On 22 Jul, Declan McCullagh wrote: Well, no. This kind of commentary made folks on mailing lists like
these feel warm and fuzzy and made some other tech types realize what was at stake. But Sen. Judd Gregg's proposal failed because of lack of support from his colleagues and opposition from well-connected industry lobbyists,
What kind of argument do you think was used by the senator's colleagues and industry lobbyists in order to defeat the proposal?
not people writing about "GNU-Darwin" (probably not one congresscritter knows what that means anyway, or cares).
Clearly, if you had read the paper, then you would know that it is about encryption and authentication, and only tangentially GNU-Darwin, which is mentioned for credibility and example purposes. One also wonders if your assessment of the Washington events surrounding the post-911 encryption proposals is complete or accurate. It appears to me that the White House was unwilling to expend political capital on the authentication schemes of the profiteers, which were contrary to the national security interests. Presumably the congress was swayed by similar arguments in the days following the 911 attacks. Regards, proclus http://www.gnu-darwin.org/
-Declan
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