From: Sandy <72114.1712@CompuServe.COM>
To: <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Message Hash: b2117bf1797ed6316e4aaaaa8219e01555b9f55517c6e84c7cf0845571d1ed5a
Message ID: <93090820305472114.1712_FHF95-2@CompuServe.COM>
Reply To: _N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-09-08 21:02:04 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 8 Sep 93 14:02:04 PDT
From: Sandy <72114.1712@CompuServe.COM>
Date: Wed, 8 Sep 93 14:02:04 PDT
To: <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Subject: CHAUM CHIMES IN
Message-ID: <930908203054_72114.1712_FHF95-2@CompuServe.COM>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
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SANDY SANDFORT Reply to: ssandfort@attmail.com
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Punksters,
For those of you who live in darkness (i.e., don't read THE
ECONOMIST), here is a letter to the editor from David Chaum, in
the most recent issue:
SIR--Your leader, "No hiding place", and article, "Big
brother is clocking you" (August 7th), are to be
commended for focusing attention on the exploding threat
to privacy being created by piece-meal adoption of
intrusive systems, such as automated road tolling.
Proposing systems designed around pre-paid smart cards
as the solution is, however, somewhat misleading.
In French pay phones, Danish vending machines, and
in fact all large-scale uses today, such cards must
identify themselves during each transaction. Even
though your name is not on the card, it represents an
erosion of privacy over the coins it replaces. If you
are once identified by even a single transaction, such
as when you reload the card from your bank account, all
your transaction details are linked to your identity.
A rare few systems, however, truly do protect
privacy. They need not cost more, weaken security, or
be harder to use. The technology is described in my
article in /Scientific American/, "Achieving Electronic
Privacy" (August 1992). A smart card version has
already been demonstrated for road tolls by the Dutch
government. And CAFE, a project sponsored by the EC, is
designing an electronic wallet that literally will, as
you recommend, "leave as much control as possible in the
hands of individuals."
/Amsterdam/ DAVID CHAUM
Of course, the next letter to the editor calls for the adoption
of systems to track every vehicle at all times. The genius who
wrote the letter, thinks it would be a good way to prevent
nuclear, biological or chemical terrorism. Geeeeez.
S a n d y
>>>>>> Please send e-mail to: ssandfort@attmail.com <<<<<<
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1993-09-08 (Wed, 8 Sep 93 14:02:04 PDT) - CHAUM CHIMES IN - Sandy <72114.1712@CompuServe.COM>