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from:
http://www.zolatimes.com/V2.41/pageone.html
<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/V2.41/pageone.html">Laissez Faire City Times
- Volume 2 Issue 41</A>
The Laissez Faire City Times
December 7, 1998 - Volume 2, Issue 41
Editor & Chief: Emile Zola
-----
The Wassenaar Invasion of Privacy

by J. Orlin Grabbe


>From the first moment it proclaimed the "information superhighway", the
Clinton administration has waged a wholesale assault on Internet free
speech and privacy.

The latest blow is the Clinton administration's strong- arming of the 32
fellow countries of the Wassenaar Arrangement to agree to an export ban
on strong cryptographic (data scrambling) software. The net effect will
be to make it easier for each government to read its own citizen's email
and other private documents.

Normally if a nation attempts to restrict the domestic sale of strong
encryption software, that attempt is made ineffective by the
availability of strong encryption software from other countries. But
such software won't be available anymore--at least not from one of the
Wassenaar countries, once they have enacted local legislation to
implement the terms of the Wassenaar agreement of December 2.

The Wassenaar Arrangement is supposed to be an intergovernmental
agreement to restrict international traffic in arms. What does this have
to do with encryption? Simply this: the US government still holds that
secret-code-producing software is a munition. So if you encrypt your
letters and files, and the government hasn't given you permission to use
that caliber encryption, then the person who gave you the encryption
software may be in violation of some regulation on arms dealing.

"They've plugged a loophole," gleefully proclaimed Ambassador David
Aaron, the President's Special Envoy for Cryptology. The day following
the agreement, the US Department of Commerce issued a press release in
which Aaron spouts gobble-de-gook phrases about a "level playing field"
and about balancing "commercial and privacy interests with national
security and public safety concerns" (see Appendix A for Commerce Dept.
press statement).

How has this agreement supposedly created a "level playing field" and
helped U.S. industry? Well, namely, by censoring foreign publishers of
cryptology software in the same way that the US government already
censors US publishers. This is similar to arguing that by increasing
tyranny in surrounding countries, we can create a "level playing field"
for freedom.

"It's ironic, but the US government is leading the charge
internationally to restrict personal privacy and individual liberty
around the world," said Alan Davidson, a staff counsel at the Center for
Democracy and Technology, according to Reuters (see Appendix B for
Reuter's news release).

A restriction on cryptology is a restriction on free speech. In the
Second World War, the US used native Navaho speakers for secure
communications. Since no one else understood the language, it served as
a powerful secret code. But is what you speak or write in an email
message suddenly not speech or language if the government can't
understand it? If your message says "Xu23MN iilc]z MNBl", does the
government suddenly have the right to imprison you for writing
gibberish?

While the clear answer is No, nevertheless the US government thinks it
has the right to restrict your "gibberish" if it is produced by
encryption software that it can't crack. The Wassenaar agreement says
encryption software that is "weak" (less than 56 bit keys in some cases,
or less than 64 bit keys in others), so that the government can
unscramble and read the real message underneath the gibberish, is okay,
and in fact frees up some export restrictions on this type of software.
The trade-off? Greater restrictions on software that produces secret
code the government can't read.

Arms control. It sounds wonderful, doesn't it? Go over to the Wassenaar
 web page and take a look. High nobility of purpose, right? "We're
keeping those guns away from the Indians," they proclaim. But what they
mean to say is: "We fully intend to read what is written on the hard
drive of your computer."

Posting to the cypherpunks mailing list, Timothy May noted:

I recently heard T. J. Rodgers, CEO of Cypress Semiconductor, repeat his
oft-made point that Silicon Valley and the high tech industry gains
nothing by talking to Washington. That as soon as dialog is started with
Washington, things get worse. This applies as well to crypto, to gun
rights, to everything. Everything Washington touches turns to statist
shit.

Is there any good news? Enabling legislation has to be enacted in each
country to carry out the terms of the Wassenaar agreement. Raising a hue
and cry with legislators over this latest invasion of privacy should
have a positive effect.

In the meantime, Mr. "Information Superhighway" Al Gore is poised for a
presidential run, so he can continue to ignore privacy concerns and bend
over for the Big Brother agencies of the national security
establishment.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Related Links

•The End of Ordinary Money: Part 1
•The End of Ordinary Money: Part 2



------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix A: Commerce Dept. Press Release


UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE NEWS

International Trade Administration

Washington, DC

For Immediate Release
Tuesday, December 3, 1998

Contact: Maria Harris Tildon
          (202)482-3809
          Sue Hofer
          (202)482-2721

P R E S S  S T A T E M E N T

U.S. Applauds Agreement on Encryption in International Export
Control Regime

Vienna, Austria -- The United States welcomed the decision taken
Thursday in Vienna by the 33 members of the Wassenaar Arrangement
to modernize and improve multilateral encryption export controls.
Ambassador David Aaron, the President's Special Envoy for Cryptology,
said that "the international agreement reached here goes a long way
toward leveling the playing field for exporters and promoting
electornic commerce.  It provides countries with a stronger
regulatory framework to protect national security and public safety."

The agreement caps a two year effort by the United States, to update
international encryption export controls and to balance commercial
and privacy interests with national security and public safety
concerns. Thursday's agreement simplifies and streamlines controls
on many encryption items and eliminates multilateral reporting
requirements. Specific improvements to multilateral encryption
controls include removing controls on all encryption products at
or below 56 bit and certain consumer entertainment TV systems, such
as DVD products, and on cordless telephone systems designed for
home or office use.

Wassenaar members also agreed to extend controls to mass-market
encryption above 64 bits, thus closing a significant loophole in
multilateral encryption controls.  This gives Wassenaar member
governments the legal authority to license many mass market
encryption software exports which were previously not covered by
multilateral controls and enables governments to review the
dissemination of the strongest encryption products that might
fall into the hands of rogue end users.   The new controls also
extend liberalized mass-market hardware below 64 bits.  Until
today, only mass-market software products enjoyed this
liberalized treatment.

"The decisions taken here in Vienna reinforce the Administration's
efforts to promote a balanced encryption policy," Aaron confirmed.



------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix B: Reuters News Release


Thursday, 3 December 1998 12:57:40

U.S. claims success in curbing encryption trade

Aaron Pressman, Reuters, Washington newsroom, 202-898-8312

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Clinton administration officials
Thursday said they had persuaded other leading countries to
impose strict new export controls on computer
data-scrambling products under the guise of arms control.

At a meeting Thursday in Vienna, the 33 nations that have
signed the Wassenaar Arrangement limiting arms exports --
including Japan, Germany and Britain -- agreed to impose
controls on the most powerful data-scrambling technologies,
including for the first time mass-market software, U.S.
special envoy for cryptography David Aaron told Reuters.

The United States, which restricts exports of a wide range of
data-scrambling products and software -- also known as
encryption -- has long sought without success to persuade
other countries to impose similar restrictions.

``We think this is very important in terms of bringing a level
playing field for our exporters,'' Aaron said.

Leading U.S. high-technology companies, including Microsoft
Corp. and Intel Corp., have complained that the lack of
restrictions in other countries hampered their ability to
compete abroad. The industry has sought to have U.S.
restrictions relaxed or repealed, but has not asked for tighter
controls in other countries.

Privacy advocates have also staunchly opposed U.S. export
controls on encryption, arguing that data-scrambling
technologies provided a crucial means of protecting privacy in
the digital age.

``It's ironic, but the U.S. government is leading the charge
internationally to restrict personal privacy and individual
liberty around the world,'' said Alan Davidson, staff counsel at
the Center for Democracy and Technology, a Washington-based
advocacy group.

Special envoy Aaron said the Wassenaar countries agreed to
continue export controls on powerful encryption products in
general but decided to end an exemption for widely available
software containing such capabilities.

``They plugged a loophole,'' Aaron said.

The new policy also reduced reporting and paperwork
requirements and specifically excluded from export controls
products that used encryption to protect intellectual property
-- such as movies or recordings sent over the Internet -- from
illegal copying, Aaron said.

Encryption uses mathematical formulas to scramble
information and render it unreadable without a password or
software ``key.'' One important measure of the strength of the
encryption is the length of the software key, measured in bits,
the ones and zeros that make up the smallest unit of computer
data.

With the increasing speed and falling prices of computers,
data encrypted with a key 40 bits long that was considered
highly secure several years ago can now be cracked in a few
hours. Cutting-edge electronic commerce and communications
programs typically use 128-bit or longer keys.

Under Thursday's agreement, Wassenaar countries would
restrict exports of general encryption products using more
than 56-bit keys and mass-market products with keys more
than 64 bits long, Aaron said.

Each country must now draft its own rules to implement the
agreement.

-30-

from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol. 2, No. 41, Dec. 7, 1998
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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