Anonymous scripsit
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That being said let it be known that I consider the following as a "Cypherpunk victory."
1. Complete freedom of technology, particularly encryption technology, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ regulated only by market forces. This implies the lack of import/export restrictions, and a complete absence of projects designed to limit ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ technology, or to standardize it for nefarious ends like Clipper. ^^^^^^^^^^
I think you overgeneralize. No limits on toxic waste incinerators, low-mileage automobiles, unsafe medical devices, genetically tampered food, or nuclear reactors? "Market forces" in such cases positively encourage dangerous technology (e.g. incinerators are superficially cheap) or are markedby their inability to distinguish the good from the crap (e.g. medical devices).
It is you who have overgeneralized. No limits on technology certainly does not mean allowing low tech and poor incinerators to continue operating. The fact that low mileage cars still drive is a result of poor markets than anything else (baring colletables). How would you argue that some low mileage cars are the result of a no limitations on technology policy? Unsafe medical devices? I would say this is a problem with testing technology, not a lack of limitation on technological advance. Genetically tampered food? Why is this dangerous? Have any evidence? Most of the livestock/crops you eat today have been altered in one way or another, be it selective breeding, low tech botanical splicing, or genetic/hormonal therapy. You see this as a regression? You never make the distinction between regulation designed to promote and regulation designed to deter technological advance. Clipper is clearly designed to set a standard and defuse the market which has advanced strong cryptography. It is designed to WEAKEN technology, make it counter-productive to it's goal (in the case of cryptography, security against all attackers). What lack of regulation does this? Market forces are lathargic, sometimes they need a boost. I propose this boost be accomplished with motivators like tax breaks, market assisters and privatization. When Germany wanted to promote environmentally sound packaging and manufacture, they started a program called Gruun Punkt (The Green Point) They allow manufactures to place the green point sticker on their products provided they meet XYZ specifications. This is the way to promote technological advance, NOT by over regulation, centralization, collectivization and stagnation. The pattern of the administration crippling markets because it is afraid it cannot keep pace is obnoxious. If we were to all keep pace with the Federal Government, we'd all still be wearing loin cloths. Anyone who thinks the Federal Government is the driving force behind the majority of technological advancement (aside the space program and military hardware) needs to take a good look.
We agree about crypto, but not all tech is crypto. :)
I'm not even sure we agree about crypto, considering you don't seem to understand, or at least express the difference between Crypto regulation and emissions testing.
======================================================================= Crim Tideson Privacy is its own justification. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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