Ah ok. Then we don’t disagree substantially. I just consider the two possibilities (problems with the encryption method, and error in implementation) to be roughly the same probability or close enough given the data we currently have that I can’t make a decent judgment on the matter, whereas you seem to think that the human error problem is substantially more likely.
This subject deserves a whole chapter of Harry Potter Fanfiction. The need for Constant Vigilance when guarding against an enemy that is resourceful, clever, more powerful and tireless. It would conclude with Mad Eye Moody getting killed. Constant Vigilance is futile when you are a human. The only option is to kill the enemy once and for all, to eliminate that dependence.
I mean, canon Harry Potter does that already—Mad Eye (the real one) is captured by Dark forces before we ever meet him, tortured routinely, and 2 or 3 years later is killed by them.
(And of course, canon Mad Eye had no chance of actually killing Voldemort once and for all, so Constant Vigilance was all he could do.)
More examples: (1) people have a history of reusing one-time pads (2) side-channel attacks. The latter is a big deal that doesn’t really fit the dichotomy.
Ah ok. Then we don’t disagree substantially. I just consider the two possibilities (problems with the encryption method, and error in implementation) to be roughly the same probability or close enough given the data we currently have that I can’t make a decent judgment on the matter, whereas you seem to think that the human error problem is substantially more likely.
Yes, it sounds like just a difference in degree.
This subject deserves a whole chapter of Harry Potter Fanfiction. The need for Constant Vigilance when guarding against an enemy that is resourceful, clever, more powerful and tireless. It would conclude with Mad Eye Moody getting killed. Constant Vigilance is futile when you are a human. The only option is to kill the enemy once and for all, to eliminate that dependence.
I don’t think MoR really needs a chapter on that.
I mean, canon Harry Potter does that already—Mad Eye (the real one) is captured by Dark forces before we ever meet him, tortured routinely, and 2 or 3 years later is killed by them.
(And of course, canon Mad Eye had no chance of actually killing Voldemort once and for all, so Constant Vigilance was all he could do.)
More examples: (1) people have a history of reusing one-time pads (2) side-channel attacks. The latter is a big deal that doesn’t really fit the dichotomy.