Politech mailing list archives

FC: Tech didn't create, can't resolve privacy probs --Signal mag


From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Wed, 12 Jan 2000 00:23:53 -0500

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[I am testing a new beta of Eudora, version 4.3.0.29, so formatting may be screwy. Acronym alert: AFCEA is the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, a professional association representing US sigint/electronics/infosys/etc. military folks founded half a century ago. AFCEA publishes Signal magazine, which is influential inside that community. Alan Campen is respected by US government folks in the "cyberwar" world, though he seems rather milquetoast here. --Declan]

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http://www.us.net/signal/CurrentIssue/CurrentIssue.html

January 2000
©SIGNAL Magazine 2000
Technology Did Not Create and Cannot Resolve Privacy Dilemma

An absence of trust and common perceptions of privacy will pace security reforms.
By Col. Alan D. Campen, USAF (Ret.)

The exploding use of encryption in cyberspace has spawned a dilemma for policy makers. They must strive to balance citizens' rights to security and privacy with the needs of law enforcement and intelligence to police what a senior defense official terms a "lawless frontier," and others call the "World
    Wild Web."

A polarized and politicized debate over the control and sale of strong encryption has focused too much on arcane technology itself, rather than seeking consensus on what services and functions most need protecting. So, blending the disparate views of private and public security seems no closer today than when cryptography first crept out of the black world into the public consciousness. This arguably took place when then head of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) William Webster chose an AFCEA luncheon to launch a campaign for stronger federal controls over the use and export of cryptography.

Information security is an international issue, involving diverse cultures that do not hold a common view of personal privacy in cyberspace or of how it should be secured. All parties summon technology, regulation or laws to resolve what is fundamentally a social problem: a lack of trust--trust in one another,
    trust in rapidly changing technology, and trust in government.

Cryptography imposes new burdens on law enforcement and intelligence agencies, as all manner of miscreants are masking their deeds in cipher land. Former U.S. Representative Jack Brooks (D-TX) likened the conundrum confronting law officials to the sheriff who bemoaned that criminals had traded
    their horses for motor cars.

But, then as now, technology is neutral. Its dual edge serves both those who use and those who abuse information. Cryptography can provide limited and ephemeral solutions to some security risks, but only if
    the "settlers," in the Wild West sense, agree on the desired end state.

    [...snip... -DBM]

Congress has done little other than further polarize the cryptography issue by serving up contrasting bills that are intolerable to the opposition and unacceptable or patently ineffective in an international arena.

    [...snip... -DBM]

The "right" security balance--if such is a practicable goal--may not come from laws or top-down policies from government, but instead from a global infrastructure that just grew, with governments struggling simply to keep their van in sight. Citing the lack of technical and legal silver bullets, Paul Saffo writes in Business Week that "the way through this swamp is with a lot of small, comparatively weak solutions
    acting in concert."

Col. Alan D. Campen, USAF (Ret.), a contributing editor to SIGNAL, is a member of the adjunct faculty at the National Defense University School of Information Warfare and Strategy and contributing
    co-editor to the AFCEA book Cyberwar 2.0: Myths, Mysteries and Reality.

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