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Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement
From: |
Jonathan S. Shapiro |
Subject: |
Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement |
Date: |
Sun, 30 Apr 2006 23:48:42 -0400 |
On Mon, 2006-05-01 at 05:29 +0200, Pierre THIERRY wrote:
> Scribit Marcus Brinkmann dies 30/04/2006 hora 23:17:
> > Propose a use case for non-trivial confinement.
>
> Here is an existing use case:
>
> A friend of mine is developing a physical constraint software, that will
> be able to calculate how an homogeneous matter would crack under a given
> set of forces.
>
> The program would be used by people from aircraft and weaponry industry
> who will apply it to matters that are industrial secrets.
>
> As a very short part of the algorithm is to be kept secret by the
> company who created it, the company would like that the program could be
> executed without being disclosed, while giving guarantee to the user
> that the processed data would not leak from their session.
Ironically, this is the very use case for which the KeyKOS factory
(a.k.a. the EROS constructor) was originally invented -- though the
original example did not involve any military complications.
shap
- Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement, (continued)
Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement, Pierre THIERRY, 2006/04/30
Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement, Pierre THIERRY, 2006/04/30
- Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement,
Jonathan S. Shapiro <=
Re: Challenge: Find potential use cases for non-trivial confinement, Pierre THIERRY, 2006/04/30