1996-03-29 - RE: Weapons & Hope

Header Data

From: Eric Anderson <ericande@cnw.com>
To: “frissell@panix.com>
Message Hash: 2b76a8d8d5200a78214d3b66aaff6a6271c81d7a4d7532fa9029c924821d21f4
Message ID: <01BB1AE5.90E0B8A0@king1-19.cnw.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-03-29 05:22:24 UTC
Raw Date: Fri, 29 Mar 1996 13:22:24 +0800

Raw message

From: Eric Anderson <ericande@cnw.com>
Date: Fri, 29 Mar 1996 13:22:24 +0800
To: "frissell@panix.com>
Subject: RE: Weapons & Hope
Message-ID: <01BB1AE5.90E0B8A0@king1-19.cnw.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain




----------
From: 	Duncan Frissell[SMTP:frissell@panix.com]
Sent: 	Tuesday, March 26, 1996 8:42 AM
To: 	cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: 	Weapons & Hope
While it might be barely possible
in the mass production age to control weapons by blocking the flow of these
specific products (a Streetsweeper, say) into the marketplace, it will
clearly not be possible  in the age of custom production.  General machines
will be available to produce specialized products (often under the direct
control of the customer, himself).  Some of this custom production will be
weapons.
	
I took machine tool operations @ my local community college. suffice it 
to say, good, high-quality firearms are **EASY** to fabricate (Believe me!)
	So my point is this: Just as the Gov't CANNOT prevent me from making a gun in my basement, whats to stop some high-school juinor from writing
a strong crypto program?
	I can just see Chuckie Schumer introducing (W/ Sen. Fine-Swine as 
co-sponor) a bill to ban "Cyberwar Software" i.e. mandatory registration of compilers, mandatory GAK, etc... What an asshole.
Take care,
Eric





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