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Bill Gates Is Right?
Scott Granneman, 2004-11-19

Bill Gates is right about one thing: asking people to use a two-factor form of authentication would go a long way toward alleviating a lot of the password problems that plague computer security today.

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Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
dreamss
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Todd Knarr (1 replies)
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-30
Prasad
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Me
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
dfy (1 replies)
Man-in-the-Middle 2004-11-22
Anonymous (2 replies)
Man-in-the-Middle 2004-11-22
Anonymous
Man-in-the-Middle 2004-11-23
David Deaves
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Borja Marcos
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-20
Florencio Cano
Yeah he's right, but... 2004-11-21
Roger
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
AR
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
Anonymous (1 replies)
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-25
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
Dmitriy
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? NO. 2004-11-22
Anonymous
Granneman is wrong? 2004-11-22
Mene Tekel
Smart cards maybe, but not biometrics 2004-11-22
Nicholas Chase
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-22
Anonymous
Biometrics isn't the best method 2004-11-23
Anonymous
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-23
hanzie
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-23
Jay
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-23
michaels
People being Human 2004-11-23
Dan J.
Bill Gates Is Right? 2004-11-23
Ean Meyer
Smart-card != SecurID 2004-11-23
Souterrain
I respectfully disagree 2004-11-23
Michael Cloppert
Scott, you made another mistakes .. 2004-11-24
Anonymous
The periods reported in the article are erroneous, and do not reflect the periods defined by Hartmann:

6) Birth of Jesus Christ to His resurrection.
7) Period of time until Jesus returns.
8) 7 years of Tribulation (first half peaceful, second half horribly violent)

By definition, since Jesus has not yet returned we are living in the days (period 7) before He returns. If someone labels events in history, and one of the events has not happened yet, why is it a mistake to say we live in the period of time before the next event?

So, who is mistaken?
Hartmann for his use of dividing history into periods based on events familiar to Europeans (the history of Hebrews and Christians), or Scott for his statements based on logically fallacious statements regarding the periods defined by Hartmann?

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/277/29211#29211
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