Quote from: Overjoyed on April 29, 2013, 04:51 amI want you people to realize something. There is software on the market that can crack PGP. Some of you already know of it. LE has it. If Atlantis is a DEA honeypot, then even if you use PGP when transferring your personal information, they could still be saving and decrypting every single one of your messages.I believe that Atlantis is a DEA honeypot and that the DDOS attacks are being made in order to drive users to Atlantis, where the DEA will have access to all of their communications due to the fact that they can crack your PGP.http://www.elcomsoft.com/efdd.htmlThat's the software. If you put in an order over Atlantis, then they can store your PGP message and decrypt it at their leisure using this software.This isn't really true.The software is more analogous to a keylogger than software with the ability to brute force PGP. It does things like intercept private keys. Interception != cracking. This is actually why we use Tor and other anonymizers, because if LE don't know where we are, they can't get to our private keys by spying and thereby decrypt our communications.I am wary of Atlantis and their ideas about what constitutes secure communications. Nonetheless to say they can decrypt your messages if they are already PGP encrypted by you (not by Atlantis or any other 3rd party) is not true. It is computationally infeasible.And we have no evidence that I've seen so far that Atlantis is responsible for the DOS.The DEA definitely cannot crack PGP. If the DEA could crack PGP, they, their entire organization, not us, would be a smear on the geopolitical windshield in about five seconds. Not by us. By other powers in the world who want the same information. PGP is no joke, and cracking it is no joke either. If PGP was cracked you'd hear about it on the mainstream news headlines in the same reverentially fearful tones as a nuclear bomb going off or a declaration of war between western nation states.