On Mon, 4 May 1998, Peter Swire wrote:
Greetings:
I'd be interested to hear anyone else's reactions to the book. More generally, what do you say to well-intentioned people when they say the following -- won't anonymous accounts contribute, at least a bit, to more drug smuggling, arms smuggling, and international terrorism?
You say, "Yes. Yes they could. And so could cars."
[Please, no flames. I am writing an academic article this summer on money laundering and financial privacy. Money laundering laws hold the potential to choke off cryptography and financial privacy generally. How can supporters of privacy best answer back to the calls for stricter regulation?]
I dunno. I guess the best way to answer those calls in the public arena is to let people know that crypto is useful stuff that everyone will need as transactions move online. The shady argument that crypto & anonymity can facilitate crime is merely an attempt to associate the two, to give the public the impression that this crypto stuff is up there with assault weapons and C4, something which can and should be controlled, while not really affect law-abiding citizens. I advise crypto proponents to halt any analogy-making to firearms, for this reason. Nothing against guns, of course; but to gain acceptance crypto cannot be dropped in the same conceptual bin as guns. -Xcott ==- Xcott Craver -- Caj@niu.edu -- http://www.math.niu.edu/~caj/ -== "This is a different thing: it's spontaneous and it's called 'wit.'" -The Black Adder