[10429] in Commercialization & Privatization of the Internet

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Brick in the Wall

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Brock N. Meeks)
Wed Feb 23 00:00:28 1994

Date: Tue, 22 Feb 1994 20:59:54 -0800
From: "Brock N. Meeks" <brock@well.sf.ca.us>
To: com-priv@psi.com


 CyberWire Dispatch//Copyright (c) 1994
 
 Jacking in from Another Brick in the Wall Port:
 
 Washington, DC -- The White House is being heavily lobbied by law
 enforcement agencies and national intelligence agencies to make the use of
 the government designed Clipper Chip mandatory in telephones, fax machines
 and cable systems, according to classified documents obtained by Dispatch.
 
 When the Administration announced on February 4th that it was endorsing
 the controversial Clipper Chip program, it asserted that any use of the
 chip would be voluntary.  But the White House carefully hedged its bet:
 Buried deep in the background briefing papers that accompanied the
 announcement was the Administration's official policy that U.S. citizens
 weren't guaranteed any constitutional right to choose their own encryption
 technologies.
 
 Government officials have brushed aside concerns from civil liberties
 groups and privacy advocates that sporadic adoption of Clipper would
 eventually spawn a mandatory use policy.  To try and forestall that,
 however, the government has instituted a subtle coercion tactic: You can't
 do business with Uncle Sam unless your products are "clipper equipped,"
 according to National Institute for Standards and Technology Assistant
 Deputy Director Raymond Kammer.
 
 The Administration's desire for industry to sign-on as an early Clipper
 "team player" was so overwhelming that it bribed AT&T into agreeing to
 publicly support the idea, according to classified documents obtained by
 Dispatch.
 
 On the same day last April when Clipper was first unveiled, AT&T publicly
 proclaimed it would be installing the chip in its encryption products.  A
 classified April 30, 1993 memo from the Assistant Secretary of Defense
 says: "[T]he President has directed that the Attorney General request that
 manufacturers of communications hardware use the trapdoor chip, and at
 least AT&T has been reported willing to do so (having been suitably
 incentivised by promises of Government purchases)."
 
 The government says "incentivised" while prosecuting attorneys all over
 the country say, "bribed."  You make the call.
 
 Take Your Privacy and Shove It
 ==============================
 
 That same memo says the Clipper proposal is a "complex set of issues [that]
 places the public's right to privacy in opposition to the public's desire
 for safety."  If "privacy prevails... criminals and spies... consequently
 prosper," the memo says.
 
 What's the answer to such freeflowing privacy?  The memo says law
 enforcement and national security agencies "propose that cryptography be
 made available and required which contains a 'trapdoor' that would allow
 law enforcement and national security officials, under proper supervision,
 to decrypt enciphered communications."  The operative word here is
 "required."
 
 Two Track Dialog
 ================
 
 While Clinton's policy wonks wring their hands over such issues as
 universal access to the National Information Infrastructure, law
 enforcement and national security officials couldn't care less, frankly.
 The Working Group on Privacy for the Information Infrastructure Task Force
 was told in clean, cold language that the desire of law enforcement is to
 "front load" the NII with "intercept technologies."  Under the guise of "do
 it now or we'll catch less bad guys."
 
 It's all black or white to these guys.  Other classified Dept. of Defense
 documents chime on this debate:  "This worthy goal (of building the NII) is
 independent of arguments as to whether or not law enforcement and national
 security officials will be able to read at will traffic passing along the
 information superhighway."
 
 This is not science fiction.  The Clipper chip is like a cancer that has
 eaten into the fabric of all levels of government, including the military.
 Classified DoD documents state that a "full-scale public debate is needed
 to ascertain the wishes of U.S. citizens with regard to their privacy, and
 the impact on public safety of preserving privacy at the expense of
 wiretapping and communications intercept capabilities of law enforcement
 and national security personnel."
 
 In other words, they don't think you know what you want.  To them, it's a
 kind of tradeoff, a twisted sort of privacy auction.  What do you bid?
 Your privacy for two drug lords, a former KGB spy and a pedophile.  What's
 the price?  Your government wants to know.  Honest.  You see, to the
 Clipper groupies, the jury's still out on all this.  According to these
 classified documents: "It is not clear what the public will decide."
 
 But you can rest safely, the Pentagon does.  Why?  Again from a secret
 memo:  "In the meantime, DoD has trapdoor technology and the Government is
 proceeding with development of the processes needed to apply that
 technology in order to maintain the capability to perform licit intercept
 of communications in support of law enforcement and national security."
 
 Meeks out...
 

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