1993-08-02 - Re: lookin’ for a slogan for Tshirts

Header Data

From: Jim McCoy <mccoy@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu>
To: cme@ellisun.sw.stratus.com (Carl Ellison)
Message Hash: feff4c9e4f0589a25192260faa82f442a1eb8933703d6e176c4d54d0f263fbba
Message ID: <199308021828.AA12198@flubber.cc.utexas.edu>
Reply To: <9308021614.AA11760@ellisun.sw.stratus.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-08-02 18:29:26 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 2 Aug 93 11:29:26 PDT

Raw message

From: Jim McCoy <mccoy@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu>
Date: Mon, 2 Aug 93 11:29:26 PDT
To: cme@ellisun.sw.stratus.com (Carl Ellison)
Subject: Re: lookin' for a slogan for Tshirts
In-Reply-To: <9308021614.AA11760@ellisun.sw.stratus.com>
Message-ID: <199308021828.AA12198@flubber.cc.utexas.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text


> 
> 	"celebrating 4000 years of strong cryptography in the
> 	 hands of private citizens"

A nice thought, but it is not quite true now, is it?  Cryptography has been
a tool for specialists, scholars, and governments for those 4000 years, but
to claim that "the masses" have had access to it is clearly untrue.  In
fact, it seems that the current friction between groups such as this one
and the U.S. governement is caused mostly because private citizens are
beginning to get access to this strong cryptography and this is something
"those who watch" do not like...

jim




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