| S. Low, N. F. Maxemchuk, and S. Paul. Anonymous credit cards and its collusion analysis. IEEE Transactions on Networking, Dec. 1996. |
....the original purchase. Another approach might be to pirate copies in a jurisdiction with lax enforcement. In addition, legitimate consumers may have privacy concerns in associating themselves with specific software purchases. Customers may seek to mask purchases via cash or anonymous transactions [56]. If anonymity becomes common in e commerce, watermarks will do little to discourage pirates. Code Partitioning. A pirate with access to a bus analyzer and a probe can contrive to harvest any software that is visible in ordinary RAM, even if it is only visible immediately prior to execution. ....
S. Low, N. F. Maxemchuk, and S. Paul. Anonymous credit cards and its collusion analysis. IEEE Transactions on Networking, Dec. 1996.
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S. Low, N. F. Maxemchuk, S. Paul, "The Anonymous Credit Card and Its Collusion Analysis," Submitted to IEEE Trans. on Networking.
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S. Low, N. F. Maxemchuk, S. Paul, "Anonymous Credit Cards and Its Collusion Analysis," IEEE Trans. on Networking, dec. 1996, vol. 4, no.6, pp 809-816.
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S. Low, N. F. Maxemchuk, S. Paul, "The Anonymous Credit Card and Its Collusion Analysis," Submitted to IEEE Trans. on Networking.
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Steven H. Low, Nicholas F. Maxemchuk, and Sanjoy Paul. Anonymous credit cards and its collusion analysis. Technical report, ATT Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, NJ 07974, October 1994.
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