1993-04-17 - The New Mykotronix phones…

Header Data

From: Peter Meyer <meyer@mcc.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: cba2bd146f7ee7398bd9f8850e5356380f30156740332177db5a8f892958c0ab
Message ID: <19930417021528.5.MEYER@OGHMA.MCC.COM>
Reply To: <199304161954.AA20309@access.digex.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-04-17 02:16:21 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 16 Apr 93 19:16:21 PDT

Raw message

From: Peter Meyer <meyer@mcc.com>
Date: Fri, 16 Apr 93 19:16:21 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: The New Mykotronix phones...
In-Reply-To: <199304161954.AA20309@access.digex.com>
Message-ID: <19930417021528.5.MEYER@OGHMA.MCC.COM>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


    Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1993 14:54 CDT
    From: Peter Wayner <pcw@access.digex.com>

    Okay, let's suppose that the NSA/NIST/Mykotronix Registered
    Key system becomes standard and I'm able to buy such a system
    from my local radio shack. Every phone comes with a built in
    chip and the government has the key to every phone call. 
    I go and buy a phone and dutifully register the key. 

    What's to prevent me from swapping phones with a friend or 
    buying a used phone at a garage sale? Whooa. The secret registered
    keys just became unsynchronized. When the government comes 
    to listen in, they only receive gobbledly-gook because the 
    secret key registered under my name isn't the right one. 

Knowing nothing except what I've read on the net today, I suppose that
while scrambling the phone conversation the chip inserts in the data
stream some ID (perhaps once per second) to tell the govt. which chip is
doing the scrambling.  This would allow multiple trapdoor keys (as
claimed) and also there would be no need for phone users to register.
The chip might also insert the number of the phone originating and/or
receiving the call, though presumably the wiretappers would already know
this.

-- Peter Meyer





Thread