Editing 1553: Public Key

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The title text refers to another feature of Public-key cryptography: In addition to assuring that certain messages can only be read by a specific key owner, it can also assure that certain messages could only have been ''written'' by a specific key owner, by "signing" it using the private key. Anyone can read a signed message, but readers with the public key can then verify that the owner of the private key wrote (or at least signed) the message, rather than someone pretending to be the owner. If Cueball published his private key, then anybody could sign any message as him, effectively impersonating him and also defeating the purpose of encryption.
 
The title text refers to another feature of Public-key cryptography: In addition to assuring that certain messages can only be read by a specific key owner, it can also assure that certain messages could only have been ''written'' by a specific key owner, by "signing" it using the private key. Anyone can read a signed message, but readers with the public key can then verify that the owner of the private key wrote (or at least signed) the message, rather than someone pretending to be the owner. If Cueball published his private key, then anybody could sign any message as him, effectively impersonating him and also defeating the purpose of encryption.
  
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{{w|Crowdsourcing}} is the term used for delegating work or tasks to a largely volunteered and uncontrolled set of people on the Internet.  It is similar in concept to {{w|outsourcing}}, in which work is delegated to an external source of labor, typically a company in a foreign country. Famous instances of crowdsourcing include {{w|reCAPTCHA}} (in which users both verify they are human and help digitize words and phrases in books that digitization software cannot understand) and [http://www.ideaconnection.com/open-innovation-success/Crowdsourcing-Down-on-the-Farm-00304.html a farm in the UK] in which ordinary Internet users make decisions about how the farm is run.   
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{{w|Crowdsourcing}} is the term used for delegating work or tasks to a largely volunteered and uncontrolled set of people on the Internet.  It is similar in concept to {{w|outsourcing}}, in which work is delegated to an external source of labor, typically a company in a foreign country. Famous instances of crowdsourcing include {{w|reCAPTCHA}} (in which users both verify they are human and help digitize words and phrases in books that digitization software cannot understand) and [http://www.ideaconnection.com/open-innovation-success/Crowdsourcing-Down-on-the-Farm-00304.html a farm in the UK] in which ordinary Internet users make decisions about how the farm is run.  In Cueball's case, delegating decisions about his contracts and spending to the Internet is not likely to be a wise choice.
  
 
When Cueball first created the key pair, he imagined it would be something he used from time to time, for reading messages only intended for him or for sending "signed" messages.  Since nothing of the sort happened, he imagines releasing both keys might cause some activity, and at this point he is happier with a "bad" outcome than with a boring one.
 
When Cueball first created the key pair, he imagined it would be something he used from time to time, for reading messages only intended for him or for sending "signed" messages.  Since nothing of the sort happened, he imagines releasing both keys might cause some activity, and at this point he is happier with a "bad" outcome than with a boring one.

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