Interesting People mailing list archives
Re: Wiretap Article
From: David Farber <farber () central cis upenn edu>
Date: Mon, 27 Sep 1993 09:56:46 -0400
Posted-Date: Mon, 27 Sep 93 08:39:11 -0400 Date: Mon, 27 Sep 93 08:39:11 -0400 From: shap () viper cis upenn edu (Jonathan Shapiro) To: denning () cs cosc georgetown edu Cc: farber () linc cis upenn edu Subject: Re: Wiretap Article [Dave: Please redistribute.] Dorothy: Recently you sent out a piece of mail providing information on wiretap laws in connection with the Clipper chip. I wish to draw to your attention that the laws concerning wiretapping are largely irrelevant to the issue at hand, and why. Let us assume that the wiretap laws as they stand are sound (I do not believe this, but it doesn't matter). Let us ignore the fact that the new Attorney General was recently asked to sign a large pile of blank warrants in the interests of "National Security," and rightly went through the roof. Let us further imagine that the system is Good, and that the likes likes of McCarthy, J. Edgar Hoover, Richard M. Nixon, G. Gordon Liddy, and Ollie North are gone forever. In fact, let's go so far as to ignore that as the Federal Government grows and grows it is a _necessary_ consequence that we will encounter more such people. Let us ignore the abridgements of the First Amendment rights of encryption technologists during the '60s and '70s by the NSA, and discount their bleatings as the reactions of alarmists. Finally, let us imagine that the timing of the munitions investigation into Pretty Good Privacy is entirely accidental, and that this does not amount to an attempt to make the only viable alternative encryption technology illegal de facto. As a personal matter, I'm inclined to grant this point because the agencies involved are too disorganized to have successfully coordinated. Government is _not_ intrinsically evil. It _is_ intrinsically amoral. The propriety of a government is only as sound as its weakest member in a position of relevant power. We can sometimes catch the offenders and subject them to due process, but doing so does not compensate their victims for their abuses. To be sure, this term's politicos are swearing themselves stupid promising that other encryption technologies will not be outlawed. By them. Of course, the policies change from term to term, and the guarantees of this group of people are therefore irrelevant to the long term. The question, you see, is not _whether_ the Clipper technology will be abused, but _how_soon_. The lessons of history, Ms. Denning, are best not forgotten. Jonathan S. Shapiro Synergistic Computing Associates
Current thread:
- Wiretap Article David Farber (Sep 27)
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- Re: Wiretap Article David Farber (Sep 27)