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Re: GAK solutions was: Is there a lawyer in the house?
[By the way, I know that my sig on that message was bogus. I made the
mistake of editing the message after signing it and sent it before
I stopped to think.]
>Date: Thu, 07 Dec 1995 22:07:00 -0400 (EDT)
>From: Pat Farrell <[email protected]>
>Subject: GAK solutions was: Is there a lawyer in the house?
>Interesting. At the NIST meeting, criteria #5 deals with decrypting
>a conversation with only the key from one end.
>
>I thought that would be hard to implement. But during the discussion,
>they called on Miles Smid [sp?] who was obviously a NIST employee/consultant
>with real knowledge. He suggested that you could encrypt the
>session key with the public key of both parties, and send it along.
>This would allow single ended GAK.
Miles Smid is a NIST employee who is quite knowledgeable about crypto
and Clipper.
>This is not far from the idea that CME proposed that the NSA/FBI/CIA
>publish public keys, and we'll hack a voluntary version of PGP that
>encrypts the session key with the LEA public key -- instant
>voluntary Key Escrow.
I still think that's the only way the gov't will get GAK -- :)
- Carl
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
|Carl M. Ellison [email protected] http://www.clark.net/pub/cme |
|PGP: E0414C79B5AF36750217BC1A57386478 & 61E2DE7FCB9D7984E9C8048BA63221A2 |
| ``Officer, officer, arrest that man! He's whistling a dirty song.'' |
+---------------------------------------------- Jean Ellison (aka Mother) -+