Clinton UN Speech / Msg to Prez/VP
In his UN speech this morning, Clinton talked about cracking down on nuke and missile proliferation, and he also mentioned eliminating cold-war-era restrictions which are harming American business. Let's put together a message to president@whitehouse.gov and vice-president@whitehouse.gov (since Gore is the info-highway guru) stating our position. Points we should make: (please modify and add to this list) * Crypto export restrictions are among the most obsolete and oppressive of these restrictions. * Americans can be jailed for exporting software which is widely used throughout the world (e.g. DES), and which in many cases was even developed outside the U.S. * These restrictions have already hurt American software companies. * They will prevent America from taking the lead in many crucial information technologies. * They will leave American companies vulnerable to industrial espionage. And our position on Clipper: * Clipper should not be established as a mandatory standard for the general public or for business. * Alternatives to Clipper should not be restricted. * Telecommunications companies should not be coerced into using Clipper. * Clipper chips should not have any special export status due to the fact that we keep the keys. This would put American makers of crypto hardware at a serious disadvantage in the world market. * Clipper should be reserved for its stated purpose - protection of non-classified information within the Federal government. * Use outside the government should be purely voluntary. * The whole concept of key escrow needs serious public examination. While the government may have the right, with a warrant, to knock down your door, key escrow is equivalent to requiring every citizen to give the police a copy of his or her key. This is a major departure from the status quo, not a continuation of it. --- MikeIngle@delphi.com P.S. It could be worse. Remember Clipper was a Bush administration plan. Bush was a former CIA head. He also had a dictatorial attitude and felt no need to justify his actions to anyone. Bush would probably have tried to ban crypto outright as soon as Clipper was ready.
Mike Ingle says:
In his UN speech this morning, Clinton talked about cracking down on nuke and missile proliferation, and he also mentioned eliminating cold-war-era restrictions which are harming American business. Let's put together a message to president@whitehouse.gov and vice-president@whitehouse.gov (since Gore is the info-highway guru) stating our position.
Messages sent to president@whitehouse.gov are weighed, not read. I suspect this will have about as much effect on the president as a note written in a bottle and tossed into the ocean. However, on that basis, its perfectly harmless for you to send a letter saying anything whatsoever other than a threat on the president's life, so if you and others would like to spend time writing such a thing, you can feel free. Just remember that there is no cypherpunks organization, so you can't claim to represent us. Perry
I agree that messages to president@whitehouse.gov, or to the whitehouse area on Compu$erve are not acknowledged. I have sent several to each as well as a letter direct to President Hillary, none of which were acknowledged. I wrote about a major money-waster in government medical care systems which could easily save the government in the three-digit millions. For what its worth, the boondoggle is this: When DOD decided to automate their medical facilities they put out an RFP. A company called SAIC was aware that the entire software system that VA uses to automate its 1000 bed hospitals is available for free under the FOIA. SAIC got a copy of all the VA software, and bid to DOD to take this VA software which the government already owns, and sell it back to DOD for giga-bucks. Now they (DOD) must negotiate with and pay for every change they want to that software. Meanwhile the VA programmers continue to improve the VA software (DHCP) as salaried government employees. In fact, now DOD is looking to pay SAIC to write interface routines to allow the DOD software (CHCS) to share info with the VA software (DHCP). You would think that this would get their attention, but no. Instead we continue to pay a private firm to sell us our own software. Hows this for medical care cost over-runs? -Kimo
participants (3)
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jdwilson@shell.portal.com -
Mike Ingle -
Perry E. Metzger