From: dmandl@lehman.com (David Mandl)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 0fd1d2a98c01986eaa1013b5fe9cf2ec87eedecfd80fbfcb6868a50f2ccf5563
Message ID: <9312081826.AA14676@disvnm2.lehman.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-12-08 18:30:43 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 8 Dec 93 10:30:43 PST
From: dmandl@lehman.com (David Mandl)
Date: Wed, 8 Dec 93 10:30:43 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: San Jose Merc article on s/w industry crypto deal
Message-ID: <9312081826.AA14676@disvnm2.lehman.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
> HIGH-TECH FIRMS WON'T OPPOSE DATA-SCRAMBLING CHIP
>
> THEY'LL ACCEPT 'CLIPPER' PROPOSAL IF U.S. WILL EASE SOFTWARE EXPORT RULES.
>
> By LEE GOMES
> Mercury News Staff Writer
>
> With some privacy advocates crying foul, a group of prominent high-tech
> companies is dropping its opposition to a controversial White House proposal
> for a new data-scrambling chip in exchange for a relaxing of the federal
> rules restricting the export of scrambling software.
>
> The Digital Privacy and Security Group, a collection of computer companies
> and related associations, said Monday that it could accept the
> administration's ''Clipper'' chip proposal if the chip's adoption was
> voluntary, and if other encryption software were available for sale,
> especially overseas.
What a sell-out (literally). Will these guys also support the government's
right to conduct random house-to-house searches if they're promised a piece
of the booty? And Clipper has ALWAYS been "voluntary" (at least so far), so
that part of the deal is no victory at all. With friends like these...
--Dave.
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