From: J. Michael Diehl <mdiehl@triton.unm.edu>
To: peb@procase.com (Paul Baclace)
Message Hash: 472a880299e114272d5f655f9b225182d1a75a8b5bc52c49b7dafa8f02b42744
Message ID: <9307152345.AA12039@triton.unm.edu>
Reply To: <9307151828.AA08970@banff.procase.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-07-15 23:45:39 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 15 Jul 93 16:45:39 PDT
From: J. Michael Diehl <mdiehl@triton.unm.edu>
Date: Thu, 15 Jul 93 16:45:39 PDT
To: peb@procase.com (Paul Baclace)
Subject: Re: The right to be secure (fwd Computerworld article)
In-Reply-To: <9307151828.AA08970@banff.procase.com>
Message-ID: <9307152345.AA12039@triton.unm.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
According to Paul Baclace:
> >> typically a court order, to both key escrow authorities.
> >"Typically", of course, means "not always", and it's coupled with the phrase
> I think they must be implicitly refering to the anti terrorist act
> which allows surveillence without a court order if national security
> is involved or if foreign nationals are involved, etc.
Now this is news to me. You mean that they can listen to me if they can
rationalize that there is a threat to national security?
Here's a scenerio. John Q. Public HAS a copy of pgp and some LEA knows it. It
must be that he's some kind of subversive. Therefore, he is a threat to national
security. It is therefore legal to infringe on his rights? Maybe this is a bit
of exageration...maybe it's not....
+-----------------------+-----------------------------+---------+
| J. Michael Diehl ;-) | I thought I was wrong once. | PGP KEY |
| mdiehl@triton.unm.edu | But, I was mistaken. |available|
| mike.diehl@fido.org | | Ask Me! |
| (505) 299-2282 +-----------------------------+---------+
| |
+------"I'm just looking for the opportunity to be -------------+
| Politically Incorrect!" <Me> |
+-----If codes are outlawed, only criminals wil have codes.-----+
+----Is Big Brother in your phone? If you don't know, ask me---+
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