1995-01-02 - Re: Exporting cryptographic materials, theory vs. practice

Header Data

From: nobody@rahul.net
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: cfcef8be821944f810a3eff82747b6d192be1e658a613072c18e3913bd814f96
Message ID: <199501021725.AA09061@bolero.rahul.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-01-02 17:25:20 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 2 Jan 95 09:25:20 PST

Raw message

From: nobody@rahul.net
Date: Mon, 2 Jan 95 09:25:20 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Exporting cryptographic materials, theory vs. practice
Message-ID: <199501021725.AA09061@bolero.rahul.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Matt has a good story, and the lesson that he draws, that presently the
average person can't follow the rules, seems valid.  But I don't see the
point of the proposals to replicate his experiment.

Doesn't Matt's experience really show simply that not enough people try
to follow the rules, so the agencies aren't set up yet to make it
easy?  Is it our goal to change this, to get Customs to streamline
their operation so that everyone really does register their crypto
equipment on travels overseas?  It seems to me we are better off with
the present informal system where you can actually use crypto overseas
without worrying much.

I could see a system where you routinely fill out and have your card
stamped when you check your luggage to show that you are carrying crypto.
Then you turn it in when you come back.  This might not be too different
from what you do now when you declare items you are taking out and
bringing back to show they are free of customs duties.  How does this
advance the CP cause?





Thread