The current CNN Headline News has a spot on the Clipper chip airing after the Sports section, I just barely caught it by accident. I have to leave now to do some consulting, but I have my VCR set up to record it the next time around. Summary of the tape: ____BEGIN SUMMARY____ The Clinton Administration is developing, along with the NSA and the NIST a chip which will ensure private communications between telephones and fax machines and such. Current plans are for the keys to be held in escrow by two seperate (unnamed) government agencies. Much was made about the objections made by people at the NIST hearings about the questionable constitutionality of the chip and a direct quote was aired by a woman saying during the hearings that 'the chip would expand the powers of the government to invade the privacy of citizens to even greater than what it already is' (paraphrase) and also about the objections of companies who are afraid of being blackballed and prevented from doing business unless they use the chip. There was a small hint of a fear that the 'voluntary' status of using the chip would not last for long. Also, AT&T (surprise) has apparantly announced that it is already developing a system using the chip and showed a prototype on the air. It seemed to be a lot larger than necessary, a huge black box with a little LCD display saying 'secure' and whatnot when you activated clipper security. There was an interview with a fed type who repeated all of the old stale arguments about making conversations secure for him but not for the criminals. ____END SUMMARY____ I think that the spot was definitely leaning toward exposing the objections that people have toward the chip, even if the people at CNN didn't really understand for sure what those objections are. The whole thing might have been a little unclear for the average Joe as to what the real problem is with this newfangled system, and I think that more uninformed coverage like this is likely to turn people against us; they may start to see us as the bad guys, a bunch of people who are against privacy by our objection to this thing. Anyway, now that it has hit CNN, it is officially mainstream and it may well become a hot, trendy news item. What we need now are hoardes of people who will volunteer to be consulted with as 'experts' on the issue for local news and such. Gotta go now, gotta write some code... Try to catch the spot. -Ryan the Bit Wallah
The current CNN Headline News has a spot on the Clipper ...
I think that the spot was definitely leaning toward exposing the objections ...
I hope they've got a new clip. The one I saw about 2 weeks ago was lead into with the statement that "some fear the new scheme might compromise the privacy rights of criminals." Duhhh. The first sound bite was an FBI dude saying that he didn't think that "child molesters, drug lords, bombers, snipers, terrorists, and kidnappers" have any right to privacy. It went downhill from there, ending with a weak 5 second statement from somebody at CPSR (weak, no doubt, because of editing, not lack of CPSR concern). Mike McNally
The current CNN Headline News has a spot on the Clipper chip airing after the Sports section,
It is likely that this is a new clip rather than the old one. There is a large class of stories for which the print media drive the televisual. See _Bad Day at Black Rock_ for a first hand account of this. The CBS News staff read the New York Times every morning to figure out what to cover. In all likelihood they've just picked up the story from Newsweek, slant and all. It is because of mechanisms such as these that it is vital that people get out there and start talking to local press, of whatever kind. The media predate on each other's research. Getting the story out _anywhere_ is useful, because it will frequently trigger more coverage, and we desire the escalation of coverage. We must make ourselves heard widely because if we can bring the wiretap chip to public debate, we will have won. The languor of apathy creates a veil of secrecy for the public equally as effective as lies and denials. If we can get enough press coverage about this, it will become an "issue". One of the best things we could hope for is that "Nightline" will have Ray Kammer v. Whit Diffie. Public opinion will not sit well with making it illegal to keep secrets. Phone calls to CNN, asking for explanations of that short story will help, hint, hint. Eric
participants (3)
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Eric Hughes
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m5@vail.tivoli.com
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RYAN Alan Porter