crypto confrontation

regarding the NIST policies on cryptography being shaped at this moment, an idea occurred to me. one of the most important aspects of protest is getting the public to be on your side. right now the american public is pretty indifferent about the cryptography issue, but there could be some very graphic situations that would help bring it out into the limelight even more than it is at the moment, and make anyone promoting government key escrow seem like the bad guys. the minor protest going on with the Perl t-shirts is really fantastic (last count, ~700 shirts out the door), but what really brings an issue to the forefront of american consciousness (i.e. the media) is *confrontation*. picketers in front of buildings clashing with police is almost guaranteed to get a little media coverage, almost no matter what the issue. now, some day we might reach this point with crypto rights. it would be quite a spectacle. (I'm sure people would argue against it here, but IMHO even a simple demonstration of a few dozen people might do more for widespread public consciousness of the issue than a million lines of code on an FTP site..) -- in the meantime here's another possibility: suppose that a software company intentionally set up a situation where they are exporting a cryptographic algorithm out of the country. and they have filming crews on hand when the bad-guy customs agents or whoever stop the truck at the border and confiscate the software. have the reporters asking questions like "why are you confiscating this"? "answer: this is classified a munition". this could really be a fantastic segment for Hard Copy or any of the other trashy tabloid shows. just a confrontration for confrontation's sake, with nothing resolved, just a lot of people pissed off at each other, and the end result the viewer coming away saying, "what a disgrace!! somebody should do something!!" I mean, imagine a segment where you see the customs officers pointing guns at a truck driver or whatever (that would *really* be optimal), and them breaking into the truck to pull out the software. the reporter could say, "what's so deadly that's in the box??" and pull out a computer disk. sound bites of people outside the country saying how they want to use the crypto. a nice businessman in a tie, in the middle of an office with hardworking suits and ties. "we're not criminals!! we're trying to *protect* ourselves from criminals!! but your government won't let us!!" other sound bites: joe sixpack goes and buys crypto package from Germany because he doesn't have to put up with illegality and uncle sam. shots of massive Microsoft and an executive or programmer complaining how they can't put the code they want to in their programs, that users *want*, that would solve these horrible hacker problems that the country is having, because uncle sam is interfering. other scenes: businessmen calculating how much the U.S. software market (which, BTW, we are premiere in the world in) has already lost in sales, or could potentially lose on the information highway. "my company personally had [x] ready but could not release it. [y] was delayed [z] years for approval. we estimate we have lost [a] and have had to hold off hiring as much as [b] people". (the actual numbers should be as close to reality as possible, but from a PR point of view don't even matter!!) much made of how the Internet committees are now ignoring the US recommendations that require escrowed crypto. "the U.S. may ironically become only a inconsequential rest stop on the information superhighway of the future" much FUD about how the US could become a "backwater in cyberspace" because of these policies. etc!! lots of hype about how cyberspace will become the very basis of future global economies, and that anybody who opts out will be slitting their own throat. also, crypto being absolutely essential to secure transactions. in fact, if we play this right we could even get a new kind of semi-conventional wisdom into that easily-manipulated thing called the public consciousness: "hackers can be foiled by good crypto. the government is killing good crypto. therefore hackers are proliferating because of the government!!" plus, you could throw in the Phil Zimmermann thing too, although that might be overdoing it. as for all the bill of rights angle and those kinds of things, those could be put in there, but remember that people generally hate lawyers <g> -- actually, I'm actually rooting for PRZ to be indicted. an acquittal would be extremely costly, but it could really bring the key issues to the forefront of the american or even world consciousness. hell, it would beat the OJ trial any day in my book!! and in fact it might be just the ticket to the kind of mainstream journalism that could really tip the balance of public opinion. (the press is pretty sleazy, I admit, but it is a *monster* machine that one might be able to trick into working for you!! in fact, I would consider that quite the ultimate hack in social engineering!! any weenie hacker can con a phone repairman, but can you trick the whole U.S. media system into telling the public what you want it to hear? sounds like a real challenge to me!!) and BTW, I am aware of how DJBernstein and others have various lawsuits and FOIAs against the government. but I don't think these are really penetrating Joe Sixpack's brain, when that is really where the battle lies. and Joe Sixpack doesn't understand esoteric things like the bill of rights, the constitution etc.-- but he does understand pictures of police confronting someone who doesn't seem to be doing anything wrong and is arguing in favor of something good for america. you might think, "what does public opinion have to do with government?" answer: a lot. if in a public poll, a large majority were in favor of releasing crypto regulation, you can bet that the "which way is the wind blowing NOW?!?!?!" politicians (that is, all of them, <g>) would be scrambling to appease the public. even Clinton has a long record of merely going with what is politically expedient. I can fully imagine him defying key law-enforcement agencies if the public was more in support of good crypto. and, if we can get scenes like what I'm talking about, that day may become a reality. I continue to believe that the way to really hammer the issue and get what we want may amount to a kind of "psychological terrorism": "propaganda" on television that promotes our cause to joe sixpack, and simply honestly tells what is at stake. (that's the beauty of our position, is that even the simple truth is very powerful propaganda-- in fact that's how you can generally tell if you are on a side that is likely to win in the long run!!). there are many here who will argue for less confrontational approaches, about not getting anyone upset, about not trying to paint anyone as a bad guy, about just opting out of a "hopeless" political process, about how the whole US system is so screwed up anyway that we're all pretty much screwed when it comes down to it, etc. ad nauseaum, ... but IMHO a pound of nonconfrontration is worth a feather of confrontation in the long run. and I continue to believe the confrontation, while a bit messy and unpleasant at times, will really get the ultimate result that we want: (1) widespread public consciousness on the issue, (2) widespread support of our side. again, the code distribution is great, but in the long term, I continue to believe that public opinion is ultimately what runs a government, and a tyrannical government cannot exist without the tacit support of the population. I applaud the Perl t-shirt sellers for their great victory but suggest that greater victories lie in waiting. how about a demonstration of a bunch of people wearing the shirts, for starters? --Vlad Nuri

On Mon, 11 Sep 1995, Vladimir Z. Nuri wrote:
picketers in front of buildings clashing with police is almost guaranteed to get a little media coverage, almost no matter what the issue.
I was really considering dropping by the meeting myself, and laying down the line in a very resistant manner, but as usual too much research popped up at the wrong time! Imagine having a copy of PGP in a DHL package addressed to a cyperhpunk in Europe, holding it up and going "I'm mailing this tommorow. Try putting me in jail!" -Thomas
participants (2)
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Thomas Grant Edwards
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Vladimir Z. Nuri