Crippled Notes export encryption

Duncan Frissell frissell at panix.com
Tue Jan 23 12:53:02 PST 1996


At 09:06 AM 1/23/96 -0500, Herb Sutter wrote:
>Careful... what would YOU have done, with your customers demanding stronger
>crypto today and you unable to legally give it to them?
>
>Again, folks, try to remember that this is NOT key escrow... international
>Notes customers are no worse off than before, and a darn sight better off
>against everyone besides Uncle Sam.

They could have shipped strong encryption and let the lawyers handle the
Feds.  That's what lawyers are for.  A court loss would be unlikely.  Even
with a loss, having IBM serve a 54-month jail term would be no prob.  It
could do it standing on its head.  They were probably more worried by
possible retaliation in government purchasing.

Those who crossed The Wall around 10:00 pm on November 10, 1989 proved that
modern (weak) governments can be faced down by large movements of people.  

Companies will learn that end-users are less sanguine about being censored
(by Compuserve) or opening one's business affairs to (any) governments than
perhaps they used to be.  Small competitors will benefit.

DCF







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