http://www.flash.net/~lidman/

=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================



From: Nicole Brown <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Call your Congressperson! Clinton wants access to our PC's. I know,
this is a onelist for guns, but this is very important.

(From the St. Louis Post)

Feds seek authority to secretly crack personal computer codes



WASHINGTON (AP) -- Law enforcers would have the authority to secretly
crack the security codes of crime suspects' home and office personal
computers, under a Clinton administration plan reported today in The
Washington Post.

The Justice Department has drafted legislation that, if approved by
Congress, would allow federal agents to obtain search warrants from a
judge to enter private property, search through computers for passwords
and override encryption programs.

According to an Aug. 4 department memo that lays out the proposal,
encryption software for scrambling computer files "is increasingly used
as a means to facilitate criminal activity, such as drug trafficking,
terrorism, white-collar crime and the distribution of child
pornography.''

Under the measure, investigators would obtain sealed search warrants
signed by a judge as a prelude to getting further court permission to
wiretap, extract information from computers or conduct further
searches.

Privacy advocates have objected to the plan, dubbed the Cyberspace
Electronic Security Act by the Justice Department.

"They have taken the cyberspace issues and are using it as
justification for invading the home,'' James Dempsey, an attorney for
the Center for Democracy and Technology, told the Post.

Peter Swire, the White House's chief counselor for privacy, told the
newspaper the administration supports encryption as a way to provide
privacy for computer users.

"But it has to be implemented in a way that's consistent with other
values, such as law enforcement,'' Swire said. "In this whole issue we
have to strike the right balance.''

The administration has for years been seeking a law to require computer
makers to include a so-called Clipper Chip in their products that would
give police a "back door'' into computers despite any encryption
software they may contain.

In a backlash, More than 250 members of Congress have signed on as
co-sponsors to legislation that would prohibit mandating such back-door
devices on computers.

AP-CS-08-20-99 0612EDT

*******************************************************

Nic

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