New PGP "Everything the FBI ever dreamed of"

Alex Le Heux alexlh at xs4all.nl
Fri Oct 3 23:13:11 PDT 1997



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On 3 Oct 1997 17:27:29 +0200, in list.cypherpunks you wrote:

>An article in today's (Fri, Oct 3) New York Times (CyberTimes)
><http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/100397pgp.html>
>describes the new release of "PGP for Business Security 5.5," which
>contains mechanisms that incorporate key recovery mechanism that can 
either
>be volontary or be enforced by using PGP's software for controlling 
a
>company's SMTP server -- the server can verify that all encrypted 
messages
>include the corporate public key (or conform to other corporate 
policies):
[snip]

Keep in mind that this is the 'PGP for Business'. Companies often 
operate on the principle that email that's sent and received from 
their machines is the company's, not the employee's. This is actually 
reasonable business practice. Specially when encryption enters the 
picture. The employee could walk under a bus, and leave some vital 
but encrypted emails in his mailbox. This could be a real problem for 
corporations.

Individuals should of course stay as far away from something like 
this as possible.

Alex

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iQA/AwUBNDXEUduYAh4dUSo/EQKERQCg6v6i8v+hvh4/zFDXGEt2e0eyl0kAn2An
2tlYh85ewSbxsCmD8L9H1OI/
=i0zt
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---
Violence is the last resort of those who have lost all control over a
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