1996-10-31 - Re: News: Sony/Philips has trouble exporting TV’s

Header Data

From: Martin Minow <minow@apple.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: f9ac6b5b4ca7763cd1cca05362a9f9e1566866c8f4df3f84a7531633a9e54ffb
Message ID: <v03007803ae9da57b4a8c@[17.202.40.158]>
Reply To: <199610300748.XAA29976@krypton.chromatic.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-10-31 00:43:25 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 30 Oct 1996 16:43:25 -0800 (PST)

Raw message

From: Martin Minow <minow@apple.com>
Date: Wed, 30 Oct 1996 16:43:25 -0800 (PST)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: News: Sony/Philips has trouble exporting TV's
In-Reply-To: <199610300748.XAA29976@krypton.chromatic.com>
Message-ID: <v03007803ae9da57b4a8c@[17.202.40.158]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>    Washington - New Internet-television systems from Sony Corp. and
>    Philips Electronics Co. are technically munitions under U.S. export
>    controls and cannot be shipped to the companies' worldwide sales
>    networks, it was disclosed last week.
>
>    Sony officials said the company's TV set-top box designed by WebTV of
>    Palo Alto, Calif., includes a state-of-the-art 128-bit code encryption
>    system for electronic commerce. This far exceeds the 40-bit encryption
>    code permissible for export under the U.S. Munitions Control List.
>

At the Bernstein case oral arguments last September, I distinctly
remember the government lawyer stating that the United States does
not restrict "financial cryptography." Perhaps he should have
qualified his argument somewhat.

This statement bothered me, as I cannot understand how an encryption
algorithm can "know" that it is encrypting a financial transaction,
rather than some non-financial document that would be export-restricted.

Martin Minow
minow@apple.com







Thread