The UK Growers Thread!

R3l@X

Well-Known Member
TORS BUSTED at nsa level pgp too...no worries for weed farmers tho we way too low to interest them
how'd it get busted? The recent patches solved the vulnerability..I'm assuming you're referring to ice post? And where is the pgp encryption being cracked? Is that with a certain bit encryption or just the general architecture of the program? but ur bang on about us were the small fish they want the ones running the site n terrorists.
 

zeddd

Well-Known Member
i liked your post about mbbs and looked into it, i actually had some but i thought ide ordered 20 when in fact only 2 came so was keeping em for spesh as vac plac seems to do the job but only for human noses, now i would only send my brothers weed vac paced and mbbd
 

zeddd

Well-Known Member

Saerimmner

Well-Known Member
TORS BUSTED at nsa level pgp too...no worries for weed farmers tho we way too low to interest them
yeah its been done by both the yanks an russians now an there is talk of china having hacked it over a year ago n kept silent about it n just gathering info etc
 

R3l@X

Well-Known Member
Ah I saw that today actually hahaha, well for one were on version 3.6 n coupled with pgp encryption ur fine she's fear mongering. It's never been 100% sure the Russians put sniffers on the end nodes and your told to use pgp with it for a reason. And as for that link it says "What does all this have to do with PGP? The RSA-129 key is approximately equal in security to a 426-bit PGP key. This has been shown to be easily crackable by this project. PGP used to recommend 384-bit keys as "casual grade" security; recent versions offer 768 bits as a recommended minimum security level." alotmore of pgp programs use 2000 +bit encryption "Your PGP software may ask you for a desired key length for your key pair. Generally the larger the key size the the more difficult it is to conduct known brute force attacks. Larger keys are generally preferable all else being equal, but some older PGP software may not function with very large keys. Most current PGP software defaults to 2048-bit keys for encryption, but we've not run into any difficulties when using 4096-bit encryption keys. While 1024-bit keys are generally considered safe for the foreseeable future, we do not recommend keys less than 1024 bit and encourage you to use at least 2048-bit or larger for all new keys if possible." source
https://www.dragonresearchgroup.org/insight/pgp-guide.html




My phone has quite a few options in itself but no way as good as a desktop bit here is a Lil bit on the encryption it uses

http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1279619



I'm using the ae encryption BTW haha
 

zeddd

Well-Known Member
Ah I saw that today actually hahaha, well for one were on version 3.6 n coupled with pgp encryption ur fine she's fear mongering. It's never been 100% sure the Russians put sniffers on the end nodes and your told to use pgp with it for a reason. And as for that link it says "What does all this have to do with PGP? The RSA-129 key is approximately equal in security to a 426-bit PGP key. This has been shown to be easily crackable by this project. PGP used to recommend 384-bit keys as "casual grade" security; recent versions offer 768 bits as a recommended minimum security level." alotmore of pgp programs use 2000 +bit encryption "Your PGP software may ask you for a desired key length for your key pair. Generally the larger the key size the the more difficult it is to conduct known brute force attacks. Larger keys are generally preferable all else being equal, but some older PGP software may not function with very large keys. Most current PGP software defaults to 2048-bit keys for encryption, but we've not run into any difficulties when using 4096-bit encryption keys. While 1024-bit keys are generally considered safe for the foreseeable future, we do not recommend keys less than 1024 bit and encourage you to use at least 2048-bit or larger for all new keys if possible." source
https://www.dragonresearchgroup.org/insight/pgp-guide.html




My phone has quite a few options in itself but no way as good as a desktop bit here is a Lil bit on the encryption it uses

http://www.eetimes.com/document.asp?doc_id=1279619
like i said its ok for petty crime lol
 
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