GAK & RSA

Carl Ellison cme at tis.com
Tue Aug 9 11:24:40 PDT 1994


   From: tcmay at netcom.com (Timothy C. May)
   Date: Tue, 9 Aug 1994 10:52:48 -0700 (PDT)

   I don't see the "Skipjack is weak" argument as ever having been
   persuasive.

	[...]

   What scares me is the incorporation of the SKE or GAK into products.
   Not that RSA may offer an even stronger system.

   It's the principle.

exactly ..

This entire debate was sidetracked with a flurry of non-essentials.  Who
cares if Skipjack has a weakness?  Who cares that it's classified?  I don't
need anything stronger than RSA and triple-DES, so Skipjack doesn't mean
anything to me.  However, it formed a kernel of controversy to distract a
bunch of reporters and people posting to USENET.

The only issue, as far as I'm concerned, is that in 4000 years of history
of crypto (as documented by Kahn), private citizens have always had strong
crypto and have kept their keys to themselves and there's no reason to
believe the gov't should have the right, now or ever, to these keys.  To
me, the *only* issue is GAK.  All the rest is moot...stuff to distract the
critics and get them arguing among themselves (or with DERD and
Sternlight).

 - Carl







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