Keep Out--The Journal of Electronic Privacy
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Keep Out The Journal of Electronic Privacy There is a well-established constitutional right to privacy in the United States. We have this right today because of the wisdom and forethought of our founding fathers. That right is being threatened--usually not by would-be dictators or demagogues, but by well-meaning people who are simply misguided. To counter that threat, I created Keep Out. Keep Out focuses on the practical side of cryptography, digital money, anonymous remailers, and everything else that can increase privacy. Rather than discuss the obscure branches of mathematics that are the basis for these technologies, Keep Out will discuss how to get these technologies, what they can do, and how to use them. Stories in progress for the first issue include: * A review of the different programs that claim to link PGP with off-line mail-readers * A story on the breaking of RSA and what it really means in terms of the security of your messages * An interview with Phil Zimmermann, including his thoughts on privacy in the digital age, export controls on cryptography, the copyright o RSA (the algorithm used in PGP), and information on his struggle wit US Customs over exporting PGP * In our beginners' section, an explanation of how public-key encryption works, and how it can work for you In short, Keep Out focuses on who is taking your privacy away from you, and what you can do to get it back. A one-year subscription (six issues) to Keep Out costs US $15. Keep Out can not accept credit-card orders, but checks and money orders payable to "Keep Out" are welcome. The premier issue of Keep Out will reach newsstands everywhere August 1. The electronic version of Keep Out will be released after it is published on paper. For information on advertising, to reach our editorial staff, or for subscription questions, call (818) 345-8640, or write: Keep Out P.O. Box 571312 Tarzana, CA 91357-1312 You can fax Keep Out at (818) 342-5127. You can also reach Keep Out through the Internet at "Keep.Out@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org" or call the Keep Out BBS at (818) 342-5127. Our Fidonet address is "Keep Out" at 1:102/903.0. John Schofield Publisher, Keep Out John.Schofield@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6 iQCVAgUBLe59Qmj9fvT+ukJdAQHDnAQAnaXlNm8ilFmmCMM1w2CmP4425/7xJY7p riPU9zJVWLskREMLqK6PAlWHnFjpwfBxOuPJAv8ONANVZzH7d7mkFR1AkTizjz8F X/h50Jz8F+uGTGjLsgtD2up0ZmX/6wywJbxVLbQy2JpejBOhIyi+EZ2ZCEh5g6B1 yOARXVc+JMg= =NA6C -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- **EZ-PGP v1.07 beta --- Blue Wave/RA v2.12 -- : John Schofield - via mcws.fidonet.org - Public Access (213)256-8371 : ARPA/INTERNET: John.Schofield@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org : UUCP: ...!cheshire!mcws!903!John.Schofield : Compu$erve: >internet:John.Schofield@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- About "Keep Out": you might want to be more precise in your blurbs. As things stand, I'm leery of trusting anything I might see in your journal. From the keyboard of: John.Schofield@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org (John Schofiel)
... Stories in progress for the first issue include: ... * A story on the breaking of RSA and what it really means in terms of the security of your messages
RSA is not broken, as far as I know. If you have verifiable details that it has, that'll be quite a scoop. If you meant to say "the _factoring_ of RSA-129," well, you should have said that instead.
* An interview with Phil Zimmermann, including his thoughts on privacy in the digital age, export controls on cryptography, the copyright o RSA (the algorithm used in PGP), and information on his struggle wit US Customs over exporting PGP
A publisher, of all people, really needs to understand what a copyright is. Note that we cannot copyright ideas, only our expression of those ideas. Referring to a copyright on "the algorithm used in PGP" is nonsense. Instead, PKP holds licensing rights to a system _patent_ on using RSA to perform public key encryption. Otherwise, your stuff sounds cool to me, though I'd really prefer that those who stand to get money for something not do their advertising via this list. Submitting boilerplate for comment is fine, but leave it to other interested parties to pass your advertising brochures to the list. Richard -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.3a-confuse-sternlight iQCVAgUBLfH/q/obez3wRbTBAQHPVQP+OqHntzDTwHttV1Mq8zLDR8kExiLyq6br uhJKIu3aSAQUEAiFge+UE03tR3w/ehnWvIcGfUJl4C0RQlLXl+aTdd7/q5F2V1Rp WpLu+8VVUviwIzAUbymjy8xxiZC/4lOx2WOoWCJSm40uiA4MwCI7zFu/trVW4B+V lFjz+mbiTSk= =TRhJ -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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Keep Out The Journal of Electronic Privacy
There is a well-established constitutional right to privacy in the United States. We have this right today because of the wisdom and forethought of our founding fathers.
Odd, but my copy of the Constitution (w/amendments) doesn't even contain the word "privacy," let alone any mention of a "right to privacy." (*Damn* these variorum editions!) There is the Fourth Amendment, of course, but the right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures is not synonymous with the right to privacy, IMO. I believe it was in Katz v. U.S. (1967) that the Supreme Court first enunciated the doctrine of a "reasonable expectation of privacy." It's interesting that it took the advent of telecommunications to bring this issue to the fore -- Katz was a wiretapping case. Of course, #define IM_A_LAWYER FALSE And I may be wrong about all this, but it's too nice to stay inside and confirm my facts. :-) Alan Westrope <awestrop@nyx.cs.du.edu> __________/|-, <adwestro@ouray.denver.colorado.edu> (_) \|-' finger for pgp 2.6 public key S,W.E.A,T! -- graffito at Moe's Pretty Good Gym -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6 iQCVAgUBLfI8r1RRFMq4NZY5AQE2nQP/fanAkJfoUPRQir22aaqNDdMcIPACBi74 D/FNxG5JXlSDUxmsVZh3gsIsFUepZQYHdE5/gp2cg8iHZqaO+EyH/HSnXSXpd/4G Vpn01XEK5rq0GJZlzS9UUhXtKPiGRTWw+xMSosoZptUfpFduuioT3ehKCIvka0nB hxLMUVdqzEg= =fkii -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Odd, but my copy of the Constitution (w/amendments) doesn't even contain the word "privacy," let alone any mention of a "right to privacy." (*Damn* these variorum editions!) There is the Fourth Amendment, of course, but the right to be secure against unreasonable searches and seizures is not synonymous with the right to privacy, IMO.
I believe it was in Katz v. U.S. (1967) that the Supreme Court first enunciated the doctrine of a "reasonable expectation of privacy." It's interesting that it took the advent of telecommunications to bring this issue to the fore -- Katz was a wiretapping case. Of course,
I was told/taught/have read that _Griswold v. Connecticut_ (1965?) was a key case in defining the "Constitutional Right to Privacy." Briefly, Griswold was representing Planned Parenthood, and was challenging a CT law that made it illegal to give information about birth control to anyone except married couples. The Supremes said that this was an undue invasion of privacy, and that there *was* a Constitutional right to privacy. They neglected to specify exactly where it was, though. ;) However, they suggested that it was held somewhere under the Ninth Amendment. Of course, 'assert (Mike == LAWYER);' fails during runtime. YMMV. -- Michael Brandt Handler <grendel@netaxs.com> Philadelphia, PA, USA PGP v2.6 public key via server / finger / mail "I am iron, I am steel, nobody can touch me when I'm on the wheel" -- Curve
Alan Westrope <awestrop@nyx.cs.du.edu> __________/|-, <adwestro@ouray.denver.colorado.edu> (_) \|-' finger for pgp 2.6 public key S,W.E.A,T! -- graffito at Moe's Pretty Good Gym ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^--What
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- the hell is that??????? I've read lot 49, etc but I really don't get it. Could you explain? Happy Hunting, -Chris ______________________________________________________________________________ Christian Douglas Odhner | "The NSA can have my secret key when they pry cdodhner @ indirect.com | it from my cold, dead, hands... But they shall pgp 2.3 public key by finger | NEVER have the password it's encrypted with!" cypherpunks WOw dCD Traskcom Team Stupid Key fingerprint = 58 62 A2 84 FD 4F 56 38 82 69 6F 08 E4 F1 79 11 - ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ A government mandante for key-escrow encryption in all communication devices would be the information-age equivalent of the government requiring private citizens to quarter troups in their home. --David Murray PGP NSA ViaCrypt Phrack EFF #hack LOD/H 950 FBI MindVox ESN KC NUA murder QSD Hacker DEFCON SprintNet MCI AT&T HoHoCon DNIC TRW CBI 5ESS KGB CIA RSA Communist terrorist assassin encrypt 2600 NORAD missile explosive hack phreak pirate drug bomb cocain payment smuggle A.P. bullets semi-auto stinger revolution H.E.A.T. warheads porno kiddiesex export import customs deviant bribe corrupt White House senator congressman president Clinton Gore bootleg assasinate target ransom secret bluprints prototype microfilm agents mole mafia hashish everclear vodka TnaOtmSc Sony marijuana pot acid DMT Nixon yeltsin bosnia zimmerman crack knight-lightning craig neidorf lex luthor kennedy pentagon C2 cheyenne cbx telnet tymenet marcus hess benson & hedges kuwait saddam leader death-threat overlords police hitler furer karl marx mark tabas agrajag king blotto blue archer eba the dragyn unknown soldier catch-22 phoenix project biotech genetic virus clone ELINT intercept diplomat explosives el salvador m-16 columbia cartel -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.3a iQCVAgUBLfO4j+Kc9MdneB1xAQFXJAQAq6eVp3XVpYR6nzau97Kjzkh8NR2gY1E+ Dc1SwtPir8ljrFUg/jGE7lLdz//mNnZ+uQrlkTI3d7vp8w+65aljNRGnCCh8NCQA 1JqdbTfkryX06KbU1QPXMrlapPGPlif1uuOqpaf8Xtz8N6fLgLJM3NRtfx25BcNv HNFQ+/WuX6Y= =Hxj4 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
participants (5)
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adwestro@ouray.Denver.Colorado.EDU -
cdodhner@indirect.com -
grendel@netaxs.com -
John.Schofield@f903.n102.z1.fidonet.org -
Richard Johnson