National Research Council
Subject: National Research Council
Kenneth Dam, committee chair, was Deputy Secretary of State (1982- 1985) and is currently the Max Pam Professor of American and Foreign Law at the University of Chicago Law School.
General W. Y. Smith, retired, committee vice-chair, is president emeritus of the Institute for Defense Analyses, and has also served in a number of military posts including that of deputy commander in chief of the U.S. European Command in Germany.
Lee Bollinger, formerly dean of the University of Michigan Law School, is currently provost of Dartmouth College and a constitutional scholar.
Ann Caracristi, retired, was Deputy Director of the National Security Agency (1980-1982).
Benjamin Civiletti was U.S. Attorney General (1979-1981), and is currently in private practice with the law firm Venable, Baetjer, Howard and Civiletti.
Colin Crook is senior technology officer for Citicorp.
Samuel Fuller is vice president of corporate research at Digital Equipment Corporation.
Leslie Gelb is president of the Council on Foreign Relations. He served as Assistant Secretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs (1977-1980).
Ronald Graham is a director of information sciences at AT&T Bell Labs and a professor of mathematics at Rutgers University.
Martin Hellman is professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University. Dr. Hellman was one of the inventors of public key encryption.
Julius Katz is president of Hills & Company, and was deputy United States trade representative (1989-1993).
Peter Neumann is principal scientist in the Computer Science Laboratory at SRI International. He is the chairman of the ACM committee on computers and public policy, and a member of the ACM study group on cryptography policy.
Raymond Ozzie is president of Iris Associates, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Lotus Development Corporation. Iris Associates is the developer of Lotus Notes.
Kumar Patel is vice chancellor for research at UCLA.
Edward Schmults was Deputy Attorney General of the United States (1981-1984) and is a former senior vice president for external relations and general counsel for the GTE Corporation.
Elliot Stone is executive director of the Massachusetts Health Data Consortium, which is responsible for the collection and analysis of the state's large health care databases.
Willis Ware, retired, is with the RAND Corporation as senior computer scientist emeritus. He chairs the Computer System Security and Privacy Advisory Board which was established by the Computer Security Act of 1987.
Is it me or are there a disproportionate amount of legal/government/military/ types on this list? Keeping this in mind, do you really think any of our comments will go anywhere but in the old circular file? --BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- Version: 2.6.1 mQCNAy5pUekAAAEEAKrDj64Zj9AJU+gC7/Ivdk8b1ef6a1T9K5CGFeu1yFDSXLyD DLIdGunZR/4ilosLMxdlZcNqPwZ3HgxL+Gk3y2SwYfqKpeWExWPgb696lgzf2BRC tED15ZAwi3UDIkcouv2PBiDwPNUUmnLb5diDXdA3qtALb+XzlwpnimeWAf3FAAUT tCFTYW11ZWwgS2FwbGluIDwrMSAoNjEyKSA1MzAtNzMxNj6JAJUCBRAuaVLjQqfV nzRSzxkBAcXuA/47yIN+sltMyIRqCgUZz/gubdI6LUcpFsTcXsFWppROpAWFPJv0 J9z/UoP1kjJ+nrAAizuKuhmC5eg5OOxUE+tUgSPl6hAtu2xJYmKtCbQpxF0sG8ni 4e8I8Zsk5vcopO5Vub96CiVgPjI5vITCb32kcLKI1yyFaztbHdtOasUthrQuU2Ft dWVsIEthcGxpbiA8c2FtdWVsLmthcGxpbkB3YXJlaG91c2UubW4ub3JnPg== =J2S+ --END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK----- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fido: Sam Kaplin 1:282/1018 | "...vidi vici veni" - Overheard Compuserve: 75240,131 | outside a Roman brothel. samuel.kaplin@warehouse.mn.org | 75240,131@compuserve.com | Change is the only constant in the For confidential communications use PGP | Universe..."Four quarters, please." ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- =========================================================================== Processed by WILDUUCP! v1.00 for WILDCAT! ===========================================================================
Is it me or are there a disproportionate amount of legal/government/military/ types on this list? Keeping this in mind, do you really think any of our comments will go anywhere but in the old circular file?
Disagree. Looks balanced or perhaps even weighted toward good guys to me. I haven't met many of them, but certainly Marty Hellman, Peter Neumann, and Willis Ware are on the Good Guys side. Willis (a colleague here at RAND) is carefully neutral on the political stuff, but is strongly pro-privacy. I assume Sam Fuller is the guy who was on my thesis committee back at C-MU 20 years ago, and he was sensible and non-political then. Another half dozen of them appear from credentials to be business and academic. Very few appear to be obvious government types. Jim Gillogly 2 Winterfilth S.R. 1994, 18:44
Is it me or are there a disproportionate amount of legal/government/military/ types on this list? Keeping this in mind, do you really think any of our comments will go anywhere but in the old circular file?
My thoughts exactly. The committee's classification/clearance policy was undoubtedly intended to skew its membership much more than to protect any legitimate government secret. After all, they're supposed to be discussing openly available civilian encryption technologies. Funny how the most obvious, no-brainer public policy questions always seem to generate the most controversy... Phil
participants (3)
-
Jim Gillogly -
Phil Karn -
SAMUEL.KAPLINï¼ warehouse.mn.org