1993-06-29 - Re: Clipper vs. Russia

Header Data

From: Marc Horowitz <marc@GZA.COM>
To: smb@research.att.com
Message Hash: d4f49638c43e48bb425874a848c41d279bf828bafefcbc4f36ac331343f58f43
Message ID: <9306292002.AA06961@dun-dun-noodles.aktis.com>
Reply To: <9306291933.AA02464@toad.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-06-29 20:02:38 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 13:02:38 PDT

Raw message

From: Marc Horowitz <marc@GZA.COM>
Date: Tue, 29 Jun 93 13:02:38 PDT
To: smb@research.att.com
Subject: Re: Clipper vs. Russia
In-Reply-To: <9306291933.AA02464@toad.com>
Message-ID: <9306292002.AA06961@dun-dun-noodles.aktis.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>> According to an AP wire story, Article 23 of the draft Russian
>> constitution says that ``Each person has the right to secret
>> correspondence, telephone conversations, mail, telegraph and other
>> communications.''

That's not really too meaningful.  Our Constitution provides for
protection against unlawful search and seizure (comments on the
reality of this to alt.flame, please :-).  Does the draft Russian
constitution forbid *all* tapping of mail, phones, etc?  I doubt it.
So that basically gives them the same protection we (nominally) have,
and our government seems quite happy with Key Escrow.

		Marc





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