Something about this
triggered my brainal Clinton deja-vu alarm. To the archives
then! Posted below are some headers from c. 1997 Free
Republic. Yup. The bastids never give up. What really
struck me however are some small things, like New World Order Assault On Privacy.
Can you imagine any such alert coming from today's MSNBC? The NY Times's Online Groups Mount an Effort To Fight
Clinton on Encryption similarly surprised, although if I had
the full article maybe not so much. The most jarring thing along
these lines though, is from the EFF story.
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In a 1999 decision in the EFF-led Bernstein
case, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals observed that
[w]hether we are
surveilled by our government, by criminals, or by our neighbors, it is
fair to say that never has our ability to shield our affairs from
prying eyes been at such a low ebb. The availability and use of secure
encryption may offer an opportunity to reclaim some portion of the
privacy we have lost. Government efforts to control encryption thus may
well implicate not only the First Amendment rights of cryptographers
intent on pushing the boundaries of their science, but also the
constitutional rights of each of us as potential recipients of
encryption's bounty.
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That, from same clown court that just allowed gummint to install electronic tracking devices on
peep's cars - without a warrant! Ay Carumba.
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The
Deja Donk Part
Mockery and Fear Greet
Encryption Plan
NY Times / CyberTimes
September 12,1997 By PETER WAYNER
The members of the House Select Committee on
Intelligence who voted
on Thursday to push for strict controls on encryption
software must
have expected to be hated on the Internet, but they probably didn't
plan on getting laughed at.
Online Groups Mount an Effort To Fight
Clinton on Encryption
NY Times
Sept. 21, 1997 By JERI CLAUSING
"Stop the government from building Big Brother into
the Internet,"
states an alert that went out on Thursday to more than
200,000
people on the Internet, urging them to call members of the House
Commerce Committee.
"In 1948, George Orwell described a future world in
which Big
Brother peaked over the shoulder of every citizen -- watching
every
move and listening to every word," the alert states. "Now, in 1997, the
FBI is pushing the United States Congress to pass
legislation which
would make George Orwell's frightening vision a reality."
Decoding Provision Defeated
Washington Post
Thursday, September 25, 1997 By Rajiv Chandrasekaran
A House committee yesterday rejected an FBI-backed
proposal that
would have required data-scrambling software sold in
the United
States to have decoding features for law enforcement authorities. The
vote was a crucial victory for the computer industry.
Sage Advise From A Tech Manual
Pretty Good(tm) Privacy Manual
5/18/98 by Philip Zimmermann
It's personal. It's private. And it's no one's
business but yours.
You may be planning a political campaign, discussing your taxes, or
having an illicit affair. Or you may be doing something that you feel
shouldn't be illegal, but is. Whatever it is, you don't want your
private electronic mail (E-mail) or confidential documents read by
anyone else. There's nothing wrong with asserting your privacy. Privacy
is as apple-pie as the Constitution.
FBI, Industry Execs Will Discuss Encryption
TechWeb News
June 5, 1998 Rutrell Yasin, InternetWeek
The encryption debate will continue next week as FBI
director Louis
Freeh meets with the nation's top computer executives
in
Washington, D.C., to discuss differences over domestic use of the
technology...."The FBI wants access to plain text data, and they want
it on their own terms," Harter said. Sometimes the agency may need to
access data in a surreptitious way; how it does that is at the center
of the debate, Harter added.
U.S. ENCRYPTION POLICY
DIFFICULT TO DECODE
The Seattle Times
April 21, 1998, Tuesday Final Edition LISA S. DEAN
FROM the very beginning of President
Clinton's first term, the
American people have been hearing about the term "encryption." The
administration's actions to stifle encryption development has created a
debate over individual privacy and America's rights under the
Constitution. First there was the Clipper Chip, which would have given
the federal government, through a "key recovery system," the ability to
snoop into every American's computer, including e-mail, fax data and
personal information. It would even give law enforcement at every
level the ability to listen in on private telephone conversations.
New World Order Assault On Privacy
MSNBC
Steve Brinich
12/30/98
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