GAK -- Government Access to Keys GAP -- Government Access to Patients GAY -- Government Access to You At 3:03 PM 9/18/96, Lucky Green wrote:
On Wed, 18 Sep 1996, Jim Ray wrote:
I agree, and hope so. "Key Recovery," while not as Orwellian-sounding as "GAK," is a step on the path to honesty WRT the English language, though it's important to continually point out, as Tim did in his post, that *access* -- rather than just recovery -- is obviously what Mr. Freeh wants.
I'd count this likely change in terminology as a "cypherpunk victory," albeit a very small and certainly a very hard-fought one.
Nope. It is a Cypherpunk loss. The use of the term "key recovery" for GAK now fully obfuscates the distinction between accessing a backup copy by the legitimate owner (or his estate, employer, etc.) and GAK. Many PKIs will support the former type of key recovery. And for good reasons. Thanks to the brainwashers using the same term for GAK, it will now become impossible to tell from a basic description of a PKI if it supports GAK or not. Furthermore, those who oppose the latter type of key
Further, merely _asking_ your Designated Key Recovery Authority what its release policies are will of course place your name on the SPL (Suspicious Persons List). The FAA is an agency which will have nearly unlimited access to communications, under the Safe Skies and Anti-Child-Hurting Act. (Think about it--Clinton already signed a couple of Presidential Decision Directives and Congress passed various anti-terrorism acts which already give the Feds authority to wiretap and surveil more widely than before, at least legally. The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (or court) allows widespread surveillance of suspected foreign agents, without any notification of local courts or of the surveillance target. Won't these many provisions allowing wide surveillance already be used almost instantaneously to force PKIs to disclose keys of all those on the SPL? "If it saves just one child.") On a related note, I read an article yesterday about the proposed new Health Data Base, with all encounters with any medical institution or any health care provider of any sort being cross-linked and cross-referenced. The privacy concerns are supposedly handled by having "security tickets" for various hospital officials, researchers (!!), insurance companies, and law enforcement. (I put the "!!" next to the "researchers" because I don't recall releasing my medical and dietary history to any so-called "researchers." While I have no doubt that many "data miners" would like access to such national data bases, and that some potentially valuable information could be gleaned, I didn't release this information for Joe Gradstudent, Ph.D. candidate to sift through.) [Here are some more details: "Mission: one-stop medical records," Robert S. Boyd, San Jose Mercury News, 1996-09-17, p. 1. "Virtually unnoticed by the public, health-care experts are preparing to create an electronic "Master Patient Index," covering every American's medical records from cradle to grave...."We can't eliminate privacy concerns, but we can minimize them," said Richard Rubin, president of the Foundation for Health Care Quality in Seattle at a planning conference here last week....David Kilman, a computer expert at New Mexico's Los Alamos National Laboratory, where the idea for the master index was born....Only people with a 'security ticket'--such as doctors, insurers, scientific researchers or police with a proper warrant--are supposed to be able to see the clinical details....Kathy Ganz, director of the New Mexico Health Policy Commission, said, "Rights to privacy are genuine concerns, but they will need to be balanced against notions of common good.""] Pretty chilling, eh? As we all know, once such medical, dietary, and genetic data bases are established, the likelihood of privacy-invading use is near unity. If the NLETS data base can be routinely accessed (it's how I got Thomas Pynchon's home address, but that's another story), imagine who will hack this data base! The tabloids will love it, as they gain access to "medical records of the stars." Hackers will suck down as much as they can and then sell the records. And such data bases will be tied to True Names, of course, thus allowing the "freezing out" of anyone who is not a True Name, who has fallen behind in child support payments, who is late on his income taxes, and so on. It doesn't matter if cash is still allowed if one cannot interact with any health care person without a proper citizen-unit data base entry. They've got you tracked even if you pay in gold dust. (Putting on my Duncan cap--not to be confused with dunce cap--I wonder what will happen the first time someone dies because a hospital wouldn't treat someone without a proper citizen-unit health care card?) P.S. I fully understand that some doctors will treat patients for cash, without reporting to The Authorities, just as some doctors will treat gunshot wounds without the mandatory reporting of same to the police. This does not mean such doctors will be easy to find. The System, if allowed to win, will win. P.P.S. Many of the things we talk about on the list are being made possible--the good and the bad--by computerization. Obviously. Burnham's "Age of Privacy" (or maybe it was "The Age of Surveillance"--my copy is not handy) made this point many years ago. We are taking the mechanization and systematization procedures the Germans used so efficiently in the 1930s and modernizing them, with every movement and every transactions tracked and recorded in data bases. Now more than ever we need "credentials without identity" and digital cash. Chaum's article about "Transaction Systems to Make Big Brother Obsolete" is now more urgent than ever. --Tim May We got computers, we're tapping phone lines, I know that that ain't allowed. ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero W.A.S.T.E.: Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^1,257,787-1 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders aren't even speed bumps on the information superhighway."