Cryptome DVDs are offered by Cryptome. Donate $25 for two DVDs of the Cryptome 12-years collection of 46,000 files from June 1996 to June 2008 (~6.7 GB). Click Paypal or mail check/MO made out to John Young, 251 West 89th Street, New York, NY 10024. The collection includes all files of cryptome.org, jya.com, cartome.org, eyeball-series.org and iraq-kill-maim.org, and 23,000 (updated) pages of counter-intelligence dossiers declassified by the US Army Information and Security Command, dating from 1945 to 1985.The DVDs will be sent anywhere worldwide without extra cost.

Google
 
Web cryptome jya.com eyeball-series.org cryptome.cn


12 May 1998


Date: Tue, 12 May 1998 11:44:58 -0400
To: jya@{at}jya.com
From: Will Rodger <rodger[at]worldnet.att.net>
Subject: Aschcroft adds CALEA

Inter@ctive Week
May 12, 1998

Senators To Introduce New Cypto Bill

By Will Rodger 10:30 AM EDT

After years of trying to get some form of legislation passed, a group of
pro-Internet senators will introduce today yet another attempt to lift
federal export controls on privacy-protecting, data-scrambling software.

Like bills before it, the "E-Privacy Act" sponsored by Sen. Patrick Leahy,
D-Vt., and Sen. John Ashcroft, R-Mo., would lift export controls on
encryption technology to countries where encryption of similar strength is
available.

The two senators are expected to join with the industry-funded Americans
for Computer Privacy to announce the bill at an press conference this morning.


The Ashcroft-Leahy proposal, a copy of which was obtained by Inter@ctive
Week, bans attempts to require encryption "backdoors" for law enforcement
domestically and abroad. It would also lift export controls to all
countries where similar products are available, except for a handful of
"rogue" nations like Iran and Libya.

"There's no mistake about it. This is strong privacy medicine," said Alan
Davidson, an attorney and policy specialist at the Center for Democracy and
Technology. "It makes more encryption accessible to more people, and that's
exactly what we need."

David Sobel, policy counsel at the Electronic Privacy Center, said the bill
offered encouragement to pro-privacy forces. "There will finally be a
vehicle in the Senate which is pro-encryption," he said. Even so, "the
sections that are nods to law enforcement are problems."

Encryption technology uses simple mathematics to do extraordinary things;
in short, it encodes messages so thoroughly that credit cards, love
letters, even massive bank transfers are safe from prying eyes online. As
such, the technology is irreplaceable to doing business online and,
proponents said, already ubiquitous worldwide.

Nonetheless, that same power can shield phone calls, e-mail and other
digital communications from police wiretaps. As a result, law enforcement
and intelligence specialists want its uncontrolled spread stopped. FBI
Director Louis Freeh, in fact, has made repeated calls for a prohibition on
all encryption that does not include "backdoors" for police to unscramble
messages through a still unspecified legal process.

Under the bill, police would have to show courts probable cause before
demanding that cell phone companies let them track cell phone users'
whereabouts through their networks. Such data can now be garnered with no
more than a U.S. attorney's signature.

The bill also requires increased legal thresholds for police who request
that phone companies trace incoming and outgoing phone calls from
customers' lines.

Both issues are at the center of a three-year dispute over implementation
of the 1994 Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act. Police say
they need the law and the $500 million in funding it provides to preserve
their ability to conduct wiretaps in increasingly computerized phone
networks. Phone companies and privacy advocates, by contrast, said the law
would drastically expand wiretap capabilities.

For all the controls on police, they do get something out of the bill.
Among other things, the legislation would impose five- and 10-year prison
sentences on criminals who use encryption to commit crimes, as well as
establish a "Net center" that could be used to teach police how to try to
crack weaker forms of encryption.


Will Rodger                                           Voice: +1 202-408-7027 
Washington Bureau Chief                        Fax: +1 202-789-2036
Inter@ctive Week                    http://www.interactiveweek.com
A Ziff-Davis Publication            http://www.zdnn.com
PGP 5.0: 584D FD11 3035 0EC2 B35C AB16 D660 293F C7BE 3F62


Crypto just took another twist in the Senate - call it a CALEA detour. My story is based on the final version of the bill. Senate bill would lift bans on overseas crypto By Will Rodger Inter@ctive Week Online May 11, 1998 6:20 PM PDT After years of trying to get some form of legislation passed, a group of pro-Internet U.S. senators will introduce Tuesday yet another attempt to lift federal export controls on privacy protecting, data scrambling software. "There's no mistake about it. This is strong privacy medicine," said Alan Davidson, an attorney and policy specialist with the Center for Democracy and Technology. "It makes more encryption accessible to more people and that's exactly what we need." David Sobel, policy counsel at the Electronic Privacy Center, said the bill offered encouragement to pro-privacy forces. "There will finally be a vehicle in the Senate which is pro-encryption," he said. Even so, "the sections that are nods to law enforcement are problems." Like bills before it, the "E-Privacy Act" sponsored by Vermont Democrat Sen. Patrick Leahy and Missouri Republican Sen. John Ashcroft would lift export controls on encryption technology to countries where encryption of similar strength was available. The bill also adds several new twists to the crypto debate by joining to it a parallel battle over wiretaps in the Federal Communications Commission. 'Back doors' banned The two senators are expected to join with the industry-funded Americans for Computer Privacy to announce the bill at an 11:30 ET press conference Tuesday. A copy of the Ashcroft-Leahy proposal obtained by Inter@ctive Week bans attempts to require encryption "back doors" for law enforcement domestically and abroad. It would also lift export controls to all countries where similar products are available except for a handful or "rogue" nations like Libya and Iran Encryption technology uses simple mathematics to do extraordinary things. In short, it encodes messages so thoroughly that credit cards, love letters even massive bank transfers are safe from prying eyes online. As such, the technology is irreplaceable to efforts to doing business online and, proponents say, already ubiquitous worldwide. Nonetheless, that same power can shield phone calls, e-mail and other digital communications from police wiretaps. As a result, law enforcement and intelligence specialists want its uncontrolled spread stopped.. If not stopped in its tracks, they say, the spread of strong crypto will lead to a reign of terror from mad bombers, drug dealers and the like. FBI Director Louis Freeh, in fact, has made repeated calls for a prohibition on all encryption which does not include "back doors" for police to unscramble messages through a still unspecified legal process. Probable cause required Under the bill police would also have to show courts probable cause before demanding that cell phone companies let them track cell phone users' whereabouts through their networks. Such data can now be garnered with no more than a US attorney's signature. The bill also requires increased legal thresholds for police who request that phone companies trace incoming and outgoing phone calls from customers' lines. Both issues are at the center of a three-year dispute over implementation of the 1995 Communications Assistance to Law Enforcement Act. Police say they need the law and the $500 million in funding it provides to preserve their ability to conduct wiretaps in increasingly computerized phone networks. Phone companies and privacy advocates, by contrast, say the law would drastically expand wiretap capabilities. For all the controls on police, they do get something out of the bill. Among other things, the legislation would impose five- and 10-year prison sentences on criminals who use encryption to commit crimes, as well as establish a "Net center" which could be used to teach police how to try to crack weaker forms of encryption -- a goal arguably at odds with a bill meant to constrain potential police abuses. Not going away Though it's anyone's guess whether the bill has a better chance than its predecessors, activists said the bill represents their best hope in a chamber that has been loathe to move on an issue that has divided privacy advocates and computer companies from law enforcement like no other. "These guys aren't going away," Davidson said. Will Rodger Voice: +1 202-408-7027 Washington Bureau Chief Fax: +1 202-789-2036 Inter@ctive Week http://www.interactiveweek.com A Ziff-Davis Publication http://www.zdnn.com PGP 5.0: 584D FD11 3035 0EC2 B35C AB16 D660 293F C7BE 3F62