
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- At 09:13 AM 6/3/97 -0500, Marc Rotenberg wrote:
http://wwww.wired.com/wired/4.05/idees.fortes/eurocrats.html
Eurocrats Do Good Privacy
Marc Rotenberg
It shows that governments, at least some governments, can be a force for progress in the crypto world.
We're talking here about governments where unlicensed crypto is a crime. Or other countries where anonymity is illegal. Give me a break.
Reread that sentence. It is not conventional wisdom in the United States. Cyberlibertarians have been unrelenting in their opposition to any federal role in crypto policy. Free marketers argue simply that there is no place for government in the development of high-tech products. Cyberanarchists seem to doubt whether there is any role at all for government.
And EPIC (nee CPSR) and CD&T are run by Left pro-government types who like big governments and high taxes. So we're even.
But the recent European experience should give pause to these allies in the battle for online privacy. Not only are European officials at the highest levels prepared to embrace technologies of privacy, they have almost uniformly opposed US-inspired surveillance schemes such as Clipper.
So are they going to give up their street cameras, address registration (in Belgium, you can't get the gas service turned on in your flat if you haven't registered with the commune -- but you can get electricity), occupational licensure (of *all* occupations as in Germany), national ID cards, Financial Police (Italy), computer registration, piles of mandatory paperwork, etc.?
Two recent reports are indicative. In "Privacy-Enhancing Technologies: The Path to Anonymity," the Netherlands and the Canadian province of Ontario call for an exploration of new technologies to promote privacy.
They could just repeal their privacy invading laws and regs. No new technology needed.
It doesn't have to be this way. The reality of modern society is that government officials make decisions every day about the rights of citizens.
And with modern technology, we turn right around and make decisions on the rights of governments.
not. Compared with governments that lack privacy officials, governments that have privacy officials have repeatedly weighed in favor of privacy interests.
Then why do Europeans have *much* less privacy than Americans. Tiny example. In much of Europe, if mail coming to your flat is not addressed to the name on the mailbox, it doesn't get delivered. In the U.S., the P.O. still tends to deliver as addressed and let the occupants sort it out. Somewhat looser. DCF -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 5.0 beta Charset: noconv iQCVAwUBM5V/wIVO4r4sgSPhAQFxPgQAxujIQM+Mmph/l+byrW1AppuOi4t8AedG QjDblzmmk7uJT8n7UqK9wV8H8mT0ANHWesrYWKyzADbwHxwa6LuCUzfLnWSTYvZn EhAIHV00z9zOSP8xlH2Sj9eEQ+JReX3QKLhN87FxyCmJY5S+9o0/TqJUmshKgh8m LDbeHpBBe9Y= =KHsl -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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Duncan Frissell