From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 02a623c1e6ea29354216cb1bd8f5da367b99b092a78da474be0b87face96ab1b
Message ID: <199802250211.DAA21296@basement.replay.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-02-25 02:12:10 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 24 Feb 1998 18:12:10 -0800 (PST)
From: nobody@REPLAY.COM (Anonymous)
Date: Tue, 24 Feb 1998 18:12:10 -0800 (PST)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Group to Attack Clinton on Crypto
Message-ID: <199802250211.DAA21296@basement.replay.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Date: Tue, 24 Feb 1998 18:49:25 +0000 (GMT)
From: "Dr I. D. Goodyer" <goodyer@well.ox.ac.uk>
To: ukcrypto@maillist.ox.ac.uk
Subject: Group to Attack Clinton on Crypto
>From http://www.news.com/News/Item/0,4,19388,00.html
I hope that this isn't too American for us the majority on this list. I
thought that it was relevant.
See original webpage for hyperlinks.
Ian
Group to Attack Clinton on Crypto
By Courtney Macavinta
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
February 23, 1998, 2:40 p.m. PT
A bipartisan group of politicos, high-tech companies,
and privacy advocates will announce a broad coalition
next week to overturn the White House's current
encryption policy through a million-dollar media blitz
and lobbying campaign, CNET's NEWS.COM has
learned.
Encryption secures digital communications, rendering
it unreadable if intercepted. The technology is the
center of a U.S. debate with federal law enforcement
officials asking Congress for access to the "keys" that
unlock encrypted data on one side, and consumer
groups and industry representatives arguing that such
provisions make encryption products useless and
constitute an invasion of privacy.
The formation of the coalition--Americans for
Computer Privacy--signals a shift in the diligent, but
Beltway-confined, fight against the White House's
crypto stance. The players in the coalition will
attempt to force encryption policy on the mainstream
radar by convincing Americans that the government
has plans to read their private digital discourse.
"This will be an effort with very major financial
backing, and this effort will be joined by a
breathtaking coalition of interests," Jack Quinn, the
coalition's legal adviser, told CNET's NEWS.COM
today. Quinn is a senior partner with Arnold &
Porter in Washington and is a former counsel to
President Clinton.
"I think people will understand that the FBI director's
[Louis Freeh] proposal for domestic encryption
controls is really like asking them to make a duplicate
of their front door key and leave it at the post office
in case he wants to get inside...I don't think it will be
hard to explain," he added.
The coalition includes the Business Software Alliance,
which will be just one of the financial backers, the
trade group confirmed today. The hired guns to head
up the coalition's strategy and media campaign also
include Ed Gillespie, president of Policy Impact
Communications and the strategist behind the
Republican's sweeping 1994 legislative package
known as the Contract with America; and the firm of
Goddard-Claussen, which is best known for creating
the famous "Harry and Louise" commercials that
helped defeat the president's health care reform
initiative the same year.
In addition, Mindshare Internet Campaigns will be in
charge of the online strategy and Web site for the
coalition, with the Dittus Group in charge of public
relations. Recruiting pamphlets with scant details
about the coalition's membership, but with clearly
laid out goals, already were circulated at the
Computers, Freedom, and Privacy conference in
Austin, Texas, last week.
These forces and other yet-to-be named members of
the coalition will try in about 50 calendar days
remaining in Congress's session to derail legislation
already on the table that they say will prevent private
online communication.
The group will fight an FBI-backed plan that would
require all federally funded computers to store
encryption keys with a government-approved party,
allowing law enforcement to unscramble documents
without users' knowledge or even a court order in
some cases.
"Even if you don't have a PC at your home or office,
still there is information about you that is
computerized; maybe it's your medical or financial
records. We want to make sure that the technology
that can keep that information private stays that way,"
said Tom McMahon, a spokesman for the coalition,
which officially will launch next Wednesday.
In addition, the Americans for Computer Privacy will
ramp up an ongoing battle to overturn Clinton
administration regulations prohibiting the export of
strong encryption products unless the codes are made
available to law enforcement agencies. A bill know as
the SAFE Act was the vehicle for this export relief,
but at least one version of the bill altered by the
House Intelligence Committee would grant law
enforcement access to encrypted protected
communication in the United States. (See related
story)
"BSA is involved in this broader coalition of users,
industry, and privacy groups. We are coming
together to push for a policy that is based on a
voluntary, market-based system that is based on
consumer demand vs. the government's demand to
access your communication in a way that is
unprecedented and violates privacy," said Kim
Willard, a spokeswoman for the BSA.
The media campaign is expected to cost more than $1
million and will continue over the next eight months.
The goal is to stimulate grassroots action against the
bills that add more controls on cryptography. At the
same time, the coalition's political heavyweights will
be working with Congress members to secure a
victory.
"They clearly want to get this out to broader public
audiences and move outside the Beltway to focus on
what the public has at stake in this the debate," said
Richard Claussen, whose firm will work on the TV
campaign. "The indication is that we want to move
pretty aggressively on this."
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