[IP] One Internet provider's view of FBI's CALEA wiretap push

John Kelsey kelsey.j at ix.netcom.com
Fri Apr 23 11:26:37 PDT 2004


>From: Tyler Durden <camera_lumina at hotmail.com>
>Sent: Apr 23, 2004 10:09 AM
>To: cypherpunks at al-qaeda.net
>Subject: Re: [IP] One Internet provider's view of FBI's CALEA wiretap push

...
>Well, what if there were 3 passwords:

>1) One for Fake data, for amatuers (very few of the MwG will actually
>be smart enough to look beyond this...that's why they have guns)

>2)One for real data...this is what you're hiding

>3) One for plausible real data, BUT when this one's used, it also
>destroys the real data as it opens the plausible real data.

The obvious problem with multiple levels of passwords and data is: When
does the guy with the rubber hose stop beating passwords out of you?
After he gets one?  Yeah, that's plausible, if he's convinced there's
only one.  But once he's seen a second hidden level, why will he ever
believe there's not a third, fourth, etc.?  The same calculation
applies to a judge or district attorney.  He *knows* (even if he's
wrong) that there's evidence of kiddie-porn, drug dealing, etc., in
there somewhere.  He knows you've given up two passwords.  Why is he
ever going to let you out of jail, or ever going to reduce the charges
down to something a normal human might live long enough to serve out
the time for?   

>-TD

--John





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