Interesting People mailing list archives

IP: The Crypto Restriction Lobby's new friend


From: Dave Farber <farber () cis upenn edu>
Date: Sun, 04 Jul 1999 09:59:07 -0400



Date: Fri, 02 Jul 1999 12:58:46 -0400
To: politech () vorlon mit edu
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>

There seems to be some confusion about what happened with privacy and the
banking bill. The sequence of events went as follows:
1. Paul/Barr and Markey submit very different proposals to Rules committee
2. Rules says Paul/Barr may be introduced as amendment to bill on House floor
but rejects Markey as not germane
3. The Paul/Barr amendment, as I wrote, fails in 129-299 vote late yesterday
4. GOP leaders propose amendment to regulate some bank third-party data
sharing
practices
5. It is attached to banking bill 427-1, with Ron Paul as sole dissenter
6. Entire banking bill, HR10, passes House 343-83.

************

The New York Post
June 28, 1999, Monday
Pg. 033

BILL GATES VS. THE DRUG WAR?
By Robert D. Novak

    THE Drug Enforcement Administration's (DEA) Thomas A. Constantine, 
a career cop, recently complained to Microsoft's Bill Gates, the 
world's richest man, that encryption devices sold by his company and 
used by international drug lords are so powerful that they cannot be 
deciphered by law enforcement. "Well," replied Gates, "you've got to 
get bigger computers."

    That is reminiscent of Marie Antoinette's "Let them eat cake!" 
advice for bread-less French peasants. As Gates knows, no computer is 
big enough to break Microsoft's new codes. But the Senate and House 
Commerce committees last week (unreported in the major daily press) 
approved bills to end export controls over encryption systems to 
which law enforcement and national security officials have no access. 
That would give the big drug cartels, now based in Mexico, worry-free 
communications with their U.S. operatives. 

    Constantine and FBI Director Louis J. Freeh are losing their 
battle to be able to decipher criminal communications under court 
order. High-tech campaign money is winning out. The Republican 
Congress has adopted Gates as its poster boy. Sen. John McCain, 
seeking the GOP presidential nomination, changed sides three months 
ago and last week guided anti-control legislation out of the Commerce 
Committee, which he heads. The normally loquacious President Clinton 
is silent, as Vice President Al Gore courts Silicon Valley in quest 
of the presidency.

    Freeh and Constantine are desperate. Wiretapping is law 
enforcement's biggest weapon, authorized by court order 1,329 times 
nationwide in 1998 - 72 percent in drug cases. No longer able to 
infiltrate the narcotics apparatus, the DEA depends on eavesdropping.

    But intercepted conversations now are interrupted by a steady 
buzz, signifying that intelligible conversation is encrypted. What 
experts call "level-one encryption" could be decoded, but the drug 
lords have turned to "level two."

[...]



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