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- Newsgroups: sci.crypt
- Path: sparky!uunet!shearson.com!snark!pmetzger
- From: pmetzger@snark.shearson.com (Perry E. Metzger)
- Subject: Re: Limits on the Use of Cryptography?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov11.194933.8724@shearson.com>
- Sender: news@shearson.com (News)
- Organization: /usr/local/lib/news/organization
- References: <1992Nov11.061210.9933@cactus.org>
- Date: Wed, 11 Nov 1992 19:49:33 GMT
- Lines: 84
-
- ritter@cactus.org (Terry Ritter) writes:
- >
- > Although the discussion of key registration has been interesting,
- > it does seem a bit like shooting fish in a barrel. Discussing the
- > proposition on a computer network invokes an inherent bias in most
- > readers. So, suppose we give the issue a different environment:
- >
- > The police bust an alleged child molester, and take possession
- > of his PC. They believe that the hard drive contains a full
- > database of young kids who have been *or may be* assaulted.
- > That database is enciphered.
- >
- > Now, your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to defend
- > cryptography to ordinary voters, congress people and newspaper
- > reporters. You also need to explain to a relative of one of those
- > kids, someone who doesn't own or work with a computer, why the
- > government should "allow" private cryptography which could hide
- > this sort of information.
-
- Why stop there? Why not outlaw the computer itself? Obviously, without
- the computer, no harm could have been done, right?
-
- There is a key problem that the sensationalizers have -- they only
- consider one half of a problem. They note that cryptography can be
- used to aid in criminal activity -- they don't, however, look at the
- benefits. Using the "only look at the harm" argument, I could showt
- that steak knives should be outlawed -- after all, people get murdered
- with steak knives.
-
- Here is the thing: that child molester could have built an encryption
- system on his own with a few hours work that the authorities could not
- break -- just go out and buy a copy of Tannenbaum's book with full
- source code to DES, for instance. He could have gone out and
- downloaded an encryption program from a million places. He could have
- failed to be so kind as to keep detailed records for the authorities
- (presumably the cure to that is to make failure to record exact
- details of your crimes a crime in itself -- Ms. Denning, take note,
- here is your next proposal just waiting for you). A criminal isn't
- going to care about anyone's petty little laws -- someone who is
- already due the electric chair for getting his jollies by cooking
- children won't give a damn that cryptography is illegal.
-
- So, we are asked to weigh handing the government all the tools needed
- to implement a totalitarian state against the possibility that the law
- enforcement agencies might occassionally catch a stupid criminal
- detered by the fact that the government has passed a law.
-
- When will people learn that not everything can be fixed by a law, but
- that much can be destroyed by one? No matter how optimistic the
- lawmakers, passing a bill declaring that by next week all children
- must be well fed and educated will not alter the minds or bellies of
- the children across the nation. Passing a law tomorrow outlawing
- racial hatred will not stop bigotry. You can't alter the universe with
- laws. All you can do is give orders to police men with them. Those
- policemen are people just like anyone else, with their limitations,
- fears, and personal desires. No number of laws passed thus far have
- stamped out drug dealing, or even made a dent in it, in spite of
- budgets that have soared by one and a half orders of magnitude in a
- decade. Similarly, no law banning cryptography will make the world
- into the place you want. However, just as the drug laws have made the
- inner cities into infernal nightmares of gunfire and street crime,
- your anti-cryptography laws will have unintended consequences -- they
- will not reduce crimes, but they may make our lives into nightmares in
- ways we cannot even yet fathom. The obvious possibilities for a police
- state are only the tip of the ice berg -- imagine the consequences of
- a further erosion of the right to free speech and privacy in areas we
- haven't even thought of yet.
-
- You can't make the world into heaven by passing a law, but you can
- often make it into hell with an ill considered one. Lets not confuse
- our desires for what we would like a law to do with what its actual
- consequences will be. Anticrypto legislation will do little or nothing
- to stop crime. The only consequence I can see for it will be the
- continuing expansion of the powers of government into our lives.
- Anticrypto legislation will disable the capacity of ordinary citizens
- to hide anything they do from the government. We might as well all
- live in panopticons if we go ahead with such a scheme.
-
-
- --
- Perry Metzger pmetzger@shearson.com
- --
- "They can have my RSA key when they pry it from my cold dead fingers."
- Libertarian Party info: Phone 1-800-682-1776, E-Mail 345-5647@mcimail.com
-