1997-10-06 - Re: The Child Molester Prevention and Effective Sentencing Act

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From: nospam-seesignature@ceddec.com
To: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
Message Hash: 3ecdf29a8ed089ff15deedd7b15d9a9091722d9bdc5c5cbf8729d056248ca211
Message ID: <97Oct6.103925edt.32260@brickwall.ceddec.com>
Reply To: <v0300780fb051e6b8720d@[168.161.105.141]>
UTC Datetime: 1997-10-06 14:53:51 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 6 Oct 1997 22:53:51 +0800

Raw message

From: nospam-seesignature@ceddec.com
Date: Mon, 6 Oct 1997 22:53:51 +0800
To: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
Subject: Re: The Child Molester Prevention and Effective Sentencing Act
In-Reply-To: <v0300780fb051e6b8720d@[168.161.105.141]>
Message-ID: <97Oct6.103925edt.32260@brickwall.ceddec.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



On Fri, 26 Sep 1997, Declan McCullagh wrote:

> 
> The problem with all the current bills like original SAFE and ProCODE is
> that they're too wimpy, abstract, arcane. Who cares about protecting
> business? Nobody, at least not when you'll be dubbed soft on crime. So
> what's the one thing everyone cares about and wants to protect?
> 
> Yes, that's right: CHILDREN!!!! I think someone should introduce a bill
> called "The Child Molester Prevention and Effective Sentencing Act of
> 1997."
> 
> The summary: "To reduce crime, protect our children, and secure our private
> communications from child molesters, pedophiles, and various perverts, this
> bill would spur the development of privacy-enhancing technologies by
> removing all export controls on encryption products."
> 
> Who would ever vote against the CMPA? Who wants to be soft on child
> molesters and random perverts? Not even Louis Freeh could successfully
> oppose this one...
> 
> -Declan
> 
> (Okay, okay. It's a Friday. Time for me to go home...)

I remember one of the NET moderators asked why they should use encryption.

What if you want to send a message to your child saying you will be late
after school.  What is to prevent a pedophile from forging such a message?
And if a pedophile intercepts such a message, couldn't he arrive 5 minutes
early saying that "dad changed his plans again and sent me...".

Now, Rep. Tauzin wants to make it illegal to listen in to any "private" 
radio communication (yes listen, not just repeat), since Gingrich couldn't
have access to encrypted communication and someone listened in on his cell
phone.  One law prevents security from being available, so they think that
a second law will prevent people from listening in.

Repealing a law preventing fences is more effective than adding a
draconian penalty for tresspass. 

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