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- Date: Fri, Mar 12, 1993 (07:51)
- From: Cliff Figallo <fig@well.sf.ca.us>
- Subject: File 5--Computer Freedom and Privacy III Conf. (Report 5)
-
- Actually, Vint Cerf was the co-inventor (with last year's Pioneer
- Award winner Robert Kahn) of TCP/IP. The one you forgot was Paul
- Baran, "inventor" of packet switching and the Telebit modem
- protocol.
- I say "inventor" because all of these people would be the first to
- tell you that all of this has been collaborative and evolutionary.
- I
- was privileged to be able to arrange for the recipients to come
- here
- to accept the awards and they are all very gracious and humble
- people.
-
- John Perry Barlow gave the lunch speech Thursday, matching Bruce
- Sterling's second-day-lunch presentation, the mind-blowing event of
- *last* year's CFP in Washington. J.P. did nothing to dim what may
- become the tradition of having the conference peak at this
- particular
- point in the schedule. Barlow's point, delivered in his
- characteristic blunt, frank, to the point, human-centered style,
- was
- that our access to the tools that can guarantee us absolute digital
- privacy can be _over-used_ by us, the technical elite. We are
- already
- more knowledgeable and sophisticated about communications than any
- branch or agency of government and we have the ability to maintain
- that lead. If we decide to escalate a "war" of privacy, it may
- force
- the government's hand and we may actually end up contributing to a
- constriction of free flow of information and a resulting damage to
- the
- community-fostering potential of electronic networking. Barlow's
- appeal to us, was to practice moderation and to pay attention to
- the
- meta-effects.
-
- He strung together so many provocative statements (I had high-level
- functionaries of both the CIA and FBI in my line of sight as he
- spoke)
- that many eyebrows were raised and twitching and even I was shaking
- my
- head in disbelief. I'll get the transcript and post it here as
- soon
- as possible. Big Fun.
-
- Aside from that, a lot of action, as usual, was taking place in the
- hallways. The session on Digital Privacy (including Dorothy
- Denning
- and the issue of the FBI's Digital Telephony scheme) was a good
- high-level discussion which as appreciated by all as giving good
- exposure to the major conflicting points of view. This being by
- third
- CFP and my eighth year being concerned with these issues, I see all
- the usual suspects discussing the usual issues, making incremental
- progress toward resolution. Some of these issues can only be
- solved
- when the technology and the people have been in the microwave long
- enough. No major breakthroughs will happen at this conference, but
- it
- does build the trust that face-to-face often brings.
-
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