At 01:46 PM 6/16/93 -0400, Perry E. Metzger wrote:
Torture, believe it or not, is a very effective way of police to get information. Our society bans it. Every mechanism that is useful is not acceptable.
Not to dilute your argument or anything (you know I agree with it), but the reading I've done on the history of the Fifth Amendment says that one of the reasons torture was eventually banned in Western countries (through mechanisms like the American Fifth Amendment) was the growing realization that it actually was NOT particularly effective. People would falsely confess to all sorts of crimes just to get the torture to stop. Consider how many confessed witches were burned in New England. One of the problematic things about encryption (as it's usually practiced now) is that it's relatively easy to tell if an encryption key is the right one or not. This makes it tempting to resort to torture (or a "contempt of court citation", in modern terms) to extract it from an unwilling defendant. That's why both steganography and "duress key" schemes will remain important for some time, even if the 5th amendment were to be held as applicable to compelling crypto keys. You could cry "torture", while the police would claim that they discovered the key by other means (or that you disclosed it "voluntarily") and it would be your word against theirs. Phil