At 10:43 AM 9/13/95, Peter Trei wrote:
"CYPHERPUNK" considered harmful
I would like to propose that we, the 'cypherpunks', are making a strategic error, which will make it far more difficult to achieve the goal we share.
Discussing some goals we might share, or ought to share, is certainly not out-of-line. Indeed, this discussion has come up many times on this list, though perhaps not much in the past year. (Those C coders do seem to be having their way...:-} ).
Our error lies in our approach to encouraging the widespread use of crypto. It is an error of hubris - overweening pride.
I think many people here are doing a lot to encourage wide use of encryption, remailers, etc. They write hooks to popular mail programs, they give public talks, they fight against restrictions and regulations, and they deploy new systems. That some folks have very occasionally mentioned "Joe Sixpack" does not mean that much. in my opinion.
We too often think of ourselves as an elite - smarter and better in various ways to our non-cpunk neighbours. We refer to these others as 'Joe Sixpack" and other such derogatary terms.
The problem is that in doing so we are marginalizing ourselves.
We call ourselves 'cypherpunks'. While this is derived from the SF term 'cyberpunk', consider the image we are creating for ourselves:
A 'punk' is a marginalized young adult, one who rejects the norms of his or her society, and takes delight in irking those around him with his or her rejection. The older of us will think of James Dean in 'Rebel Without a Cause', or Brando in 'The Wild One'. Later, you get images such as Peter Fonda in 'Easy Rider', and more recently, Sid Vicious and other icons of the 'punk rock' movement.
While I have had some qualms about the name, on balance I think it has been good for us. After all, it's not as if _other_ groups don't already exist! In particular, the British branch of Cypherpunks disliked the name "Cypherpunks" so much that they used a different name for themselves, the "U.K. Crypto Privacy Association." It doesn't seem to exist anymore, for whatever reasons. But the name may have been a factor, at least. Similarly, there's the Libertarian Party, with similar themes to our own, the International Association of Cryptographic Research (or somesuch), and even several nascent groups like "Terra Libre" and "DigitalLiberty" which purport to have a similar focus to what we have. And of course there are _several_ groups devoted specifically to lobbying for various sorts of cyberspatial rights, laws, etc.: EFF, EPIC, CPSR, VTW, and the ACLU. All of these groups have a different focus than we have. If I were to pick one that matches Peter Trei's proposed organization, it would be the EFF. Thus, I suggest Peter and others of like mind look into helping out the EFF in its worthy causes. I mean no disrespect here to Peter's views, nor am I suggesting he leave this list. Plenty of room for support of the EFF and being on this list. I'm a member of the EFF, for example (though their computer has me as "Tim Mat" for some reason). But for some reason--draw your own conclusions--the Cypherpunks list has a membership of something like 600-800 subscribers, more if you count folks who subscribed for a while, or who read it in other places. I don't think "Terra Libre" or "DigitalLiberty" are quite as successful and visible. We fill a certain niche which is useful to have filled, a more radical facet of things. If we didn't exist, or renamed ourselves "Concerned Citizens for Cryptographic Protection," CCCP, then somebody would have to _invent_ the Cypherpunks! I addressed the issue of our name, pluses and minuses, in an early chapter of my Cyphernomicon (http://www.oberlin.edu/~brchkind/cyphernomicon/): 2.4.10. "Where did the name 'Cypherpunks' come from?" + Jude Milhon, aka St. Jude, then an editor at "Mondo 2000," was at the earliest meetings...she quipped "You guys are just a bunch of cypherpunks." The name was adopted immediately. - The 'cyberpunk' genre of science fiction often deals with issues of cyberspace and computer security ("ice"), so the link is natural. A point of confusion is that cyberpunks are popularly thought of as, well, as "punks," while many Cyberpunks are frequently libertarians and anarchists of various stripes. In my view, the two are not in conflict. - Some, however, would prefer a more staid name. The U.K. branch calls itself the "U.K. Crypto Privacy Association." <check this> However, the advantages of the name are clear. For one thing, many people are bored by staid names. For another, it gets us noticed by journalists and others. - - We are actually not very "punkish" at all. About as punkish as most of our cyberpunk cousins are, which is to say, not very. + the name - Crypto Cabal (this before the sci.crypt FAQ folks appeared, I think), Crypto Liberation Front, other names - not everybody likes the name...such is life -------- Getting back to your suggestion that "we" change the name to something more respectable. How could "we" do this, given that "we" are an effective anarchy? I can't imagine a vote on this, and the endless debates on what "we" ought to call ourselves would be a waste of time. Fortunately, there's an elegant solution: form your own group. Form your own group, your own mailing list, with a catchy name, something like "The Privacy Education Foundation," or "The American Civil Liberties Union" (whoops, taken), or "The Society for the Preservation of Cyberspatial Liberty." Then announce it on our list, and elsewhere. People will vote with their feet. If your "meme" is catching, your list will rapidly gain members. Maybe this Cypherpunks list will even atrophy away. Evolution in action. The market in action. A better approach than trying to get the name and the charter changed. --Tim May ---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---------:---- Timothy C. May | Crypto Anarchy: encryption, digital money, tcmay@got.net 408-728-0152 | anonymous networks, digital pseudonyms, zero Corralitos, CA | knowledge, reputations, information markets, Higher Power: 2^756839 | black markets, collapse of governments. "National borders are just speed bumps on the information superhighway."