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Re: TWP on Crypto Keys
I think the upshot of it is that they just read the bill (and the
surrounding issues) incorrectly. I read the editorial and said to myself,
"they aren't reading the same bill the rest of us are reading".
-Shabbir J. Safdar * Online Representative * Voters Telecomm. Watch (VTW)
http://www.vtw.org/ * Defending Your Rights In Cyberspace
Thaddeus J. Beier writes:
>Somebody posted this editorial this morning, that includes the
>following passage:
>
>> The Washington Post, March 11, 1996, p. A18.
>>
>> Security and Software [Editorial]
>...
>>
>> Legislation introduced this month in both the House and the
>> Senate would ease the export restrictions while attempting
>> to meet some of the government's security concerns. Code
>> makers would deposit a "spare key" to any exported
>> encryption software with a trusted third-party agency...
>
>Now, I thought that the bills did no such thing. How could The
>Washington Post get this so wrong?
>
>As I understand it, the bills do not in any way tie export to
>key escrow. They mention key escrow only to the extent that
>they specify that it is illegal to disclose the keys.
>
>Why would the paper get this cockeyed? Is it just a screwup,
>or are they pushing for a change?
>
>thad
>-- Thaddeus Beier [email protected]
> Technology Development 408) 286-3376
> Hammerhead Productions http://www.got.net/~thad