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Clipper's Revenge
Ok, this is a 'what if':
What if:
The government backs down on clipper, agreeing that there will be
no escrowing of keys, but says that communications with the
government must use Skipjack in order to establish a single
encryption scheme for government communications.
(this has the benefit of creating a huge userbase, thus establishing
it as a standard.)
What if:
Skipjack, as designed, has a (secret) hole in it that will decrypt
ANY communications using it. This means that anybody with the master
skeleton key would be able to read Skipjack encrypted information.
=========================
If you think about it, the above makes sense. The government wants to
spy on the population, but the population can't know about the spying.
Thus, they propose escrowing keys, which they know will raise public
outrage. They put up a half-hearted fight and then back down, making hte
public thinks they've won.
In reality, though, Big Borther has won as they have put an compromised
algorithm into general use that will allow them to do what they wanted to
all along.
Granted, they couldn't prosecute cases with evidence from taped Skipjack
communications, but as we've seen, wiretaps are used so infrequently that
it really isn't relevant. But, as long as they lay low, they can spy on
any Skipjacked communications among business and other government agencies.
Is the above feasible?
____ Robert A. Hayden <=> [email protected]
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