============================================================================== ___ _ _____ ____ _____ _ / _ \| | | ____| _ \_ _| | Visit Your Member of Congress during the | |_| | | | _| | |_) || | | | Month of August - Help Support Privacy | _ | |___| |___| _ < | | |_| and Security on the Net!! |_| |_|_____|_____|_| \_\|_| (_) Posted July 29, 1997 Please forward where appropriate until September 2, 1997 This alert brought to you by The Voters Telecommunications Watch, the Center for Democracy and Technology, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, EFF-Austin Americans for Tax Reform, and Wired Magazine _____________________________________________________________________________ Table of Contents What's Happening Right Now What You Can Do To Help Privacy And Security On The Internet - Meet Your Member of Congress, Tell Them How You Feel Background On The Encryption Policy Issue and HR 695, the SAFE bill What's At Stake in this debate About This Alert _____________________________________________________________________________ LET YOUR VOICE BE HEARD... The government is demanding that you provide guaranteed law enforcement access to your private online communications and business transactions. Your Congressman will be heading home for the month of August. Now is a great time to let him or her know that privacy on the Internet is important to you. Please read the ALERT below and find out what you can do to help. ________________________________________________________________________ WHAT'S HAPPENING RIGHT NOW The FBI, CIA, NSA and other law enforcement agencies are pressuring Congress to pass legislation to force anyone who wants to protect their privacy on the Internet to use programs with built in "key recovery" features -- virtual back doors which would allow law enforcement (and anyone else sophisticated enough to find a weakness) access to your private communications. This effort by the Clinton Administration to force the domestic use of government approved "key recovery" encryption represents a very real threat to your privacy and security in the Information Age. Fortunately, a bill known as the "Security and Freedom Through Encryption Act" (HR 695) is making its way through the House of Representatives. The bill, known as SAFE, would help protect privacy and security on the Internet by: * Prohibiting the government from imposing key recovery or key escrow encryption inside the United States or abroad. * Allowing Americans the ability to use whatever form of encryption they choose. * Encouraging the widespread availability of strong, easy-to-use encryption technologies by relaxing cold war-era export restrictions. SAFE enjoys support from a bi-partisan majority of 250 Members of the House of Representatives, and has been endorsed by civil liberties and public interest groups from both sides of the political spectrum, as well as a broad cross section of the computer and communications industries. The SAFE bill has recently cleared two key House committees and is expected to be voted on by the full House of Representatives in September. As your Representatives in Congress head home for the August recess, now is a great time to let them know that the folks back home care about protecting privacy on the Internet. Please read the instructions below to find out what you can do to participate in "Meet Your Member Month," and join the fight to protect your right to privacy online. ________________________________________________________________________ WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW Between August 1 and September 2, Congress will be in recess and your Congressman will be in your area meeting with constituents at large town hall meetings and individual appointments. These meetings are a great opportunity to show them that the folks back home care about privacy on the Internet. If you can't make a meeting, consider sending a letter or making a phone call to your Congressman's home office. Whatever you can do to show your support for privacy and security on the Net will make a big difference when the issue is voted on by the full house in September. Instructions: 1. Visit http://www.crypto.com/member/ Simply enter your Zip Code to: * Find the name and contact information for your Representative * Sign up to join the Adopt Your Legislator Campaign; * Learn about your Congressman's voting record and positions on the encryption issue; * Tips on how to set up a meeting and contacting your Congressman; * Links to background information on the SAFE bill, and more. 2. Forward this ALERT to your fiends and colleagues. Urge them to join Adopt Your Legislator campaign at http://www.crypto.com/adopt/ Two years ago, the Internet user community responded in overwhelming numbers to the threat of censorship and joined together to defeat the Communications Decency Act. The ongoing debate over US encryption policy reform is no less important, and will determine the future of privacy and security in the Information Age. Now is the time to join the fight, before its too late. ________________________________________________________________________ BACKGROUND ON THE ENCRYPTION POLICY ISSUE Complete background information, including: * A down-to-earth explanation of why this debate is important to Internet users * Analysis and background on the issue * An analysis of the Risks of Key-Recovery by leading cryptographers * Text of the Administration draft legislation * Text of Congressional bills to reform US encryption policy, includig SAFE * Audio transcripts and written testimony from recent Congressional Hearings on encryption policy reform * And more! Are all available at http://www.crypto.com/ ________________________________________________________________________ WHAT'S AT STAKE Encryption technologies are the locks and keys of the Information age, enabling individuals and businesses to protect sensitive information as it is transmitted over the Internet. As more and more individuals and businesses come online, the need for strong, reliable, easy-to-use encryption technologies has become a critical issue to the health and viability of the Net. Current US encryption policy, which limits the strength of encryption products US companies can sell abroad, also limits the availability of strong, easy-to-use encryption technologies in the United States. US hardware and software manufacturers who wish to sell their products on the global market must either conform to US encryption export limits or produce two separate versions of the same product, a costly and complicated alternative. The export controls, which the NSA and FBI argue help to keep strong encryption out of the hands of foreign adversaries, are having the opposite effect. Strong encryption is available abroad, but because of the export limits and the confusion created by nearly four years of debate over US encryption policy, strong, easy-to-use privacy and security technologies are not widely available off the shelf or "on the net" here in the US. A recently discovered flaw in the security of the new digital telephone network exposed the worst aspects of the Administration's encryption policy. Because the designers needed to be able to export their products, the system's security was "dumbed down". Researchers subsequently discovered that it is quite easy to break the security of the system and intrude on what should be private conversations. This incident underscores the larger policy problem: US companies are at a competitive disadvantage in the global marketplace when competing against companies that do not have such hindrances. And now, for the first time in history, the Clinton Administration and members of the US Senate have proposed DOMESTIC RESTRICTIONS on the ability of Americans to protect their privacy and security online. All of us care about our national security, and no one wants to make it any easier for criminals and terrorists to commit criminal acts. But we must also recognize encryption technologies can aid law enforcement and protect national security by limiting the threat of industrial espionage and foreign spying, promote electronic commerce and protecting privacy. What's at stake in this debate is nothing less than the future of privacy and the fate of the Internet as a secure and trusted medium for commerce, education, and political discourse. For more information on this issue and the various legislative and administration proposals to reform US encryption policy, visit http://www.crytpo.com/ ________________________________________________________________________ ABOUT THIS ALERT This message was brought to you by the following Internet advocacy groups who have joined togther to educate Congress and the public about the importance of encryption policy reform: * the Center for Democracy and Technology -- http://www.cdt.org/ * the Voters Telecommunications Watch -- http://www.vtw.org/ * the Electronic Fronter Foundation -- http://www.eff.org/ * EFF-Austin -- http://www.eff-austin.org/ * Americans for Tax Reform -- http://www.atr.org * Wired Magazine -- http://www.wired.com/ For more information, visit http://www.crypto.com/about/ _____________________________________________________________________________ end alert 07.29.97 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ HOW TO REMOVE YOURSELF FROM CDT'S POLICY POST LIST: To unsubscribe to CDT's Policy Post list, send mail to policy-posts-request@cdt.org with a subject: unsubscribe policy-posts ----------------------------------------------------------------------------