From: grady@netcom.com (1016/2EF221) Subject: My letter about Clipper Date: Wed, 28 Apr 1993 21:00:45 GMT The Honorable Dan Hamburg, representing the 1st District (attn: Paul Anderson, Legislative Aide, Communications) 28 Apr 93 Re: President Clinton's "Clipper Chip" wiretap proposal On April 16, 1993 the Office of the Press Secretary for President Clinton announced an initiative to standardize communications privacy through encryption using solid-state technology developed by the National Security Agency. This chip ("The Clipper Chip"), already proposed for inclusion by AT&T in several telecommunications products, has a built-in 'back door' that permits law enforcement agencies to monitor the messages undetectably. The administration proponents argue that the "key" to the telephone can only be obtained upon warrant from trusted escrow houses and that this kind of monitoring capability is necessary to prevent criminal conspiracy from flourishing. I disagree strongly with this initiative for several technical and social reasons. Privacy is indeed desirable and we need technical and social measures that can assure it. However, as historical events have shown we need protection from the government as least as much as protection from other citizens. Illegal wiretapping of the Weathermen as revealed by Federal Judge Damon J. Keith (the 'Keith Case') in 1971, Richard Nixon's 'watch lists', and the notorious NSA project Minaret and project Shamrock involving warrantless monitoring of domestic individuals and organizations supports the idea that the NSA deems its secretive national security mission more important than the law or our individual civil rights. Nor is the NSA the only agency that has disregarded our civil rights in search for 'national security'. For example, in December 1974 Seymour Hersh reported in the New York Times the details of Operation Chaos, an illegal CIA spying program directed against Americans. The list is long of government wiretap abuses. Technically, the Clipper chip proposal is flawed because the specifications for the chip remained classified, contrary to normal scientific peer review standards. We citizens cannot verify the correct functioning of this technology nor its capacity for its abuse of our right to privacy. We must trust the NSA to exclusively guard our civil rights, which we know is unwise. Wiretapping now and under this new proposal can be done undetectably. There is no technical means to assure us citizens that the government has a proper warrant. The only means we citizens have of currently assuring privacy, even from government wiretapping, is through strong cryptography. And this initiative explicitly questions our use of this strong cryptography in the passage: "We [the administration] are not saying that every American, as a matter of right, is entitled to an unbreakable commercial encryption product." I disagree. I believe that we individual do have the right to be secure in our papers and effects and our expressions of ideas telephonically, digitally, or by any other means. I believe that the government ought to regulate our overt actions in our dealings with other people, not to regulate our private expression of ideas to ourselves or to others. This initiative even goes further to erode our right to privacy because each encoded conversation will be tagged with a unique serial number that would allow collection of warrantless collection of conversations from the comfort of remote headquarters with just the flick of a switch. This call 'tracking' is a potentially dangerous new capability that the government wants in monitoring its citizens. Under a recent Federal Court decision (the 'Steve Jackson Games' case), the judge ruled that mere collection of digital messages without a warrant was not the same as an 'intercept' which is forbidden by Federal Law. This ruling coupled with the new 'serialized message' Clipper chip technology means that all of our conversations can legally be collected and warehoused for use at any future time. Although the initiative stresses that the inclusion of Clipper technology into phones, modems, and computer networks is purely voluntary (at this time), this serializing represents a dangerous new capability for government intrusion into our unencumbered expression of ideas. And of course determined criminals can use technology developed outside the United States to evade this new initiative anyway. The administration's suggestion that this technology will thwart terrorist or drug traffickers is grossly overstated and misleading. We all don't want criminals to evade proper warrants with the new secure encryption technologies, but the danger to our civil rights of this new Clipper Chip initiative and the signs that the government will use its wide dissemination to justify outlawing truly strong cryptography 'to fight drug traffickers and terrorists' in the future, is extremely troubling to me. I would much prefer a that some criminals have secure conversations than the bulk of our citizens having their constitutional right to privacy reserved by the fourth and tenth amendment to the Constitution eroded. Funding for the Clipper chip initiative should be axed unless with some reasonable certainty we citizens can assure ourselves of its guarantee of due process and protection of our civil rights. Congressman Edward J. Markey has also questioned the wisdom of this proposal; you may want to contact his office to consolidate information. Very truly yours, Grady Ward -- grady@netcom.com 2EF221 / 15 E2 AD D3 D1 C6 F3 FC 58 AC F7 3D 4F 01 1E 2F