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- EFFector Online Volume 6 No. 3.01 10/20/1993 editors@eff.org
- A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- In This Issue:
-
- EFF Changes: New Editor, Suns Move to DC!
- EFF Elects Two New Members to Its Board of Directors
- Notes from House Hearing on Cryptography Export Controls
- Administration Expands FOIA Rights
- UK Cryptoprivacy Association Meeting
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- EFF Changes: New Editor, Suns Move to DC!
-
- EFFector Online is now produced by Stanton "Mechanism" McCandlish, EFF's
- Online Activist, mech@eff.org. Besides UseNet ubiquity, Stanton has been
- active in the BBS scene for some time, particularly in FidoNet, and is
- the founder of IndraNet. Mech hails from Albuquerque, New Mexico, and is
- finding EFF and Washington DC to be a fascinating change of pace and
- place.
-
- Some new formatting: All articles are separated by the -==-==-==... line you
- see above, which should make it convenient to scan forward to a new article
- quickly.
-
- General comments about EFFector, EFF, and the issues raised should be
- directed to editors@eff.org.
-
- Other important addresses, one of which is new:
- eff@eff.org - to get on mailing lists, and other tech stuff.
- ask@eff.org - to ask questions about EFF or the issues we are involved in.
-
- EFF's Sun Microsystems SPARCstations finally have been moved down to our
- offices in DC. Chris Davis and Helen Rose-Davis, EFF's former Systems
- Administrators, journeyed with the machines and, with the help of new
- Systems Administrator Dan Brown (brown@eff.org), had them up and running
- within one hour of arrival onsite! Chris and Helen now will be able to
- devote their complete energies to KEI, which was kind enough to loan us
- their talents. We thank them for all they've done for us and wish them the
- best of luck.
-
- Note that EFF *is* still reachable at eff.org, the ftp site is still
- ftp.eff.org, the gopher site is still gopher.eff.org, wais is wais.eff.org,
- as always. However, kragar.eff.org may not be a valid host domain name much
- longer, so avoid using it and use ftp.eff.org instead.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- EFF Elects Two New Members to Its Board of Directors
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today announced the election of
- two individuals to its Board of Directors: David Johnson, a Washington,
- D.C. attorney specializing in computer law, and Rob Glaser, a software
- industry executive and multimedia pioneer.
-
- David Johnson is counsel in the Washington, D.C. law firm of Wilmer,
- Cutler & Pickering where his areas of practice include software and
- systems contracting, electronic publishing and privacy issues, newspaper
- distribution systems, litigation, property valuation and administrative
- law. He also serves as President and CEO of Counsel Connect, an
- electronic mail and conferencing system that connects corporate counsel
- and outside law firms, and has been instrumental in encouraging the use of
- information technology in the legal profession. Johnson serves on the
- Board of Directors of the Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction
- (CALI) and is a Trustee of the National Center for Automated Information
- Research (NCAIR).
-
- "EFF has provided unique leadership by helping everyone involved in
- building and using the new electronic networks to understand the
- importance of preserving core democratic values in this new medium," said
- Johnson. "The founders of EFF have pushed vigorously for networks that
- preserve freedom of speech, privacy and enhanced opportunities for all. I
- am excited to have a chance to participate in EFF's continuing discussion
- of these vital questions."
-
- Rob Glaser is presently a consultant to Microsoft Corporation. He most
- recently served as the company's Vice President for Multimedia and
- Consumer Systems, where he led Microsoft's development of multimedia
- technology and the company's strategy for entering the emerging market for
- consumer digital appliances. Prior to that, Glaser held positions at
- Microsoft related to the development and marketing of networking systems
- software and desktop applications such as Microsoft Word and Excel. Before
- joining Microsoft in 1983, Glaser was founder and President of Ivy
- Research, a PC software startup company. Glaser also is a minority owner of
- the Seattle Mariners baseball team, and serves on the board of the Target
- Margin Theater Company of New York, and Dwight Hall, the umbrella
- organization for Yale University student social and political activism.
-
- "I'm honored and excited to be joining the board," said Glaser about his
- involvement in EFF. "In its brief history EFF has established itself as
- the leading organization working to ensure that the Electronic Frontier is
- organized and run in accordance with fundamental American principles of
- openness, democracy, and social justice. I hope to help EFF extend its
- work into the arena of video and multimedia information."
-
- Johnson and Glaser join with other members of the Foundation's Board of
- Directors, including EFF co-founders Mitchell Kapor and John Perry
- Barlow, Jerry Berman, John Gilmore, Stewart Brand, Esther Dyson, and David
- Farber.
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- Notes from House Hearing on Cryptography Export Controls
- by Danny Weitzner, EFF Senior Staff Counsel
-
- October 12, 1993
- House Foreign Affairs Committee
- Subcommittee on Economic Policy, Trade, and the Enviornment
- Hearing on mass market cryptography and export controls
- Rep. Sam Gejdenson (D-Conn.), Chair
-
- Committee Members present:
-
- Gejdenson, Cantwell (D-Wash.), Fingerhut (D-Ohio), Rohrbacher (R-Calif.)
- Manzullo (R-Ill.)
-
- Witnesses:
-
- PANEL 1 (Open)
-
- J. Hendren, Arkansas Systems (A data security firm that does a lot of
- international banking work)
-
- Ray Ozzie, IRIS Associates for Business Software Alliance (Lotus Notes
- developer)
-
- Stephen Walker, Trusted Information Systems for Software Publishers Association
-
- Philip Zimmermann, PGP developer
-
- Don Harbert, Digital Eqiupment Corp.
-
- PANEL 2 (Secret Session)
-
- NSA representative
-
-
- Opening Statement of Gejdenson:
-
- "This hearing is about the well intentioned attempts of the National
- Security Agency to try to control the uncontrollable.... The NSA itself
- acknowledges that if you have a long distance telephone line and a modem,
- you can send this software anywhere in the world. If you have a computer
- and a modem you can take this software off of the Internet anywhere in the
- world.... I do not question the value of the information sought by the
- National Security Agency. But once it is determined that the dispersion of
- this software cannot be controlled, then however much we might want to
- protect our ability to obtain information, it is beyond our means to do so.
- Just as in the case of telecommunications, the National Security Agency is
- attempting to put the genie back in the bottle. It won't happen; and a
- vibrant and productive sector of American indsutry may be sacrificed in the
- process."
-
- The main points raised by witnesses were these:
-
- 1. DES and other strong encryption which is barred by ITAR is in the public
- domain and available on the global market from foreign software
- manufacturers:
-
- -Ray Ozzie used his laptop and a modem to show how to get a DES
- implementation from ftp.germany.eu.net. The committee loved it and most of
- them seemed to understand what was going on on the screen, even though they
- had never heard of ftp.
-
- -Stephen Walker described the results of an SPA study which uncovered over
- 250 cryptography packages which offer DES-based or stronger algorithms.
-
- -Phil Zimmermann testified that he designed PGP from publicly available
- information.
-
- 2. Foreign DES implementations are just as good as US versions.
- Surprisingly enough, this is a contentious issue. Some members of the
- committee seemed to have been told by someone or another that foreign
- versions of DES may not be as strong as those that are made in the USA. If
- this were true, then export controls might still be justified despite the
- numerous foreign versions of DES on the market. In my view, this is a
- pretty desperate argument.
-
- -Steve Walker demonstrated that all DES works the same way by encrypting a
- passage from Mozart's Eine Kleine Nachtmusik with several different foreign
- DES packages, and then decrypting them. Surprise! They all sounded just
- the same.
-
- 3. Lots of money is being lost by US software/hardware vendors:
-
- -Don Harbert from DEC told of loses of over $70 Million in just the last
- few months.
-
- -BSA estimates that export controls exclude access to a global market the
- is $6-9 Billion.
-
- 4. People want their privacy
-
- -Phil Zimmermann told the committee about his experience with PGP users and
- how badly people need and want to protect their privacy in electronic
- environments
-
- Committee Responses:
-
- Overall, the committee was quite sympathetic to the witnesses. Chairman
- Gejdenson seemed very supportive of changing export controls. Rep. Dana
- Rohrbacher, no flaming liberal, said, "the cold war is over. I sympathize
- with everything that has been said here."
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- Administration Expands FOIA Rights
-
- In an announcement made on Monday, October 4, 1993, President Bill Clinton
- has called on all federal departments and agencies "to renew their
- commitment to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), to its underlying
- principles of government openness, and to its sound administration."
-
- Attorney General Janet Reno specified some changes the Administration will
- be making in its enforcement of FOIA. First, the Department of Justice
- will no longer allow agencies the excuse that there MIGHT be a legal basis
- for withholding information. Instead, agencies will be encouraged to
- disclose unless there is a clear legal reason that prevents disclosure.
- "In short, it shall be the policy of the U.S. Department of Justice to
- defend the assertion of a FOIA exemption only in those cases where the
- agency reasonably foresees that disclosure would be harmful to an interest
- protected by that exemption."
-
- Attorney General Reno also announced that the Department of Justice would
- be reviewing regulations implementing FOIA and forms used in the process.
- DoJ will also strive to reduce the current FOIA backlogs over the coming
- year.
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) was especially pleased that
- President Clinton refered to enhancing "public access through the use of
- electronic information systems." EFF believes that electronic access to
- information is critical, and EFF has been working with Congress (through
- support of Senator Patrick Leahy's (D-VT) Electronic FOIA amendments and
- other legislation) and members of the Administration to ensure that
- electronically stored information is as easily obtainable as printed
- documents. EFF Director of Legal Services Shari Steele commented, "We are
- encouraged that the Clinton Administration has recognized the importance of
- this method of information dissemination. In this electronic era, it is
- critical that information be made available in a format that is most useful
- to citizens as they inquire about the activities of their government."
-
- After over a decade of government whittling away at citizen access to
- public information, EFF is pleased to see this shift in priorities. "We
- applaud the Clinton Administration for taking this first step toward
- restoring our vital right to access information," Ms. Steele continued,
- "and we are hopeful that the Administration will take further steps in this
- direction, particularly when it comes to information that is stored
- electronically."
-
- A copy of the Administration's memorandum is available for anonymous ftp at
- /pub/EFF/legislation/freedom-info-act-10.4.93 on ftp.eff.org.
-
-
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- UK Cryptoprivacy Association Meeting
-
- Date: Sunday, 31 October 1993
- Time: 1430
-
- At the offices of:
-
- FOREST
- 4th floor
- 2 Grosvenor Gardens
- London SW1W 0DH
-
- [ FOREST is located at the corner of Grosvenor Gardens and Hobart
- Place, a couple of blocks west of Victoria Station. There is a
- taxi shelter across the street from the office. Those who have
- trouble finding this location can page Russell Whitaker on
- 081-812-2661, and stand by the payphone or cellphone for a callback. ]
-
- The UK Cryptoprivacy Association has its roots in the U.S. cypherpunk
- advocacy of strong personal cryptography. The next UKCA meeting, to be
- held at the offices of FOREST (see the above), will feature roundtable
- discussion on such issues as:
-
- - The recent well-publicised discovery of a larger number of U.S.
- National Security Agency (NSA) electronic listening posts
- than had been previously suspected;
- - Further news on the spread of freely-available public key
- cryptography software in Eastern Europe, Russia, and the
- Transcaucasian states;
- - The status of the various UK and Moscow PGP public key servers and
- software archive sites, with input from a couple of maintainers
- of these services in the UK;
- - The implications of the legal controversy surrounding the
- development and distribution of PGP encryption software in the
- U.S., with further discussion on the possibility of volunteer
- contributions to Phil Zimmermann's legal defence fund;
- - Introduction to public key cryptography for novices
-
- Attendees are encouraged to bring and exchange diskettes with their
- PGP public keys. A few of us will bring along our MS-DOS laptops, to
- sign public keys on site. In the interest of speeding things along, it is
- recommended that all keys signed at the meeting be submitted later, with
- their newly appended signatures, to the PGP Key Server at Demon
- Internet Services. Send a message with the subject line "help" to
- pgp-public-keys@demon.co.uk, for more information. PGP (Phil
- Zimmermann's "Pretty Good Privacy") public key encryption software can
- be obtained by ftp from, among other places, ftp.demon.co.uk in the
- directory /pub/pgp. Versions include, but are not limited to, Unix,
- MS-DOS, Archimedes, and MacOS. Full source code is available.
-
- This meeting will also feature discussion on the upcoming First European
- Conference on Computers, Freedom and Privacy (ECFP '93) to be held on
- 20 November 1993, which will feature speakers including John Gilmore,
- David Chaum, and Duncan Frissell, as well as a representative of the
- UK's Data Protection Registry.
-
- Russell Earl Whitaker
- ECFP Ventures Ltd
- russell@eternity.demon.co.uk
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- EFFector Online is published biweekly by:
-
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1001 G Street, N.W., Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001, USA
- Phone: +1 202 347 5400, FAX: +1 202 393 5509
- Internet Address: eff@eff.org or ask@eff.org
-
- Coordination, production and shipping by:
- Stanton McCandlish, Online Activist <mech@eff.org>
-
- Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. Signed
- articles do not necessarily represent the view of the EFF. To reproduce
- signed articles individually, please contact the authors for their express
- permission.
-
- *This newsletter is printed on 100% recycled electrons.*
-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- MEMBERSHIP IN THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER FOUNDATION
-
- In order to continue the work already begun and to expand our efforts and
- activities into other realms of the electronic frontier, we need the
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-
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-
- -==--==--==-<>-==--==--==-
-
- Mail to:
- Membership Coordinator
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- 1001 G Street, N.W.
- Suite 950 East
- Washington, DC 20001 USA
-
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