
At 3:26 AM -0700 7/15/96, Arun Mehta wrote:
At 10:17 14/07/96 -0700, David Sternlight wrote:
At 7:05 AM -0700 7/13/96, Deranged Mutant wrote:
On 12 Jul 96 at 18:23, Bob Palacios posted:
* Called for the liberalization of export controls provided computer users participate in a "global key management infrastructure" designed to make personal encryption keys accessible to law enforcement.
This is particularly problematic...
Your best shot would be to make sure the part about the system being voluntary was hard-wired into any legislation or rule-making. Unless and until ITAR is modified by Congress, the USG has what Mark Twain called "the calm confidence of a Christian with four aces" on this matter.
International agreement on this issue won't happen this century. People don't understand the problem (or why it needs regulation), are suspicious of the US and its motives -- in any case international negotiations take forever.
That's certainly one view. Another is that if you watch the precursors of legislation, then actions in the Netherlands, the UK, and in the European Parliament suggest that an independent European escrow initiative might happen within a year. When it does it will be a trivial matter to harmonize it with some US offering. The mills in various countries are grinding too coincidentally for my taste. Given the glacial pace with which standard integrated crypto has appeared on the Internet, with Navigator only going to offer the final link--encrypted e-mail--later this year, the above timing isn't necessarily one which will be left behind by independent Internet developments. And given the glacial pace of PGP movement toward integrated internet standard products, it hasn't a hope of beating the above timing to the punch. David