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- From: ygoland@edison.seas.ucla.edu (The Jester)
- Newsgroups: comp.org.eff.talk
- Subject: Public Key Registration
- Message-ID: <8714@lee.SEAS.UCLA.EDU>
- Date: 21 Nov 92 19:58:34 GMT
- Sender: news@SEAS.UCLA.EDU
- Organization: Republicans for Sanity
- Lines: 31
-
- I'm a tad bit confused about Ms. Denning and other's proposals regarding
- this area. I thought one of the fundamental concepts of our society
- is 'innocent until proven guilty'. The proposal to register public
- keys seems to my naive eyes to be a clear violation of this
- principal. In effect it says 'you might be guilty, so please provide
- us with the evidence to convict you'. To put her proposal in a
- simpler vein:Imagine that microphones and cameras were placed in
- your house and were constantly recording your activity. But the
- government couldn't access them unless it got three different code
- cards from three different private agencies. Unless they have a
- court order, they can't access those microphones and cameras, so
- whats the problem? Or imagine that all your mail and phone calls are
- intercepted and recorded but only listened to if the intercepting
- agency has a warrant to read it's own records. After all, whats the
- problem? They will only violate your privacy if they have a reason
- to think your a criminal!
-
- The fundamental problem with public key registration is that its
- easy and relatively inexpensive to do. The idea of intercepting and
- recording all mail and telephone calls or of putting cameras and
- microphones in your house are both prohibitivly expensive. Though I
- wonder, if the equipment should fall in price to the point of
- basically being 'free', will people come out proposing cameras and
- intercepts as well?
-
- The Jester
- --
- For some reason unintelligible to me, Lord Acton's dictum that
- "Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely"
- is rarely raised in connection with judges, who...possess power
- ..that comes [close] to being absolute"-Judge Bork
-