Two quick points: * I think the discussion centered around CDT since they put out a policy post a few hours after the SAFE markup earlier this week, and that policy post was well-circulated online. * Didn't CDT, unlike the other groups like EPIC/ACLU/EFF/ATR, send a letter to the House subcommittee on April 29 urging that SAFE be approved without any changes? (I'm in Oklahoma right now and I have a copy of that letter in my office in DC, but that's what I remember.) -Declan On Thu, 1 May 1997, Shabbir J. Safdar wrote:
The Administration hates this bill, because it threatens their ability to roll out Key Recovery. They've said as much in the letter Declan forwarded:
"The bill could be read as prohibiting the United States government from using appropriate incentives to support a key management infrastructure and KEY RECOVERY." [emphasis added]
Do you think that if this bill helped the Administration, that they'd be out there urging the subcommittee chairman to stop it? I think not.
I'm also puzzled by the fact that CDT is being criticized pretty much solely, even though the entire Internet Privacy Coalition, and several other groups all wrote a letter of support of the bill with only a criticism of one provision. However the overall statement was of support. (see http://www.privacy.org/ipc/safe_letter.html)
As far as I can tell, everyone criticizing the bill either thinks that:
a) CDT actually runs all these groups behind the scenes, or b) pretty much all of the Internet advocates believe that this bill is needed and are doing the best they can with what Congress has written.
You're pretty hard on CDT, but EFF, EPIC, the ACLU, VTW, Americans for Tax Reform, the Association for Computing Machinery, Computer Professionals for Social Responsiblity, Eagle Forum, the National Association for Criminal Defense Lawyers, and PGP Inc all signed this letter.
Can you consider, perhaps, for a second, that critics of SAFE are being unreasonable? I would think so, as critics of SAFE include the Clinton Administration. Is that the kind of company that cypherpunks keep?
Here's a great excerpt from the Internet Privacy Coalition letter:
The pending bill provides a positive framework for the reforms that are long overdue in this critical area. It makes clear that the sale or use of encryption, a vital technique to promote network security and individual privacy, should not be restricted in the United States. This is the view widely shared by users of the Internet and the computer and communications industry. It was also a central recommendation of the report of the National Research Council last year.
Looks like widespread support from people who study this issue for living. I'm glad to be counted among them.
-S
-Shabbir