3. Phase 3 is where transparency trees come in. Everyone loves transparency trees! They help us make sure that the server is following the protocol for every participant in a way that is basically invisible for the users. Best kind of security: the kind that works invisibly.
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Tavis, do you mean distributing the "targeted bugdoor" to all users but then only exercising it against the one target user? Or distributing it to just the targeted user?
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Right, why not just distribute it to all users, and then exercise it against the target user? There is zero penalty if you're caught, you can just try again.
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Eh, and? That still means a big gap between web and native has been closed, at least in the handwavy, needs-to-be-specced thread I linked. Moves web from “always updating” to something more akin to defined instal/update points, which the provider can control and user audit
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and... what will the user be auditing for? That there are no backdoors, but might still be bugdoors? Is that really useful?
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