[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
HP does it
http://www.cnn.com/TECH/9611/15/encryption.reut/index.html
Hewlett-Packard to unveil encryption 'breakthrough'
encryption
links November 15, 1996
Web posted at: 9:00 p.m. EST
PALO ALTO, California (Reuter) -- Hewlett-Packard Co. said Friday that
it will unveil technology Monday that will provide a breakthrough in
the long-deadlocked debate over use of software encoding for secure
data traffic.
If the encryption technology has won the backing of industry and the
U.S. and other governments -- which Hewlett-Packard officials say is
the case -- the development could eliminate a key obstacle to the
growth of electronic commerce via the Internet.
Hewlett-Packard Chairman Lewis Platt will provide details on the
technology, which includes technology patented by the Palo Alto
computer giant as well as other technologies, a company spokesman
said.
Technology from RSA Data Corp. the de facto standard-setter for
Internet security, will be involved Hewlett-Packard officials said.
Senior Microsoft Corp. and Intel Corp. executives were also scheduled
to attend Monday's news briefing at the National Press Club in
Washington, Hewlett-Packard officials said.
The technology will make it possible to export products containing
so-called "strong encryption," which have not been exportable under
national security laws dating back to the Cold War.
Under national security law, the U.S. government has allowed the
export of software and other computer products containing only
"weaker" data encryption technologies.
Encryption has been classified as a munition because of its potential
for use by terrorists, spies or other criminals to conceal messages.
Encryption programs use mathematical formulae to scramble confidential
information, such as electronic mail messages or credit card numbers,
rendering them unreadable to computer users without a password or
"software key" that can decode the coded material.
For years the domestic computer industry has complained that such
government restrictions have hampered its competitiveness in world
markets, and that its customers did not necessarily want the
government to be able to decode internal data.
The industry says the laws have prevented it from offering some of the
most recent Internet technologies, even within the United States,
because it is impossible to prevent computer users outside U.S.
borders from gaining access to technologies publicly available on the
Internet.
Companies and their customers want to use encryption to protect
confidential communications and electronic commerce.
Silicon Valley executives recently noted that consumer devices, such
as WebTV Network's Web-browsing television device that hit store
shelves this autumn, use the same levels of strong encryption as used
in military systems.
WebTV said it is using keys composed of 128 bits, or characters, of
data to encode and decode its communications to its set-top boxes
providing consumers with the best level of security available over the
Internet.
The government recently proposed that the constraint be eliminated by
providing a key recovery system, in which authorities could recover
keys to crack messages if they received a court warrant to do so.
Industry has rebuffed this as difficult to manage.
The solution being offered by Hewlett-Packard would be flexible,
allowing customers to use the levels of encryption required by
different governments, the company said.
"This is going to allow very strong encryption," said a spokeswoman.
Hewlett-Packard said its technology would provide a means of "solving
the data security and integrity issues that have impaired and
frightened users and companies from exploiting the full power of the
Internet."
Copyright 1996 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.