What happens when an attacker has both factors in a two-factor situation is that security is breached.
Fuck everything, we're going to 5 factor security.
Yo dawg, I heard you like pointers so I put an array of pointers to pointers in your pointers so you can dereference while you're dereferencing.
Even one time pads are susceptible to brute force attacks.
Nope, absolutely incorrect. That's what makes one-time pads different. When the key length is the same as the plaintext length, it is possible have perfect security. Look up unicity distance.
If the original was normal human readable text it becomes immediately obvious when your brute force succeeds and a subsequent dictionary comparison of each word yields a hit.
But your brute force attack will yield every single possible plaintext (with the same length as the original plaintext). Which is the real one?
For example, if the ciphertext is BWIJAA, your brute force attack will get ATTACK for one key, and GOHOME for another. (And every other 6 character string.)
The human brain is composed of one hundred billion or so neurons. Looks like it's pretty much finite to me. I have ten times as many bytes of information in my hard disk.
But a neuron is worth a lot more than a byte - it's more like a node. At least mine are - don't know about yours.
(But point taken about "infinite complexity".)
In other words, its a matter of communication.
You forgot the apostrophe there, chief. Don't make me sick Bob on you. Oh, too late: http://www.angryflower.com/bobsqu.gif
I had to try hard to avoid saying "I don't cheat so I have to actually understand the material to pass the classes."
Maybe this is a stupid question, but why didn't you just go ahead and say it?
Everybody's hot and bothered about the HOW, begging the question of the LEGITIMACY of taxes in the first place.
So how's anarchy working out for you?
Artificial scarcity doesn't work. Period.
I don't know
Variables don't; constants aren't.