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ITAR Re-write ?
Friend,
Bloomberg, the business news agency, reports 01 12 96:
The U.S. Commerce Department will recommend easing
export controls on encryption software after a study by
the department and the National Security Agency found
that American firms are being hurt....
The report's release came on the same day federal pro-
secutors dropped a three-year investigation...of...Philip
Zimmerman....
The government study comes a week after [the Computer
Systems Policy Project] released [its] own study showing
...American companies will lose [maybe $60 billion] in
U.S. computer system sales expected in 2000....
The 13-member Project
...includes International Business Machines...and AT&T....
Perhaps the let-go of Zimmerman is less a triumph of right
than of might?
But economic might is not the only kind of might:
[Easing export controls] may pit Brown's department a-
gainst U.S. defense and spy agencies....
So...
[Commerce Secretary] Brown said his department will pre-
pare recommendations for easing [ITAR] controls that
should be forwarded to the president "within a few months."
Meaning: the 13 Project members should be prepared to pay
through the nose in the runup to the '96 gala.
And just so they get the big picture:
It's unclear if the NSA, the super-secret eavesdropping
agency, endorsed the Commerce Department's conclusions
in the report it jointly prepared.
The newsstory reports
...federal prosecutors dropped [the Zimmerman] investiga-
tion without explanation....
No explanation's required. One hostage was released. 13
others were taken. But the one release does afford the new
hostages, who have deep pockets, some hope...
Cordially,
Jim
NOTE. The newsstory's headline? COMMERCE'S BROWN
PROPOSES REWRITE OF ENCRYPTION EXPORT CONTROLS.
Its dateline? WASHINGTON (Jan 12, 1996 5:34 p.m. EST).
Its Nando News online filename? biz6_1893.html