From: jya@pipeline.com
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 1e42640d6e45fe48560f184b4b6e2f104bc0b5aee338930db39d4b26e0887d1b
Message ID: <199605031309.JAA16482@pipe2.nyc.pipeline.com>
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UTC Datetime: 1996-05-03 20:32:37 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 4 May 1996 04:32:37 +0800
From: jya@pipeline.com
Date: Sat, 4 May 1996 04:32:37 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Dole Backs Crypto Export
Message-ID: <199605031309.JAA16482@pipe2.nyc.pipeline.com>
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Financial Times, May 3, 1996, p. 7.
Dole backs removal of software export ban
By Louise Kehoe in San Francisco
Senator Bob Dole, the presumptive Republican presidential
candidate, yesterday threw his support behind proposed
legislation to remove US export restrictions on computer
software used to encode Internet messages.
The new Security and Freedom through Encryption bill
introduced yesterday by several Republican senators and
congressmen, also rejects a controversial Clinton
administration proposal to enable law enforcement agencies
to unlock encoded electronic messages.
For Senator Dole, the encryption bill provides an
opportunity to seek support from Silicon Valley high-tech
leaders many of whom backed Mr Bill Clinton in 1992, and to
boost his election campaign efforts in California.
"The administration's misguided proposal on encryption
amounts to a pair of cement shoes for Silicon Valley," said
Senator Dole. "It seems to me that a new pair of track
shoes might be a better answer. The administration's big
brother proposal will literally destroy America's computer
industry," he said.
Encryption software is currently classified as "munitions"
and exports are strictly limited by the US state
department. US and other western intelligence and law
enforcement agencies are opposed to the commercial use of
the most powerful encryption methods which they argue could
be used to mask criminal or terrorist activities by
effectively preventing wire-taps.
However, US software companies maintain that the current
export restrictions threaten US pre-eminence in the world
software market.
A study by the Computer Systems Policy Project, a computer
industry group, estimated that within four years the US
economy would lose $60bn in revenues and roughly 216,000
jobs as a result of encryption export controls.
Moreover, current regulations, which allow export only of
"weak" encryption, are unacceptable because such encoding
has been demonstrated to be ineffective.
Last year, for example students in France were able to
break encryption which is used in the export version of
Netscape Communication's popular Internet browser software.
The limited availability of strong encryption software is
also blocking the progress of electronic commerce on the
Internet, US computer experts argue, because companies and
individuals are reluctant to make electronic payments over
the Internet without assurance of security.
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