Alan Cox wrote:
Ar Llu, 2006-07-03 am 18:11 -0400, ysgrifennodd Daniel Bonekeeper:
That's one problem: I don't want to create one more userspace
interface for that. I suppose that all the hundreds of fingerprint
readers that ships with a SDK have their own way of doing that.. that
The very cheap readers all appear to be fairly crude image scanners, and
they even lack hardware encryption/perturbation so they are actually of
very limited value.
Crude, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. I like hardware which
does as little as possible because I can then apply the appropriate
software to the data. I can see that if cost is no object and the
algorithm is never going to change, I can build all that stuff into the
device. But I don't need to... as long as I can take the data, pass it
through a transform, and get out of that a key which works or not, then
I can do useful things with it.
Useful includes many things. I'm playing with using a combined secret
and SecureID(tm) to decrypt and boot a virtual machine, such that I can
do many unrelated things and have reduced chance of "unintended data
migration." It also allows ad-hoc users (read that as undergrads) given
a temporary machine fairly easily, visiting professors, etc.
I can see the benefits of having the whole package be a black box, I
hope I have explained why I find even a dumb scanner useful in some cases.
--
Bill Davidsen <davidsen@xxxxxxx>
Obscure bug of 2004: BASH BUFFER OVERFLOW - if bash is being run by a
normal user and is setuid root, with the "vi" line edit mode selected,
and the character set is "big5," an off-by-one errors occurs during
wildcard (glob) expansion.
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