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Did Mitt Romney Save His Soul? – The New Yorker

Mitt Romney and his family are gathered inside a budget hotel room. It is January, 2008, and the New Hampshire primary is just days away. Romney, a candidate for the Republican Presidential nomination, sits in a high-backed chair, clad in his usual armor: a navy-blue tie, a gleaming white shirt with cufflinks, and dress pants. His wife, Ann, is seated next to him; two of his sons and a daughter-in-law are arrayed around them. Romneys campaign is going poorly. He lost badly to Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, in the Iowa caucuses, and in New Hampshire he appears on track to lose again, this time to Senator John McCain. Maybe you just wait a few years? one of Romneys sons suggests. Romney seems to dismiss the possibility. When this is over, Ill have built a brand name, he says. People will know me. Theyll know what I stand for. He pauses. The flippin Mormon, he says, his face broadening into a half smile. There are some titters from his family, more deflated than amused. Later, the clan kneels on the floor to pray. Romney bows his head, his elbows resting on the chair. In her prayer, Ann thanks God for His blessings and says that the family desires only to serve Thee and to bring greater light to this earth.

This moment, captured in the 2014 documentary Mitt, encapsulates the enduring paradox of Mitt Romney. After serving as a moderate governor in Massachusetts, where his signature accomplishment was enacting universal health care, he went through an ideological and tonal makeover as he labored, during two failed Presidential campaigns, to navigate the rightward lurch of his party. He never shed the aspersion that he was a flip-flopper, a man lacking true conviction. During a Republican candidate forum in New Hampshire, in 2008, McCain turned to Romney and said, We disagree on a lot of issues, but I agree you are the candidate of change. On the hustings, Romney often came across as starched and stiff, like his crisply ironed dress shirts. Voters struggled to get a genuine sense of him. And yet his core has always been evident to those granted entre to his world. It was evident in that New Hampshire hotel room, and its evident throughout McKay Coppinss instructive new biography, Romney: A Reckoning, in which the politicians Mormon faith emerges as the substrate that nourishes all else in his life.

It is no accident that both Coppins and Greg Whiteley, the director of Mitt, are fellow-members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Coppins relies on dozens of interviews with Romney, as well as hundreds of pages of personal journals and private correspondence, to narrate Romneys interior journey as his ambitions and principles increasingly come into conflict. The result is a rare feat in modern-day political reporting: an account in which the subject engages in actual introspection. Romney spent years contorting himself for the hard-right elements in his party, eventually becoming the G.O.P.s standard-bearer during the 2012 election. In interviews, he spoke about the rationalizations hed made over the years and his capacity for self-justification, as Coppins puts it. But when Donald Trump won the Presidencythe moment of reckoning in the books titleRomney decided to fling himself into the fray. The forces of populism and outrage had already overtaken the Republican Party. The question was whether Romney could find redemption for himself.

The Epistle of James admonishes believers to be doers of the word, not just hearers. Without works, the epistle explains, faith is empty. The manner in which faith becomes works in politics, however, can be like an intricate knot, with many folds. Black evangelicals and white evangelicals share theological beliefs but diverge on their partisan affiliations. There is a rich social-justice tradition in Roman Catholicism, yet many conservative Catholics are foot soldiers of the right. Religion offers a compass but not a map. Universal health care? Balancing the budget? Protecting the border? The Scriptures and other religious texts are silent. One can identify broad principlesand sometimes even these are contradictorybut specific policies must emerge from human wisdom and processes.

Romneys process came from another deeply rooted identity: the data-driven businessman. In the nineteen-seventies, after graduating with joint M.B.A. and law degrees from Harvard, Romney began working in the burgeoning field of management consulting. He eventually landed at Bain & Company, where he quickly became a star. Bains leaders put him in charge of a new investment firm, Bain Capital, which identified ailing companies to invest in, overhauled them from within, then sold them for profit. The firm made Romney fabulously wealthy and helped to launch his political career. It also shaped his governing in Massachusetts, where he saw himself primarily as a partisan of pragmatism, not an ideologue. His approach to the health-care issue was illustrative. I dont look and say, Whats the conservative point of view on this? he told Coppins. I ask, What do I think is the right answer to a particular problem? When Romney began considering a run for the Presidency, pitching himself to conservative audiences, he had a new set of data points to consider. He remade himself into a crusader on social issues; a lifelong hunter, even though he had gone hunting only twice in his life; and a zealot on illegal immigration. Romney thought little about the authenticity of his new persona. It was a matter of simple math, Coppins writes.

Even as Romney was remaking himself on the stump, his faith remained an abiding presence. Evangelical Christians, a crucial voting bloc in Republican primaries, consider Mormonism to be a heresy. Some of Romneys supporters suggested that he distance himself from his faith. Romney declined. According to Coppins, it was perhaps the only part of his life that he refused to compromise on. He prayed on buses and before debates, read the Scriptures daily, and avoided scheduling campaign events on the Sabbath. Romney even arranged for the Churchs Boston temple to hold a late-night session for him and his family, an unusual accommodation. Romney craved the closeness to God he experienced during those sacred worship ceremonies, Coppins writes. Swapping his presidential-candidate costume for the simple white clothing of the temple that night, he felt fully, truly like himself.

Perhaps the most stirring moment in Romneys campaign came on December 6, 2007, when Romney decided to address concerns about his faith directly, in a speech at the George H. W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum, in College Station, Texas. I believe in my Mormon faith and I endeavor to live by it, he said. Some believe that such a confession of my faith will sink my candidacy. If they are right, so be it. But I think they underestimate the American people. Americans do not respect believers of convenience. Americans tire of those who would jettison their beliefs, even to gain the world. Two months later, Romneys campaign was over.

When it came time to decide whether to enter the 2012 Presidential campaign, Romney was conflicted. The press generally considered him the Republican front-runner, but most of his family opposed another bid. The right was undergoing a transformation. The Obama Presidency had helped to incite the anti-establishment Tea Party movement, and the G.O.P.s restive, grievance-fuelled grass roots didnt seem particularly hospitable to a patrician figure like Romney. He was also resolved to avoid the contortions of 2008. Of course, I would want to win, but feeling that I have been true to what I believe is even more important, Romney wrote in an e-mail to advisers.

The campaign decided to relentlessly focus on the economy; Romney had always been most comfortable making his case as a turnaround specialist. But, in Coppinss telling, Romneys advisers continued to nudge him to tend to the far right. His rhetoric on immigration verged on nativist; during one Republican debate, he suggested self-deportation for undocumented immigrants. He also sought the endorsement of Trump, who had spent months stoking baseless conspiracy theories about Obamas birthplace. Romney captured the nomination but was trounced by Obama in the election. That night, when one of his advisers raised the prospect of yet another campaign, he insisted, My time on the stage is over, guys.

Romney first encounters Donald Trump in the fourth chapter of Coppinss book. It is 1995, and Trump has invited Romney to spend the weekend at his extravagant estate at Mar-a-Lago. According to Coppins, Romney found the experience deeply weird, and figured he would never see Trump again. The magnates rise in the polls, during the 2016 nominating contest, befuddled him. He and Ann watched Trumps rallies, where the spectre of violence seemed omnipresent. Those people werent at our events, Ann said. When it became clear that Trump might win the Republican nomination, Romney scrambled to stop him, delivering a speech denouncing him as a phony, a fraud, and later working behind the scenes to send the nomination to the convention. He had predicted to friends that Trump would win the election. Even so, he was unprepared when it happened.

Yet Romneys resistance to Trump did not proceed in a straight line. He famously flirted with joining the Trump Administration as Secretary of State. When a photo of the two men meeting over dinner at Jean-Georges, the lavish restaurant inside the Trump International Hotel and Tower in New York, went viral, the flip-flopper memes returned. In the orange-and-yellow-hued image, Trump appears to be almost cackling; Romney looks chagrined, his eyebrows raised and his lips drawn together. He later insisted to Coppins that his expression had nothing to do with Trump. It had to do with the awkwardness of being in a public restaurant and cameras coming and taking pictures, he said. After the dinner, he told reporters that he had increasing hope that president-elect Trump is the very man who can lead us to a better future. According to Coppins, Trump called Romney and told him that he needed to come out with a stronger statement: Trump was terrific and would be a great president. Romney could suffer the pretense no longer. Maybe after so many years of allowing the petty indignities and moral compromises to pile up, he had finally reached his limit, Coppins writes.

Coppins details Romneys growing alarm during Trumps first few months in office: the travel ban; the exodus from the State Department; the statement, after a white-nationalist rally in Charlottesville, that there were very fine people on both sides. At one point, Romney jotted down a line from William Butler Yeatss poem The Second Coming, written after the First World War: The best lack all conviction, while the worst / Are full of passionate intensity. This was the new Republican Party, in Romneys mind. In the fall of 2017, he decided to return to politics, running for a Senate seat in Utah. Money is motivating when you dont have it and when you are young, he wrote in his journal. A purpose greater than self is what motivates now. That purpose was to become a counterweight to Trump.

In the Senate, Romney seemed to grow in stature and fortitude. Gone was the caution that had paralyzed him during his Presidential bids. He became one of the few in his party willing to criticize Trumps excesses. On December 18, 2019, the House voted to impeach the President over allegations that hed withheld military aid from Ukraine in order to pressure its President, Volodymyr Zelensky, into launching investigations that would benefit Trump politically. Preparing for the Senate trial, Romney studied Federalist No. 65, in which Alexander Hamilton argues that the Senate is the only institution with sufficient independence to handle a trial with necessary impartiality. The trial lasted just five days.

Romney was frustrated by his Republican colleagues. How unlike a real jury is our caucus? he wrote in his journal. One evening, after the Senate had recessed, Romney returned to his office, knelt on the floor, and prayed. Later, he listed in his journal the potential consequences of voting to convict Trump: he would be ostracized in the Senate; Fox News would tear into him, stoking up the crazies; the President would attack him mercilessly, or use the government to hurt his sons; Romney might need to move from Utah. That night, at his town house in Washington, he slept poorly, waking before dawn to review the case again. In his office, he convened his staff and told them that he had reached a verdict.

On February 5, 2020, Romney stood at the lectern in the Senate chamber to explain his decision to become the first senator in American history to vote to remove a President from his own party. As a Senator-juror, I swore an oath, before God, to exercise impartial justice, he said. I am profoundly religious. My faith is at the heart of who I am. Here, Romney paused for several seconds, his eyes downcast, seemingly overcome. I take an oath before God as enormously consequential, he went on. Disregarding that oath for a partisan end, he said, would expose his character to the censure of my own conscience. He acknowledged that many in his party and his state would disagree with the decision. He also acknowledged that his vote would not remove Trump from office. I will tell my children and their children that I did my duty to the best of my ability, he said, believing that my country expected it of me.

After the speech, Romney reached Ann by phone. She described watching his address as a spiritual experience. In the days that followed, as vitriol rained down on Romney, he thought of Parley Parker Pratt, an early Mormon missionary and a distant ancestor, who had toiled for months in New York City without winning any converts, but who one day received a vision of assurance from the Lordthat his labor had not been in vain, that his sacrifice had been accepted. Romney wrote in his journal that a huge weight had been lifted, that the anxiety is gone.

In the spring of 2021, Coppins and Romney began meeting weekly, in secret, for interviews that sometimes went on for hours. Several months had passed since the January 6th insurrection, and Coppins writes that Romney often sounded like a spy behind enemy lines. Romney confided that much of his party really doesnt believe in the Constitution. He was mulling difficult questions, including his own culpability in what had become of the G.O.P.: Was the rot on the right new, or was it something very old just now bubbling to the surface? And what role had the members of the mainstream establishmentpeople like him, the reasonable Republicansplayed in allowing that rot to fester?

Last month, Romney announced, at the age of seventy-six, that he would not seek relection in the Senate. He cited his age in his decision, declaring that it was time for a new generation of leaders. According to Coppins, Romney has had recurring premonitions of his death. His church teaches him that, one day, he will stand before God and face an accounting, for his thoughts, words, and works. He will have to explain his time in politicsthe positions he took, the compromises he made, where he chose to stand firm. If Romney is at a loss, he might bring along Coppinss record of his reckoning.

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Did Mitt Romney Save His Soul? - The New Yorker

Chicago faces a migrant crisis as it prepares to host the 2024 Democratic National Convention – POLITICO – POLITICO

Officials are also incorporating concerns over migrants into their security planning for the convention. And the governors office has begun a public pleading and shaming campaign with the Biden administration to do more to stem migrant flows to the border and open up resources for states and municipalities to deal with migrant buses being sent to them.

Speaking to reporters recently, Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker said he is confident that local officials will be able to handle whatever spate of migrants arrive in the leadup to the convention as long as they get sufficient federal support.

We will manage it but we need to have the city and the state working together. We need the federal government at the table here, he said during a discussion put on by the University of Chicagos Institute of Politics.

Pritzker recently told CBS Face the Nation that someone needs to work in Texas with these border politicians to have them stop sending people only to blue cities and blue states.

That convention planners are having to strategize around a flow of migrants at all shows the degree to which migrants have become both a headache for Democrats in major cities and a national political issue.

Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnsons office said that its trying to get a handle on the migrant situation now so it wont be a problem when the Democratic Partys luminaries gather at the United Center to formally nominate a presidential nominee.

The administration sent a delegation to Texas border towns last week to better understand the process of moving migrants across the country.

I dont know if its a concern or just an additional challenge that we know that were going to have to deal with, Johnsons chief of staff Richard Guidice told POLITICO. He is tasked with helping to manage the behind-the-scenes logistical planning for the convention.

Optically you certainly want to show Chicago in its best light, said Guidice. As part of the process, you identify all things that potentially could happen in any large scale event.

The challenge for Chicago is trying to find inhabitable space. It costs money to remove asbestos in empty structures and make them livable, for example. Operations to get asylum-seekers off the floors of the airport and police stations before Chicagos notoriously frigid winter is challenging, too. And neither the city nor the state budgets have the surpluses needed.

Its expensive, said Jason Lee, the mayors chief adviser. But there is potentially a pathway to being able to manage the influx.

The confluence of incoming migrants just as the convention is revving up could also be a major security issue as well, added Lee. Extra bodies around creates a headache for security officials who need clear pathways for high-profile individuals.

Officials with the convention host committee in Chicago and the Democratic National Convention Committee largely dismissed the idea that the bussing of migrants could cause some sort of disruption or embarrassment.

The convention team supports the efforts of city and state officials working around the clock to ensure that migrants being sent to Chicago are treated with the dignity and respect that all human beings deserve, the convention planners said in a joint statement.

The party has sought to position itself as welcoming of immigrants. And Chicago, run by Democratic officials, also wants to be a welcoming city inside a welcoming state.

But Republicans have argued that such posturing is largely bluster and that, presented with the migrant numbers they face on a daily basis, blue states would change their tune. Chicago has seen more than 18,000 asylum seekers since Texas Gov. Greg Abbott started sending buses to Chicago in August 2022, according to Johnsons administration.

And frustration is mounting. Pritzker blamed Republican governors for sending people to our state like cargo in a dehumanizing attempt to score political points. It was part of a letter the Democratic governor wrote to President Joe Biden that called for more help in managing asylum seekers coming to Chicago.

His comment was a jab at Abbott, who has sent migrants to Chicago as well as New York City and Washington, D.C., over the past year.

Andrew Mahaleris, a spokesperson for Abbott, acknowledged that Texas has increased the number of migrants being sent to Illinois and other states. Texas has ramped up our busing mission to help our local partners in Eagle Pass and other border towns, and we are prepared to provide as many buses as necessary to provide relief to our overrun and overwhelmed border communities, he said in a statement to POLITICO.

Other cities including Denver and New York are sending asylum seekers to Illinois, too, often because the new arrivals request to go there.

After sending his letter, Pritzker said he got a quick response from White House officials. Representatives from the Department of Homeland Security, which is managing the humanitarian effort, visited Chicago recently to see first-hand the situation that has migrants sleeping on the floors of police stations and Chicago OHare International Airport where Democratic delegates will be arriving when they come for the convention next year.

The DHS team is working with Chicago officials to assess the current migrant situation and identify ways that the city and the federal government can improve efficiencies and maximize resources, said a person who didnt have authority to be named.

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Chicago faces a migrant crisis as it prepares to host the 2024 Democratic National Convention - POLITICO - POLITICO

Legislators in Albany need to tackle the migrant crisis – liherald.com

By Ed Ra

New York City is home to many famous landmarks and attractions, such as Times Square, Wall Street and New York-style pizza. Yet what people associate with New York today is the migrant crisis, a growing and complex problem with statewide consequences. Since the spring of 2022, more than 116,100 migrants have flooded into the state. The lack of planning by Gov. Kathy Hochul and New York City Mayor Eric Adams has resulted in a severe humanitarian crisis and a strain on public resources. Our local communities are shouldering the burden of providing essential services such as health care, education and social services to migrants and their families, stretching their resources thin. This crisis isnt just a federal issue; it affects every corner of our state. From Long Island to Buffalo, from the five boroughs to the North Country, its consequences are felt by our citizens, our communities and our local governments. The humanitarian challenges and security concerns stemming from the influx of migrants at our borders and throughout our state demand immediate and comprehensive attention. We must convene a special session of the State Legislature to address this crisis, and act now to protect the interests of our state and its residents. Protecting our communities and upholding the principles of compassion and humanitarianism are not mutually exclusive. Unfortunately, neither of these standards is currently being met. The Assemblys Republican conference has been calling for these actions for several months, but has been met with silence. Even more troublesome, federal and state leaders continue to dance around the problem with backward approaches such as offering nearly a half-million Venezuelan migrants legal status and work permits. We dont want immigrants sitting idly, but there must be a process in place to ensure that public safety and resources are maintained.

Ed Ra, who represents the 19th Assembly District, is the ranking Republican on the Assembly Ways & Means Committee.

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Legislators in Albany need to tackle the migrant crisis - liherald.com

Hochul extends state of emergency over migrant situtation – Spectrum News

Gov. Kathy Hochul once again extended an executive order that declares a state of emergency in response to the arrival of migrants, her office said Monday.

According to the governor, the order will give the state more flexibility to procure the resources for local municipalities to support asylum seekers and provide humanitarian aid.It also continues to allow New York state to mobilize members of the National Guard, which currently provide logistical and operational support at shelter sites.

While New York continues to respond to the asylum seeker crisis, Im extending our State of Emergency to ensure communities have the resources needed to support our ongoing efforts, Hochul said in a statement. My administration remains committed to ensuring state and local officials have all of the support they need to address this unprecedented humanitarian crisis."

The executive order on migrants was issued by Hochul on May 11 and reissued in August. This extension runs through Nov. 21.

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Hochul extends state of emergency over migrant situtation - Spectrum News

Crack a 1999 NSA Cryptography Standard and Win a Bounty – The New Stack

Filippo Valsorda describes it as a call to arms to help fill in a page of cryptographic history.

The former Cloudflare/Golang cryptographer has announced a $12,288 bounty for finding the seeds of five elliptic curves produced by the NSA in 1999 that have since become an industry standard. Valsorda calls them the elliptic curves that power much of modern cryptography, noting that theyre used, among other things, for the certificates securing millions of websites. Theyve been augmented over the decades with even more utility-enhancing formulas and interfaces.

As Valsorda puts it, Theyre a big deal.

But was there a common English phrase used to create this foundational sequence? Valsorda says its creator left behind a cryptographic mystery, some conspiracy theories, and an historical password cracking challenge. And hes calling on the larger internet community to try to solve it.

Or as Valsorda put it on the social networking service formerly known as Twitter, Do you have a bunch of GPUs and passphrase brute-forcing experience? Crack the NSAs five SHA-1 hashes at the heart of NISTs elliptic curves, solve a cryptographic mystery, and earn $8k (tripled if donated to charity).

You can win half the bounty walking away with $6,144 just by correctly submitting one of the five seeds, according to Valsordas site. (Since Even one would make history.) The other half of the bounty goes to whoever submits all five.

And Valsorda will triple payout amounts if the winner names a U.S. 501(c)(3) charity to receive the money. (We reserve the right to veto charity choices dramatically incompatible with our values, but we wont be jerks about it.)

Thats a $18,432 donation for finding just one of the seeds and a $36,864 donation for finding all five. (Valsorda is putting up some of the money himself aided by generous matchers)

But more importantly? Its a chance to write yourself into the history of cryptography itself

It all started in September, when Steve Weis, who is both a cryptographer and a principal software engineer at Databricks, published a thought-provoking blog post. Weis notes the 1999 parameters are the most widely used elliptic curve cryptography standard (adopted in 2000 by the U.S. Department of Commerces official National Institute of Standards and Technology.)

But Revelations of NSA interference in cryptographic standards like Dual_EC_DRBG led to speculation of whether the NIST curve seeds could have been intentionally chosen with a weakness or backdoor known only to the NSA. The blog post notes at least one person raising this suspicion in a 1999 post to a Usenet discussion group about cryptography, and a more recent paper published in 2015 by math professors Neal Koblitz and Alfred Menezes.

Professor Menezes told Weis hed been given the seeds as early as 1997 by long-time NSA employee Jerry Solinas (known for authoring several cryptography standards). But Weis adds Unfortunately, Dr. Solinas died in early 2023 without publicly saying how the curve seeds were generated. Yet Weis has uncovered some tantalizing clues. One of Solinass contemporaries said that around 2013, Solinas had confided that the seed was something like

SEED = SHA1(Jerry deserves a raise.)

But Solinas had revealed even more, suggesting that the seed mightve been lost even to Solinas himself. After he did the work, his machine was replaced or upgraded, and the actual phrase that he used was lost, Weis writes. When the controversy first came up, Jerry tried every phrase that he could think of that was similar to this, but none matched.

Weis adds that after publishing his blog post, a fourth person came forward saying that in 2013, Dr. Solinas recalled to them that the seed phrase had two names in it, like Give Alice and Bob a raise.' Another source claimed Solinas told them the phrase included an arbitrary number that changed with each block of text encrypted. Since then Weis has even tried requesting any documentation under the Freedom of Information Act. (NIST claimed they had no documentation and the NSA ceased responding.)

This leaves what Weis calls a long shot chance: trying to brute force guess short English phrases and see if any collide with a seed from the specifications.

And of course, this inspired Valsorda

Weis succinctly summarizes whats at stake here. Whenever a controversy about the NSA arises among the cryptographic community, it resurfaces a question that has been open for 25 years: How were the NIST ECDSA curve parameters generated?

Valsorda is skeptical that the NSA repeated its interference the way theyd done with the Dual_EC_DRBG standard (noting that earlier standards compromised design immediately stuck out like a sore thumb and library authors had to be paid to implement it.) Valsordas blog post points out that that incident suggests the NSA is kinda bad at backdoors, not magical. But he believes that because of the speculation, some fear, uncertainty, and doubt persists around the otherwise pretty good NIST curves that would be good to clear up

The effort is continuing. On Oct. 8 Valsorda updated the post to include a link to a massive list of nearly 12,000 potential target hashes that cover 99% of the probability space for each of the prime order curve seeds. Valsorda wrote on Mastodon that the list was based on the hypothesis that maybe instead of increasing a counter, the seed/hash itself was increased until a valid one was found.

And of course, theres been a lively discussion on Valsordas Mastodon feed.

@jerry absolutely deserves a raise.

But mixed in with the comical banter, Valsorda has answered some important questions like the user who asked For the uninformed, the seeds being found wont impact the security of using these curves at all?

Valsordas answer? Nope, if anything it would make them more trustworthy, although most cryptographers I know dont think thats necessary.

Valsorda also explained how standardizing on these curves allowed more speedy and accurate encryption than self-generated curves and lets us write well optimized, safer implementations. While you could try generating your own original encryption parameters, the security margin you get from forcing an attacker to crack a few thousand parameters instead of one is just a dozen bits.

And so back on his personal blog, Valsorda is now cheering on an unseen internet community who may finally solve this long-standing mystery. We dont actually care how you find the seeds, Valsorda wrote. It can be brute forcing, clever guessing, sleuth work tracking down NSA employees (dont get arrested), or even recovering that old backup of when you used to work at NIST. If you dont want us to, we wont ask questions.

May the hashrate be ever in your favor, and lets fill out a page of cryptographic history.

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Crack a 1999 NSA Cryptography Standard and Win a Bounty - The New Stack