1996-07-20 - Bureaucractic Slime Factor (Was: NSA response to key length report)

Header Data

From: Ernest Hua <hua@xenon.chromatic.com>
To: Matt Blaze <mab@crypto.com>
Message Hash: 66d2d058ae2966cf2d99dfb467e36e1d1173e5c45ff9d2236473b6ac396c3276
Message ID: <199607200018.RAA24698@server1.chromatic.com>
Reply To: <199607192110.RAA07548@crypto.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-07-20 11:30:04 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 20 Jul 1996 19:30:04 +0800

Raw message

From: Ernest Hua <hua@xenon.chromatic.com>
Date: Sat, 20 Jul 1996 19:30:04 +0800
To: Matt Blaze <mab@crypto.com>
Subject: Bureaucractic Slime Factor (Was: NSA response to key length report)
In-Reply-To: <199607192110.RAA07548@crypto.com>
Message-ID: <199607200018.RAA24698@server1.chromatic.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



> What I find most disturbing about this is that their report was
> provided secretly to policymakers in the administration and in
> Congress, without independent technical review that would have
> quickly exposed the fallacy of the arguments.  I never would have
> seen it had several of the recipients not faxed it to me.  This is

Yes.  This is the bureaucratic slime factor.  It pissed me off when
Freeh lobbied behind the scenes for Digital Telephony.  It pissed me
off when government officials use effectively hidden channels
precisely because they know they cannot get away with it in the full
light of public scrutiny.

Another way B.S.F. shows up is exemplified by gross mistatements
like Gore's recent "emerging consensus" claim.  It's the old "it's
technically true but we know damn well we are effectively lying to
the public" trick.

I am actually kind of surprised that there are some on this list
who might have considered giving Gore the benefit of the doubt.

Ern







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