Difference between revisions 123927187 and 123927190 on dewiki

{{cleanup|date=December 2010}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:_NSAKEY}}
'''_NSAKEY''' was a [[variable (computer science)|variable]] name discovered in [[Windows NT 4]] [[Windows NT 4.0#Service Packs|Service Pack]] 5 (which had been released unstripped of its [[Debug symbol|symbolic debugging]] data) in August 1999 by Andrew D. Fernandes of Cryptonym Corporation. That variable contained a 1024-bit [[public key]].

== Overview ==
(contracted; show full)title=Microsoft, the NSA, and You |publisher=Cryptonym |date=1999-08-31 |url=http://www.cryptonym.com/hottopics/msft-nsa/msft-nsa.html  |accessdate=2007-01-07 |archiveurl = http://web.archive.org/web/20000617094917/http://www.cryptonym.com/hottopics/msft-nsa/msft-nsa.html |archivedate = 17 June 2000}} ([[Internet Archive]] / [[Internet Archive#Wayback Machine|Wayback Machine]])</ref>  Fernandes published his discovery, touching off a flurry of speculation and [[conspiracy theory|conspiracy theories]]
; such as, including the possibility that the second key, was owned by the United States [[National Security Agency]] (the NSA), coul and allowed the intelligence agency to subvert any Windows user's security.{{Citation needed|date=September 2011}}

During a presentation at the [[Computers, Freedom and Privacy Conference|Computers, Freedom and Privacy]] 2000 (CFP2000) conference, [[Duncan Campbell (investigative journalist)|Duncan Campbell]], Senior Research Fellow at the [[Electronic Privacy Information Center]] (EPIC), mentioned the _NSAKEY controversy as an example of an outstanding issue related to security and surveillance.{{Citation neede(contracted; show full)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nsakey}}
[[Category:Microsoft criticisms and controversies]]
[[Category:History of cryptography]]
[[Category:Conspiracy theories]]
[[Category:National Security Agency]]
[[Category:Microsoft Windows security technology]]
[[Category:Articles with underscores in the title]]