Re: So, what crypto legislation (if any) is necessary? (Was List O' , shame)

At 1:32 PM 3/25/96 -0500, Black Unicorn wrote:
All it would take is one anti-trust case with encryption as a concealing method and people would be busting down doors at night looking for PGP.
Back in the dark ages, IBM built an audio messaging system. It was quite popular in "cave of the winds" (IBM headquarters) because it allowed busy executives to leave audio memos for each other without needing a secretary to type them. Since storage was limited, and old messages were purged from the system it also had the effect that anti-trust discovery would have nothing to discover. Regards - Bill ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Bill Frantz | The CDA means | Periwinkle -- Computer Consulting (408)356-8506 | lost jobs and | 16345 Englewood Ave. frantz@netcom.com | dead teenagers | Los Gatos, CA 95032, USA

On Mon, 25 Mar 1996, Bill Frantz wrote:
At 1:32 PM 3/25/96 -0500, Black Unicorn wrote: to type them. Since storage was limited, and old messages were purged from the system it also had the effect that anti-trust discovery would have nothing to discover.
Hmmm - that's another issue; what about diffie hellman with ephemeral keys? Once the transaction is complete, unless you keep a copy of the key, even you can't decrypt that session. Would a law requiring you to keep a copy of the keys be important. It would have the advantage of allowing a sub-poena to be more restrictive than "just hand over your private key", but it's a pretty heavy (undue?) burden. Simon --- They say in online country So which side are you on boys There is no middle way Which side are you on You'll either be a Usenet man Which side are you on boys Or a thug for the CDA Which side are you on? National Union of Computer Operatives; Hackers, local 37 APL-CPIO
participants (2)
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frantz@netcom.com
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Simon Spero