1993-07-15 - Re: The right to be secure (fwd Computerworld article)

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From: Peter Shipley <shipley@tfs.COM>
To: wcs@anchor.ho.att.com (Bill_Stewart(HOY002)1305)
Message Hash: c3dc5a6c7ddc3a9c4e1098fd3c174f89bbc51486a5933083cd031fafe51ee2a9
Message ID: <9307150220.AA01203@edev0.tfs.com.TFS>
Reply To: <9307150109.AA04795@anchor.ho.att.com>
UTC Datetime: 1993-07-15 02:20:30 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 14 Jul 93 19:20:30 PDT

Raw message

From: Peter Shipley <shipley@tfs.COM>
Date: Wed, 14 Jul 93 19:20:30 PDT
To: wcs@anchor.ho.att.com (Bill_Stewart(HOY002)1305)
Subject: Re: The right to be secure (fwd Computerworld article)
In-Reply-To: <9307150109.AA04795@anchor.ho.att.com>
Message-ID: <9307150220.AA01203@edev0.tfs.com.TFS>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>   Finally, the system will be designed to ensure that law
>   enforcement destroys the keys it receives when its authority
>   to conduct the electronic surveillance has expired.
> 
>.  It also suggests that keys *can* be kept longer than court
>orders permit if the attorney general wants.
>

if also suggests there no safeguard in the system for keys to expire;
thus an underground can form for keys since there is no expiration date.





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