Water Power (film)
Water Power is a pornographic film directed by Shaun Costello. Released circa 1976, it was loosely based on the real-life exploits of the Illinois "Enema bandit", Michael H. Kenyon, who administered forced enemas to female college students in the 1960s and 1970s. The film stars Jamie Gillis as a disturbed loner. In preparing for his role, Gillis reportedly asked to be flown to Illinois to interview the man his character was based upon (his request was denied).
Water Power | |
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Theatrical poster | |
Directed by | Shaun Costello |
Produced by | Shaun Costello |
Screenplay by | Shaun Costello |
Music by | Alvar Stugard |
Cinematography | Bill Markle |
Edited by | Shaun Costello |
Distributed by | Star Distributors |
Release date |
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Running time | 84 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $18,000 |
Cast
- Jamie Gillis as Burt
- John Buco as Jack Gallagher
- C.J. Laing as Irena Murray
- Eric Edwards as The Doctor
- Marlene Willoughby as The Nurse
- Gloria Leonard as Hostess at the Garden of Eden
- Clea Carson as Stewardess
- Long Jeanne Silver as The Patient
- Crystal Sync as Barbara
- Philip Marlowe as Police Captain
- Susaye London as Ginger
- Barbara Belkin as Candy
- Craig Esposito as Police Station Cop with Typewriter
- Sharon Mitchell as Eve
- Sally O'Neil
- Shaun Costello as Police Station Cop/Man at Car Window
- Fred Keitel
- Leo Lovemore as Stewardess's Boyfriend
- Peter Christian
- Beverly Steig
- Roger Caine
gollark: Specifically, 22 bytes for the private key and 21 for the public key on ccecc.py and 25 and 32 on the actual ingame one.
gollark: <@!206233133228490752> Sorry to bother you, but keypairs generated by `ccecc.py` and the ECC library in use in potatOS appear to have different-length private and public keys, which is a problem.EDIT: okay, apparently it's because I've been accidentally using a *different* ECC thing from SMT or something, and it has these parameters instead:```---- Elliptic Curve Arithmetic---- About the Curve Itself-- Field Size: 192 bits-- Field Modulus (p): 65533 * 2^176 + 3-- Equation: x^2 + y^2 = 1 + 108 * x^2 * y^2-- Parameters: Edwards Curve with c = 1, and d = 108-- Curve Order (n): 4 * 1569203598118192102418711808268118358122924911136798015831-- Cofactor (h): 4-- Generator Order (q): 1569203598118192102418711808268118358122924911136798015831---- About the Curve's Security-- Current best attack security: 94.822 bits (Pollard's Rho)-- Rho Security: log2(0.884 * sqrt(q)) = 94.822-- Transfer Security? Yes: p ~= q; k > 20-- Field Discriminant Security? Yes: t = 67602300638727286331433024168; s = 2^2; |D| = 5134296629560551493299993292204775496868940529592107064435 > 2^100-- Rigidity? A little, the parameters are somewhat small.-- XZ/YZ Ladder Security? No: Single coordinate ladders are insecure, so they can't be used.-- Small Subgroup Security? Yes: Secret keys are calculated modulo 4q.-- Invalid Curve Security? Yes: Any point to be multiplied is checked beforehand.-- Invalid Curve Twist Security? No: The curve is not protected against single coordinate ladder attacks, so don't use them.-- Completeness? Yes: The curve is an Edwards Curve with non-square d and square a, so the curve is complete.-- Indistinguishability? No: The curve does not support indistinguishability maps.```so I might just have to ship *two* versions to keep compatibility with old signatures.
gollark: > 2. precompilation to lua bytecode and compressionThis was considered, but the furthest I went was having some programs compressed on disk.
gollark: > 1. multiple layers of sandboxing (a "system" layer that implements a few things, a "features" layer that implements most of potatOS's inter-sandboxing API and some features, a "process manager" layer which has inter-process separation and ways for processes to communicate, and a "BIOS" layer that implements features like PotatoBIOS)Seems impractical, although it probably *could* fix a lot of problems
gollark: There's a list.
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