patent office and key recovery
Steve Bellovin <smb@research.att.com> posted this to cryptography: --------------------------------------------------------------------- Today's NY Times had an article on how the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is gearing up for electronic filing of patent and trademark applications (http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/012698patents.html). Since patent applications here are confidential, filings must be encrypted. And of course, one of the things holding up deployment -- of a system where a government agency is the legitimate recipient of the message -- is the "need" for key recovery. "The agency wants to include a "key recovery" system in the software in case the encryption has to be broken." The mind boggles. ----------------------------------------------
"The agency wants to include a "key recovery" system in the software in case the encryption has to be broken."
The mind boggles.
The Patent Office is obliged to submit all patent applications to the spooks for review (as patent attorney Axel Horns pointed out on another list). So there is little "need" for "recovery" even from the government point of view, other than getting people to use key escrow.
participants (2)
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Bill Stewart
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ulf@fitug.de