1995-09-04 - Oddly enough, Clipper is helpful

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From: Deranged Mutant <rrothenb@ic.sunysb.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 136d17568d619b0a73edd13890304d9bc0fd98c057a3433a2bdef5f90ce71e1b
Message ID: <199509040454.AAA05091@csws5.ic.sunysb.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-04 04:54:45 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 3 Sep 95 21:54:45 PDT

Raw message

From: Deranged Mutant <rrothenb@ic.sunysb.edu>
Date: Sun, 3 Sep 95 21:54:45 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Oddly enough, Clipper is helpful
Message-ID: <199509040454.AAA05091@csws5.ic.sunysb.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



Despite a few rants about how the NSA has monkeywrenched potential standards
for encryption with Clipper (market forces being what they are, even if there
were no Clipper we may still have no standard by now...), I think there is
oddly a good side to Clipper: the issue has thrown cryptography and security
into the public debate, even if marginally.

Prior to Clipper, PGP was not featured in national and international features
in TV, newspapers and magazines... now a lot of people want their hands on it.
People have become aware of communications security issues--very avaerage
folks who one might even consider techno-illiterates or luddites are now
concerned with the government's ability to listen in and watch them.

Think of Clipper as an opportunity to propose something better, as an
opportunity to make people more aware of the issue.






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