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ACM Releases Crypto Study (fwd)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 30 Jun 1994 16:34:47 +0000
From: "US ACM, DC Office" <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: ACM Releases Crypto Study
Association for Computing Machinery
PRESS RELEASE
__________________________________________________
Thursday, June 30, 1994
Contact:
Joseph DeBlasi, ACM Executive Director (212) 869-7440
Dr. Stephen Kent, Panel Chair (617) 873-3988
Dr. Susan Landau, Panel Staff (413) 545-0263
COMPUTING SOCIETY RELEASES REPORT ON ENCRYPTION POLICY
"CLIPPER CHIP" CONTROVERSY EXPLORED BY EXPERT PANEL
WASHINGTON, DC � A panel of experts convened by the nation's
foremost computing society today released a comprehensive report
on U.S. cryptography policy. The report, "Codes, Keys and
Conflicts: Issues in U.S Crypto Policy," is the culmination of a
ten-month review conducted by the panel of representatives of the
computer industry and academia, government officials, and
attorneys. The 50-page document explores the complex technical
and social issues underlying the current debate over the Clipper
Chip and the export control of information security technology.
"With the development of the information superhighway,
cryptography has become a hotly debated policy issue," according
to Joseph DeBlasi, Executive Director of the Association for
Computing Machinery (ACM), which convened the expert panel. "The
ACM believes that this report is a significant contribution to the
ongoing debate on the Clipper Chip and encryption policy. It cuts
through the rhetoric and lays out the facts."
Dr. Stephen Kent, Chief Scientist for Security Technology
with the firm of Bolt Beranek and Newman, said that he was
pleased with the final report. "It provides a very balanced
discussion of many of the issues that surround the debate on
crypto policy, and we hope that it will serve as a foundation for
further public debate on this topic."
The ACM report addresses the competing interests of the
various stakeholders in the encryption debate -- law
enforcement agencies, the intelligence community, industry and
users of communications services. It reviews the recent history
of U.S. cryptography policy and identifies key questions that
policymakers must resolve as they grapple with this controversial
issue.
The ACM cryptography panel was chaired by Dr. Stephen Kent.
Dr. Susan Landau, Research Associate Professor in Computer Science
at the University of Massachusetts, co-ordinated the work of the
panel and did most of the writing. Other panel members were Dr.
Clinton Brooks, Advisor to the Director, National Security Agency;
Scott Charney, Chief of the Computer Crime Unit, Criminal
Division, U.S. Department of Justice; Dr. Dorothy Denning,
Computer Science Chair, Georgetown University; Dr. Whitfield
Diffie, Distinguished Engineer, Sun Microsystems; Dr. Anthony
Lauck, Corporate Consulting Engineer, Digital Equipment
Corporation; Douglas Miller, Government Affairs Manager, Software
Publishers Association; Dr. Peter Neumann, Principal Scientist,
SRI International; and David Sobel, Legal Counsel, Electronic
Privacy Information Center. Funding for the cryptography study
was provided in part by the National Science Foundation.
The ACM, founded in 1947, is a 85,000 member non-profit
educational and scientific society dedicated to the development
and use of information technology, and to addressing the impact of
that technology on the world's major social challenges. For
general information, contact ACM, 1515 Broadway, New York, NY
10036. (212) 869-7440 (tel), (212) 869-0481 (fax).
Information on accessing the report electronically will be
posted soon in this newsgroup.