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- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
-
-
- Phil Zimmermann Legal Defense Fund Appeal
-
- In November, 1976, Martin Hellman and Whitfield Diffie announced
- their discovery of public-key cryptography by beginning their paper
- with the sentence: "We stand today on the brink of a revolution in
- cryptography."
-
- We stand today on the brink of an important battle in the
- revolution they unleased. Philip Zimmermann, who encoded and released
- the most popular and successful program to flow from that discovery,
- Pretty Good Privacy ("PGP"), may be about to go to court.
-
- It has been over fourteen months now since Phil was first informed
- that he was the subject of a grand jury investigation being mounted by
- the San Jose, CA, office of US Customs into the international
- distribution, over the Internet, of the original version of the
- program. On January 12th, Phil's legal team will meet for the first
- time with William Keane, Assistant US Attorney for the Northern
- District of California, who is in charge of the grand jury
- investigation, in San Jose. An indictment, if one is pursued by the
- government after this meeting, could be handed down very shortly
- thereafter.
-
- If indicted, Phil would likely be charged with violating statute 22
- USC 2778 of the US Code, "Control of arms exports and imports." This
- is the federal statute behind the regulation known as ITAR,
- "International Traffic in Arms Regulations," 22 CFR 120.1 et seq. of
- the Code of Federal Regulations. Specifically, the indictment would
- allege that Phil violated 22 USC 2778 by exporting an item listed as a
- "munition" in 22 CFR 120.1 et seq. without having a license to do so.
- That item is cryptographic software -- PGP.
-
- At stake, of course, is far more than establishing whether Phil
- violated federal law or not. The case presents significant issues and
- will establish legal precedent, a fact known to everyone involved.
- According to his lead counsel, Phil Dubois, the US government hopes to
- establish the proposition that anyone having anything at all to do with
- an illegal export -- even someone like Phil, whose only involvement was
- writing the program and making it available to US citizens and who has
- no idea who actually exported it -- has committed a federal felony
- offense. The government also hopes to establish the proposition that
- posting a "munition" on a BBS or on the Internet is exportation. If
- the government wins its case, the judgment will have a profound
- chilling effect on the US software industry, on the free flow of
- information on the emerging global networks, and in particular upon the
- grassroots movement to put effective cryptography in the hands of
- ordinary citizens. The US government will, in effect, resurrect
- Checkpoint Charlie -- on the Information Superhighway.
-
- By now, most of us who are reading this know about Phil and the
- case, whether by having the program and reading the doc files or by
- seeing reports in the Wall Steet Journal, Time, Scientific American,
- the New York Times, Wired, US News and World Report, and hundreds of
- other news outlets; on Usenet groups like talk.crypto.politics or
- alt.security.pgp; or by listening to Phil give talks such as the one he
- gave at CFP '94 in Chicago. We know that PGP has made great strides
- since version 1.0, and is now a sophisticated encryption and
- key-management package which has become the de facto standard in both
- micro and mainframe environments. We know that Phil and the PGP
- development team successfully negotiated a commercial license with
- Viacrypt, and, through the efforts of MIT, a noncommercial license for
- PGP with RSA Data Security, the holders of the patent on the RSA
- algorithm on which PGP is based, thus freeing the program from the
- shadow of allegations of patent infringement. We know that programs
- such as PGP represent one of our best bulwarks in the Information Age
- against the intrusions of public and private information gatherers. We
- know that PGP is a key tool in insuring that the "Information
- Superhighway" will open the world to us, without opening us to the
- world.
-
- What we may not all know is the price Phil has had to pay for his
- courage and willingness to challenge the crypto status quo. For years
- now Phil has been the point man in the ongoing campaign for freely
- available effective cryptography for the everyday computer user. The
- costs, personal and professional, to him have been great. He wrote the
- original code for PGP 1.0 by sacrificing months of valuable time from
- his consulting career and exhausting his savings. He continues to
- devote large amounts of his time to testifying before Congress, doing
- public speaking engagements around the world, and agitating for
- "cryptography for the masses," largely at his own expense. He is now
- working, still for free, on the next step in PGP technology, PGP Phone,
- which will turn every PC with a sound card and a modem into a secure
- telephone. And we know that, just last month, he was searched and
- interrogated in the absence of counsel by US Customs officials upon his
- return from a speaking tour in Europe.
-
- Phil's legal team consists of his lead counsel, Philip Dubois of
- Boulder, CO; Kenneth Bass of Venable, Baetjer, Howard & Civiletti, in
- Washington, DC, first counsel for intelligence policy for the Justice
- Department under President Carter; Eben Moglen, professor of law at
- Columbia and Harvard Universities; Curt Karnow, a former assistant US
- attorney and intellectual property law specialist at Landels, Ripley &
- Diamond in San Francisco; and Thomas Nolan, noted criminal defense
- attorney in Menlo Park.
-
- While this is a stellar legal team, what makes it even more
- extraordinary is that several of its members have given their time for
- free to Phil's case. Still, while their time has been donated so far,
- other expenses -- travel, lodging, telephone, and other costs -- have
- fallen to Phil. If the indictment is handed down, time and costs will
- soar, and the members of the team currently working pro bono may no
- longer be able to. Justice does not come cheap in this country, but
- Phil deserves the best justice money can buy him.
-
- This is where you and I come in. Phil Dubois estimates that the
- costs of the case, leaving aside the lawyers' fees, will run from
- US$100,000 - $150,000. If Phil's team must charge for their services,
- the total cost of the litigation may range as high as US$300,000. The
- legal defense fund is already several thousand dollars in the red and
- the airline tickets to San Jose haven't even been purchased yet.
-
- In September, 1993 I wrote a letter urging us all to support Phil,
- shortly after the first subpoenas were issued by Customs. Today the
- need is greater than ever, and I'm repeating the call.
-
- Phil has assumed the burden and risk of being the first to develop
- truly effective tools with which we all might secure our communications
- against prying eyes, in a political environment increasingly hostile to
- such an idea -- an environment in which Clipper chips and digital
- telephony bills are our own government's answer to our concerns. Now
- is the time for us all to step forward and help shoulder that burden
- with him.
-
- It is time more than ever. I call on all of us, both here in the
- US and abroad, to help defend Phil and perhaps establish a
- groundbreaking legal precedent. PGP now has an installed base of
- hundreds of thousands of users. PGP works. It must -- no other
- "crypto" package, of the hundreds available on the Internet and BBS's
- worldwide, has ever been subjected to the governmental attention PGP
- has. How much is PGP worth to you? How much is the complete security
- of your thoughts, writings, ideas, communications, your life's work,
- worth to you? The price of a retail application package?i Send it.
- More? Send it. Whatever you can spare: send it.
-
- A legal trust fund, the Philip Zimmermann Defense Fund (PZDF), has
- been established with Phil Dubois in Boulder. Donations will be
- accepted in any reliable form, check, money order, or wire transfer,
- and in any currency, as well as by credit card.
-
- You may give anonymously or not, but PLEASE - give generously. If
- you admire PGP, what it was intended to do and the ideals which
- animated its creation, express your support with a contribution to this
- fund.
-
- * * *
-
- Here are the details:
-
- To send a check or money order by mail, make it payable, NOT to Phil
- Zimmermann, but to "Philip L. Dubois, Attorney Trust Account." Mail the
- check or money order to the following address:
-
- Philip Dubois
- 2305 Broadway
- Boulder, CO USA 80304
- (Phone #: 303-444-3885)
-
- To send a wire transfer, your bank will need the following
- information:
-
- Bank: VectraBank
- Routing #: 107004365
- Account #: 0113830
- Account Name: "Philip L. Dubois, Attorney Trust Account"
-
- Now here's the neat bit. You can make a donation to the PZDF by
- Internet mail on your VISA or MasterCard. Worried about snoopers
- intercepting your e-mail? Don't worry -- use PGP.
-
- Simply compose a message in plain ASCII text giving the following:
- the recipient ("Philip L. Dubois, Attorney Trust Account"); the bank
- name of your VISA or MasterCard; the name which appears on it; a tele-
- phone number at which you can be reached in case of problems; the card
- number; date of expiry; and, most important, the amount you wish to do-
- nate. (Make this last item as large as possible.) Then use PGP to en-
- crypt and ASCII-armor the message using Phil Dubois's public key, en-
- closed below. (You can also sign the message if you like.) E-mail
- the output file to Phil Dubois (dubois@csn.org). Please be sure to use
- a "Subject:" line reading something like "Phil Zimmermann Defense Fund"
- so he'll know to decrypt it right away.
-
- Bona fides: My relation to Phil Z. is that of a long-time user and
- advocate of PGP and a personal friend. For over a year I moderated the
- (no longer published) digest, Info-PGP, on the old lucpul.it.luc.edu site
- here at Loyola. I am in no way involved with the administration of the
- PZDF. I volunteer my time on its behalf.
- Phil Dubois is Phil Z.'s lawyer and lead counsel in the Customs case.
- He administers the PZDF.
- To obtain a copy of my public key (with which you can verify the
- signature on this doc), you have a number of options:
- - Use the copy which I will append below.
- - Send mail to me at hmiller@luc.edu with the "Subject:" line
- reading "send pubkey"
- - Get it by anon ftp at ftp://ftp.math.luc.edu/pub/hmiller/pubkey.hm
- - Obtain it from an Internet PGP keyserver machine such as
- pgp-public-keys@pgp.ai.mit.edu. Just send a mail message to this
- address with the "Subject:" field "GET hmiller". Other keyserver
- machines on the Net which accept the same message format (and
- automatically synchronize keyrings with each other every 10 minutes or
- so) include:
-
- pgp-public-keys@pgp.mit.edu
- pgp-public-keys@demon.co.uk
- pgp-public-keys@pgp.ox.ac.uk
- pgp-public-keys@ext221.sra.co.jp
- pgp-public-keys@kub.nl
- pgp-public-keys@pgp.iastate.edu
- pgp-public-keys@dsi.unimi.it
- pgp-public-keys@pgp.dhp.com
-
- You can verify my public key by calling me at 312-338-2689 (home)
- or 312-508-2727 (office) and letting me read you my key fingerprint
- ("pgp -kvc hmiller" after you have put my key on your pubring.pgp keyring).
- I include it also in my .sig, below, if that's good enough for you.
- You might also note that Phil Zimmermann has signed my public key.
- Hopefully he is Node #1 in your Web-of-Trust! His key is available on
- the net keyservers and in the 'keys.asc' file in the PGP distribution
- packages.
- Phil Dubois's pubkey can also be obtained from the keyservers, if
- you prefer that source to the text below, and from 'keys.asc'. Phil Z.
- has signed his key as well.
-
- Here is Phil Dubois's public key:
-
- - -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
- Version: 2.7
-
- mQCNAiyaTboAAAEEAL3DOizygcxAe6OyfcuMZh2XnyfqmLKFDAoX0/FJ4+d2frw8
- 5TuXc/k5qfDWi+AQCdJaNVT8jlg6bS0HD55gLoV+b6VZxzIpHWKqXncA9iudfZmR
- rtx4Es82n8pTBtxa7vcQPhCXfjfl+lOMrICkRuD/xB/9X1/XRbZ7C+AHeDONAAUR
- tCFQaGlsaXAgTC4gRHVib2lzIDxkdWJvaXNAY3NuLm9yZz6JAJUCBRAsw4TxZXmE
- uMepZt0BAT0OA/9IoCBZLFpF9lhV1+epBi49hykiHefRdQwbHmLa9kO0guepdkyF
- i8kqJLEqPEUIrRtiZVHiOLLwkTRrFHV7q9lAuETJMDIDifeV1O/TGVjMiIFGKOuN
- dzByyidjqdlPFtPZtFbzffi9BomTb8O3xm2cBomxxqsV82U3HDdAXaY5Xw==
- =5uit
- - -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
-
- Here is my (Hugh Miller's) public key:
-
- - -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
- Version: 2.6.2
-
- mQCNAy7frrEAAAEEALzOAQt+eWHzXSDLRgJaQMQ7Uju1xrD9mXAZGAG1GmiTNjKl
- wK68qOXrwJvnH1BmGtg8GGv53nTeabltpn5crsQVFm+0623M56/T7SOeUBWxxoa0
- vvqAA8sJ6ac1/MXY9KIgqxu8Mu6Qwf68C4OnwCbE7T71bi+fjdEdYC5Hk8UpAAUR
- tB1IdWdoIE1pbGxlciA8aG1pbGxlckBsdWMuZWR1PokAlQMFEC7ryVNleYS4x6lm
- 3QEBW6YD/2IOIZX9FOggNyemvPwM/EN86KW74ZGuYuTIfPCrvOMy8pFqfE33Bw93
- UkyIDj1Yh/nDlclEOO/J0tyngPn2BD2vMtaKIGRhVjnoxQc3BfzdjJ2nnHoFzAjz
- 0MBxYthysmWYsyF8cQxST6LZLITKkf41dti8SVKYVRWIgkyub02HiQCVAwUQLt/F
- oNEdYC5Hk8UpAQHD1wP9GdN9OHAKkIRsHeHy0wsEkI4Emb/bHiU+W59Zw7NPWsWF
- 3WTT1z8GKNToQLUdysbbJuSSk3rD3F4SNGJ+KPjR4674pmEfCVVP8cQPXEl4a3Zs
- xSLWNI6rG3muUAfLdyZiFP08NthOVlP2h1aOLCqIgkjEYMfQNEgkefBRJd6JywI=
- =hWCA
- - -----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
-
- * * *
-
- This campaign letter will be posted in a number of Usenet groups.
- I will also be turning it into a FAQ-formatted document, which will be
- posted monthly in the relevant groups and which will be available by
- anonymous ftp from ftp://ftp.math.luc.edu/pub/hmiller/PGP/pzdf.FAQ. If
- you come upon, or up with, any other ways in which we can help raise funds
- for Phil, drop me a line at hmiller@luc.edu and let me know, so that I
- can put it in the FAQ.
-
-
- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
- Version: 2.6.2
-
- iQCVAwUBLvFO3tEdYC5Hk8UpAQF6IwQAp3Ig71gGRj/dDGXDBdqj55uMQQsywhi2
- pEzh0arfrRonqMX0UleysqYqjcUtm0rvbrXoYUy8a9vJzj4Wuyf1dQ6WyqBkcmOX
- z7RGtoLVxsfTjNNTrY0810SXx/yOMYtBW7mq+zNmqEykGFZTdfsVKFEyFw6AJ//B
- Ah+LQNb01Xo=
- =aW2m
- -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
-
-