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Old December 20th, 2003
Naked Truth Naked Truth is offline
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Join Date: September 15th, 2003
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Default J. Ashton claims to have broken SSL Encryption

Mr. Julian Asthon claimed in a recent chat that he has in fact broken the SECURE SOCKETS LAYER (SSL) Encryption and holds "the keys" to all SSL.

He also warns that "SSL is something of the past".

Click here to see J. Ashton's claims of cracking SSL

After doing some checking, and getting the response of hundreds of p2pr's worldwide, it appears that J. Ashton lied with the help of Slyck.com.

J. Ashton, creator of POISON, the MAC APP that connects to KAZAA, cannot hack / crack SSL. But then the real question remains what is his agenda? Why did Ashton say this crap in the first place? (I mean wtf, PAYPAL, and every bank in the world uses SSL/HTTPS so I mean who is Ashton kidding??)

Do not trust this shady person. He continually is making an *** out of himself and it is rumoured that he does in fact work for the RIAA. He does NOT deny working for DIGITAL RIGHTS MANAGEMENT! His Mac program POISON is in fact a DRM tool that can be accessed via backdoor by him, his friends or even the RIAA. So be careful.

On a different bug traq, Julian Ashton is over on Slyck now slamming Edonkey.

On Bugtraq he's succeeded in embarrassing himself again by posting about an Edonkey non-bug.

His non-bug is basically that any Edonkey plug-in can be a virus. That's true of any program you download. There isn't anything that makes Edonkey plugins any different from anything else you get off the Net.

Remember, his program Poisoned uses the giFT code, something you can download for free from http://sourceforge.net. He himself didn't write any of the networking code. All he did was slap a Mac Graphical Interface on top of it.

The Edonkey network which has been running for YEARS without problems, suddenly now has a vulnerability because J. Ashton says so.

Remember, if you want to HELP p2p programs to get better, you inform the author of the program about a bug, and only if the author doesn't FIX the bug, do you make it public. Random Nut and Julian Ashton don't do that. Their first action is to publically embarrass p2p developers and scare users. They are trying their best to destroy p2p applications.
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