Responding to msg by anonymous-remailer@shell.portal.com () on Sun, 10 Sep 2:8 AM [Snip]
The person who told me about this also said something about a Department of Trade & Industry paper which mentioned that the British Government was going to insist on key escrow for encryption.
Anyone else in the UK heard anything about this?
Picking up the possible mandated use of key escrow in the UK: There was chat at the NIST key escrow meeting that low-bit key escrow may be the global policy in the works among governments. With a blanket outlawing of all non-escrowed systems. And, that US key escrow and 64-bit export policy is a harbinger of domestic regulation. A fed at the B-2 breakout session imperiously barked the mantra chanted by several feds at the general meeting, "64- bit encryption is what industry asked for, why are you now complaining." To the counter-question, "what industry are you referring to?" the answer was always just "industry." The USG's latest key escrow policy, the NIST meetings and the Intellectual Cryptography Insitute's conference "Global Challenges" posted here may be the surfacing of a well- orchestrated government and "industry" collusion on this issue. Note the common ever-present attendees of both NIST and the ICI meetings. Certainly, some "industry" spokespersons like "Daughter of Clipper" Denning presume by their tone of writing that key escrow is on its way to supremacy, with only quibbling left on the criteria for acceptably "competitive" variations. The NIST handouts of industry players seem to bear this out as well, even as some join the public kibitzing. Perhaps their raz, and that of BSA, is just a diverting smokescreen to induce complacency -- or squeaking wheels to get USG attention for sweetheart contracts. Maybe they've already met privately with USG reps to get rewarded with a piece of the PGP/non-escrow clamp-down biz -- more venerable suckling of national security kabooty as advised by smart-varmints like ex-NSA Mr. Stewart Abercrombie Baker, Every-meet-attending-Esq. I wonder if Mrs. Denning and Mr. Baker are advising their sweating crypto clients, "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em, the international escrow train is leaving the station, better get on before it's too late." While fretting of derailment by hackers, or worse, by international security agencies paranoid of gov-biz complicity to take over the "if you knew what I knew" crypto-protected cornucopia. Wonder who's really engineering this GAK Limited runaway? Does anybody know David Kahn well enough to ask what he's finding as NSA Visiting Historian -- in the archives and in the job-insecure-spook resumes heat-seeking crypto fires?