From: Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>
To: “Vladimir Z. Nuri” <vznuri@netcom.com>
Message Hash: b092d85a098330371d13dc76d3d2be68a160025bde3701591f21a3db02389cd6
Message ID: <199510171312.JAA15286@panix.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-10-17 13:13:48 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 17 Oct 95 06:13:48 PDT
From: Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Oct 95 06:13:48 PDT
To: "Vladimir Z. Nuri" <vznuri@netcom.com>
Subject: Re: The NSA Visits Compendium
Message-ID: <199510171312.JAA15286@panix.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
At 02:05 PM 10/16/95 -0700, Vladimir Z. Nuri wrote:
>a study on this would be very significant. (from what I understand, the NSA
>tried to do this with public key crypto, i.e. suppress it at the
>publication stage. a professor gave a lecture on this in one of my
>classes and said that it was even covered in the NYT at the time.
>unfortunately I lost the date. I believe it was a long time ago
>(maybe the 80's or even the 70's). hopefully someone else has an
>encyclopedic brain.
1977/1978. "A Proposal for a Public Key Encryption System." IEEE meeting.
Imprisonment threat by letter. Mathematical Games column in Scientific
American. 3,000 copies of paper distributed free by MIT.
>unfortunately, whenever someone says, "don't name my company", it loses
>effectiveness. I would like to point out that people are directly contributing
>to their erosion of rights by this behavior that suggests that they
>doing something lawbreaking that they are ashamed of.
One should always suggest to investigating authorities that they show a
warrant or get lost. "Quo warranto"? It is rarely useful to chat with them.
DCF
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1995-10-17 (Tue, 17 Oct 95 06:13:48 PDT) - Re: The NSA Visits Compendium - Duncan Frissell <frissell@panix.com>