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| 4d5ae9164b | |||
| d7413cccee |
@@ -19,6 +19,6 @@ Imagine a world where you can connect to the Internet, get all the gob-stopping
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To summarise the headlines:
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- No domain names, only cryptographic hashes
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- You take your identity with you, so there is no concept of 'logging in'
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- There is no trust in the system, in contrast to the Web, which depends on total trust in invisible corporations who hold domain name databases and sign TLS certificates
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* No domain names, only cryptographic hashes
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* You take your identity with you, so there is no concept of 'logging in'
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* There is no trust in the system, in contrast to the Web, which depends on total trust in invisible corporations who hold domain name databases and sign TLS certificates
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@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
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I picked up a random book in the New College Library, and it brought home how much tightly apocalyptic language had been tied to visions of nuclear armageddon, particularly in the 1980s.
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Perhaps this is still shaping, and limiting, how we use apocalyptic language today, even as the subject matter has largely shifted away from nuclear weapons and towards green issues.
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