From: “Dave Banisar” <banisar@epic.org>
To: “Cypherpunks List” <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Message Hash: bdd6db6c9ffe59d5e7407dee47dc04e647050784e77cdb8af91d56dff1139553
Message ID: <n1383746530.3760@epic.org>
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UTC Datetime: 1996-04-02 07:54:58 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 2 Apr 1996 15:54:58 +0800
From: "Dave Banisar" <banisar@epic.org>
Date: Tue, 2 Apr 1996 15:54:58 +0800
To: "Cypherpunks List" <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Subject: ACM/IEEE Letter on Crypto
Message-ID: <n1383746530.3760@epic.org>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Reply to: ACM/IEEE Letter on Crypto
Association For Computing Machinery
Office of US Public Policy
666 Pennsylvania Avenue SE
Suite 301
Washington, DC 20003 USA
(tel) 202/298-0842 (fax) 202/547-5482
Institute of Electronics and Electrical Engineers
United States Activities
1828 L Street NW
Suite 1202
Washington, DC 20036-5104 USA
(tel) 202/785-0017 (fax) 202/785-0835
April 2, 1996
Honorable Conrad Burns
Chairman, Subcommittee on Science, Technology and Space
Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee
US Senate SD-508
Washington, DC 20510
Dear Chairman Burns:
On behalf of the nation's two leading computing and engineering
associations, we are writing to support your efforts, and the efforts of
the other cosponsors of the Encrypted Communications Privacy Act, to
remove unnecessarily restrictive controls on the export of encryption
technology. The Encrypted Communications Privacy Act sets out the
minimum changes that are necessary to the current export controls on
encryption technology. However, we believe that the inclusion of issues
that are tangential to export, such as key escrow and encryption in
domestic criminal activities, is not necessary. The relaxation of
export controls is of great economic importance to industry and users,
and should not become entangled in more controversial matters.
Current restrictions on the export of encryption technology harm
the interests of the United States in three ways: they handicap American
producers of software & hardware, prevent the development of a secure
information infrastructure, and limit the ability of Americans using new
online services to protect their privacy. The proposed legislation will
help mitigate all of these problems, though more will need to be done to
assure continued US leadership in this important hi-tech sector.
Technological progress has moved encryption from the realm of
national security into the commercial sphere. Current policies, as well
as the policy-making processes, should reflect this new reality. The
legislation takes a necessary first step in shifting authority to the
Commerce Department and removing restrictions on certain encryption
products. Future liberalization of export controls will allow Americans
to excel in this market.
The removal of out-dated restrictions on exports will also enable
the creation of a Global Information Infrastructure sufficiently secure
to provide seamless connectivity to customers previously unreachable by
American companies. The United States is a leader in Internet
commerce. However, Internet commerce requires cryptography. Thus
American systems have been hindered by cold-war restraints on the
necessary cryptography as these systems have moved from the laboratory
to the marketplace. This legislation would open the market to secure,
private, ubiquitous electronic commerce. The cost of not opening the
market may include the loss of leadership in computer security
technologies, just at the time when Internet users around the world will
need good security to launch commercial applications.
For this legislation to fulfill its promise the final approval of
export regulations must be based on analysis of financial and commercial
requirements and opportunities, not simply on the views of experts in
national security cryptography. Therefore, we urge you to look at ways
to further relax restrictive barriers.
Finally, the legislation will serve all users of electronic
information systems by supporting the development of a truly global
market for secure desktop communications. This will help establish
private and secure spaces for the work of users, which is of particular
interest to the members of the IEEE/USA and the USACM.
On behalf of the both the USACM and the IEEE/USA we look forward
to working with you on this important legislation to relax export
controls and promote the development of a robust, secure, and reliable
communications infrastructure for the twenty-first century.
Please contact Deborah Rudolph in the IEEE Washington Office at
(202) 785-0017 or Lauren Gelman in the ACM Public Policy Office at (202)
298-0842 for any additional information.
Sincerely,
Barbara Simons, Ph.D.3
Chair, U.S. Public Policy
Committee of ACM
Joel B. Snyder, P.E.
Vice President, Professional Activities and
Chair, United States Activities Board
cc: Members of the Subcommittee on
Science, Technology and Space
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