1996-03-31 - So where’s the Burns bill?

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From: jim bell <jimbell@pacifier.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: d8298540139a38bad88e6cd7fb368e852f016b051eba5d89e25c2f51c74b5f87
Message ID: <m0u3RCi-0008xVC@pacifier.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-31 23:02:41 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 1 Apr 1996 07:02:41 +0800

Raw message

From: jim bell <jimbell@pacifier.com>
Date: Mon, 1 Apr 1996 07:02:41 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: So where's the Burns bill?
Message-ID: <m0u3RCi-0008xVC@pacifier.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>(1) SENATOR BURNS ANNOUNCES BILL TO LIFT CRYPTO EXPORT CONTROLS
>The battle to roll back the Clinton Administration's encryption policy
>escalated on Thursday when Senator Conrad Burns (R-MT) announced that he
>will introduce a new proposal to repeal restrictions on encryption exports
>and to encourage the growth of electronic commerce. Senator Burns announced
>the bill via a teleconference during a special session at the Computers,
>Freedom, and Privacy Conference in Boston, MA.
>The bill, titled the "Promoting Commerce On-Line in the Digital Age Act"
>(PROCODE), joins two recent bills introduced earlier this month (S. 1587
>and HR 3011) designed to encourage the development of strong, easy-to-use
>privacy and security products for the Internet.

Maybe I'm just naturally suspicious of the government about such things, but 
I'm wondering where the text of this new Burns bill has gotten off to.  It's 
been days since it was first described, and yet a recent trip to the CDT 
page still claims it's coming.  Well, is there a bill or isn't there?

As usual, my solution will cause some people to smile, while others will 
frown:  We should educate these politicians that whenever they claim 
they have a bill to introduce, at the very least they should be required to 
release a secure hash of their CURRENT draft version of the bill, as it sits 
in the word processor.  Later, when the finalized bill is complete, they 
will be required to release the intermediate edit (whose hash can be checked 
against that originally announced) to prove that they did, indeed, have a 
specific bill in mind.  It would also allow all citizens to see how that 
bill changed (if at all) between the time they CLAIMED the bill existed, and 
the time it is actually released in finalized text version.

(If we REALLY don't trust the politicians, we could insist that the text of 
that proposed bill be released into the hands of one of these 
supposedly-trustworthy escrow agents they seem to want US to use, which 
instructions to release it in, say, 2 weeks maximum come hell or high water. 
 All these instructions, plus the hash, will be immediately released.)

This requirement would drastically cut down on the kind of game-playing that 
may be going on regularly when a bill is claimed to be ready to introduce, 
but actually isn't.  It would prevent the politicians from "running it up 
the flagpole and seeing if anyone salutes" without that being later 
revealed.  They could still change their bills, but all of their changes will 
become documented, and thus potentially  politically incriminating.

Jim Bell
jimbell@pacifier.com






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