Thanks for your kind words, I really appreciate it.
And thanks for pointing me to the paper about Zero Knowledge Systems.
I have to admit that I did not know much about your company and its products. However the following paragraph really resonated with me!
”[…] The very name of the company was both an homage to cryptography (a “zero-knowledge proof” is a standard cryptographic protocol) and a promise of a specific relation between the company and its clients (Zero-Knowledge would know nothing of its clients – not even who they were). No one need trust Zero-Knowledge to protect privacy; one need only trust their software. One could look at the code to see what it could or couldn’t do, what Zero-Knowledge could or couldn’t know. […]”
Those are exactly the same motivations behind our decision to call Clipperz a “zero knowledge web application”. You can even find similar sentences all over our website! “Don’t trust us, trust our code” is our mantra since the beginning, in 2005!
I’m sorry if some people think that you are affiliated with Clipperz, I’m definitely going to write a post trying to clarify this issue.
Thanks Austin
@ Austin
Thanks for your kind words, I really appreciate it.
And thanks for pointing me to the paper about Zero Knowledge Systems. I have to admit that I did not know much about your company and its products. However the following paragraph really resonated with me!
Those are exactly the same motivations behind our decision to call Clipperz a “zero knowledge web application”. You can even find similar sentences all over our website! “Don’t trust us, trust our code” is our mantra since the beginning, in 2005!
I’m sorry if some people think that you are affiliated with Clipperz, I’m definitely going to write a post trying to clarify this issue.
Thanks, Marco