1995-12-21 - Encryption Rules Coming

Header Data

From: m5@dev.tivoli.com (Mike McNally)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: a7aacc0f466e95ee4221a7c82c0433c2b5ed41c355a77bdba8fbf27bf7b8ba8a
Message ID: <9512211714.AA08868@alpha>
Reply To: <199512211605.LAA00150@pipe3.nyc.pipeline.com>
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-21 17:15:04 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 21 Dec 95 09:15:04 PST

Raw message

From: m5@dev.tivoli.com (Mike McNally)
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 95 09:15:04 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Encryption Rules Coming
In-Reply-To: <199512211605.LAA00150@pipe3.nyc.pipeline.com>
Message-ID: <9512211714.AA08868@alpha>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



 >    Financial Times, December 21, 1995, p. 4.
 > 
 >    However, many governments, including that of the US, have
 >    resisted permitting the technology to be exported because
 >    they fear it will fall into the hands of organised crime
 >    and terrorist organisations.

I am forced to wonder whether the people who type in stories like this
are conscious while they do so.  Replace "the technology" with
"pistols" in the above paragraph; it doesn't make any sense unless you
assume there are no organized crime or terrorist organizations in the
US, or that such organizations can only acquire things that pass
through national borders.  Are news editors so technophobic that they
assume there must be something they just "don't get"?


On a vaguely related note, I saw a quick preview for an episode of
"The Client".  The episode was supposed to be about Internet child
molesters (who I suppose are the ones that know the secret
"meta-alt-ctrl" sequence that causes the innocent victims on the other
end of the wire to be abused via modem).  Anybody see it?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
| Nobody's going to listen to you if you just | Mike McNally (m5@tivoli.com) |
| stand there and flap your arms like a fish. | Tivoli Systems, Austin TX    |
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