented, it can not be broken. "Properly implemented" pretty much implies a paper version where there are only two copies of any pad page, and both are immediately destroyed…
copied from Reddit No, when properly implemented, it can not be broken. "Properly implemented" pretty much implies a paper version where there are only two copies of any pad page, and both are immediately destroyed…
There's never been a perfectly secure lock in all of history, thousands of years of it. What makes modern day humans think that one can exist in digital form? I think there is a direct connection to the laws of physics…