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- Newsgroups: sci.crypt
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!rpi!uwm.edu!psuvax1!uxa.ecn.bgu.edu!news.ils.nwu.edu!ils.nwu.edu!mccoy
- From: mccoy@ils.nwu.edu (Jim Mccoy)
- Subject: Re: PGP and real criminals
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.095414.10565@ils.nwu.edu>
- Sender: usenet@ils.nwu.edu (Mr. usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: aristotle.ils.nwu.edu
- Reply-To: mccoy@ils.nwu.edu
- Organization: The Institute for the Learning Sciences
- References: <1992Nov20.092807.13613@ucsu.Colorado.EDU> <1ej1fsINN5ad@morrow.stanford.edu> <1992Nov21.112308.60@nsrvan.vanc.wa.us>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 09:54:14 GMT
- Lines: 89
-
- In article <1992Nov21.112308.60@nsrvan.vanc.wa.us>, sysevm@nsrvan.vanc.wa.us writes:
- > In article <1ej1fsINN5ad@morrow.stanford.edu>, castor@drizzle.Stanford.EDU (Castor Fu) writes:
- > > [should convicted felons be restricted from using cryptography?]
- > >
- > > It seems to me that once a person has violated certain rules, e.g.
- > > child molestation, insider trading, etc. one might restrict their
- > > access to tools which are particularly useful towards those ends,
- > > e.g. guns, crypto etc.
- >
- > Let me get this straight. You are suggesting that convicted felons are
- > required to give up their privacy even after their terms are up. I don't
- > see the differience between this and requireing them to wear a transmitter
- > at all times so that the LE staffers can listen in at random without due
- > process (in principal). Felons have rights. (Yes, I know about no guns for
- > felons but how was the constitution bypassed here?)
-
-
- Well, the inability to use possess a firearm is not the only thing
- convicted felons lose; they also cannot vote and have other restrictions
- placed upon them. Why? Because they are _convicted felons_. This means
- that they have broken the societal codes that we have set up and "society"
- basically feels that once you do that it can squash you like a bug. This
- is because felons have proven that they cannot be trusted to follow "the
- rules" (or at least the most important ones, hence the felony/misdemeanor
- distinction) and if they decide to continue living in this particular
- society they must accept the fact that they have distinguished themselves
- in this fashion and society has limited thier actions accordingly. That
- is how the world works. It may not be fair, but no one ever said life
- would be fair.
-
- ----the real question-------
-
- I guess this returns to the "is cryptography the gun of the information
- age" question I asked a while back. Information is not just an intangible
- "essence", it is something we use to make decisions and to record our
- actions, and the means in which we use it will be subject to judgement by
- others. In some cases the community/society may demand access to that
- information and, while it may take a decision by a judge or court to
- determine whether or not law enforcement officials may obtain access, when
- we create tools that make this task impossible it is a moral imperitive to
- examine the situations that have been discussed in this group recently.
-
- Secure cryptography carries a danger in that it may be used for purposes
- which we feel are immoral or unjustifiable. By preventing access to
- information it may be used to hide things that a society/community feels it
- has a right to know. It seems very easy for people to present straw-man
- arguments regarding the dangers we face from the evil government forces
- that are slinking around dark alleys in Washington waiting to impose the
- new fascist police state upon America, but it seems that very few people
- who present these arguments balance them by showing how thier right/need
- for this sort of information protection overrides any possible claim that
- might be made upon this information by the society/community of which they
- are members.
-
- Arguments against "key registration" and other possible limitations to
- secure cryptography will almost always contain within them the words "right
- to privacy", but few people who use this aegeis seem willing to acknowledge
- any restrictions on this "right". Privacy rights, at least in the US, are
- a fragile construction at best. Societies claim the right to know how much
- a person earn to establish a tax on income, the right to privacy does not
- protect information regarding one's criminal record, there are numerous
- other cases where society claims a right to know certain pieces of
- information. In a sense I am playing devil's advocate here, but the nature
- of this forum (Usenet) is one that places a high value on privacy and a
- responsible inquiry into the nature of these tools demands that certain
- questions be asked.
-
- I am interested in hearing answers to this question: Why is it necessary for
- citizens to have access to cryptography that prevents _any_ attempts at
- information retrieval by law enforcement agents (assuming they are acting
- on legitimate instructions from the court, or in other ways that society has
- determined to be valid through it's process of making laws and regulations) ?
-
-
- To further this discussion, perhaps we can try limiting this thread to the
- "real criminals" in the Subject line. Those who have been convicted or, in
- the case of our "hypothetical example", who actually committed to crimes of
- which they are accused. A tool may be used for many purposes, do not
- dismiss the immoral ones just because you may not use it in that fashion
- yourself.
-
-
- jim
- --
- Jim McCoy | PGP 2.0 Key md5 hash:
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