On 6/25/02 4:15 AM, "Dan Geer" <geer@TheWorld.com> wrote:
Over the last six months, I'd discovered that Carl Ellison (Intel), Joan Feigenbaum (Yale) and I agreed on at least one thing: that the problem statements for "privacy" and for "digital rights management" were identical, viz., "controlled release of information is yours at a distance in space or time" and that as such our choices for the future of digital rights management and privacy are "both or neither" at least insofar as technology, rather than cultural norms & law, drive.
I think it even goes further than that. I was giving one of my DMCA-vs-Security talks while l'affaire Sklyarov was roiling, and noted that while that was going on, the US was being testy with China over alleged espionage by US nationals while in China. At a high level, each of infringement and espionage can be described as: Alice gives Bob some information. Bob is careless with it, disclosing it to someone that Alice would rather not see it. Alice has a non-linear response. You can call it infringement or you can call it espionage, but at the bottom of it, Alice believes that a private communication has been inappropriately disclosed. She thinks her privacy has been compromised and she's stomping angry about it. At the risk of creating a derivative work, you say pr-eye-vacy, I say pr-ih-vacy. Infringement, espionage, let's call the whole thing off. Jon --------------------------------------------------------------------- The Cryptography Mailing List Unsubscribe by sending "unsubscribe cryptography" to majordomo@wasabisystems.com