Good Cop, Bad Cop
By Vin Suprynowicz
[email protected]
Special to The Libertarian Enterprise
         As encryption advocate Gene Woltz ([email protected]) 
recently asked his e-mail correspondents, "Would you store a key to 
your house at the local police station, just in case any government 
agency ... wanted to search your home, without a court ordered search 
warrant, whether you were home or not?
         "Would you feel better if the key to your house was kept at a 
local bank, but available to the government within two hours, seven 
days a week, 24 hours per day, and the bank was forbidden by law from 
telling you that the government had your house key?
         "What would you do if such a bill was in congress right now? ..."
         It is. 
         The personal "effects" targeted this time are our computer files, 
telephone calls, and e-mail communications, thanks to the latest 
revisions to Senate Bill 909, "The Secure Public Networks Act of 
1997."
         Initially the bill in question -- sponsored by Republican Sen. 
John McCain of Arizona -- stipulated the congressional intent was to 
outlaw the use of sophisticated devices to scramble Internet 
communications only for the purpose of concealing crimes, that 
Congress in no way intended to outlaw the transmission of coded 
messages between otherwise law-abiding Americans.
         But a new version of the bill's Section 105, appearing Aug. 28 and 
supported by FBI Director Louis J. Freeh, would in effect require 
Internet Service Providers to decode users' messages upon court demand 
-- a function they would be able to perform because, under the new 
version of the law, those using encryption to make their messages 
unintelligible to third parties would now be required to store "escrow 
keys" capable of decoding their messages with a "trusted third party" 
such as the local bank.
         The sale, distribution, or importation of encryption programs 
without such a government-accessible "keyhole" would, of course, be 
made illegal, as of January 1999.
         Chief federal internal security officer Freeh contends his 
revision only reflects "the legitimate needs of law enforcement," of 
course.
         Mr. Costner responds: "Indeed, one can offer many arguments as to 
why a government would be better off without encryption being held by 
its citizens. Just think what a different world we would live in if 
early American crypto had not been possible.  Remember Paul Revere's 
secret key implementation of 'One if by land, two if by sea?' "
         But in a pleasant surprise, Vice President Al Gore on Sept. 9 
reaffirmed the Clinton administration's policy against restricting 
the domestic sale of high-tech computer privacy devices.
         "The administration's position has not changed on encryption," 
Gore told the Software Publishers Association.
         Until Mr. Freeh's initiative a week ago, official U.S. policy had 
opposed restrictions on the sale of data-scrambling software within 
the United States, though the administration does regulate exports of 
encryption devices, actually labeling such export products "munitions" 
based on their presumed usefulness to foreign armies and terrorist 
groups.
         Vice President Gore didn't specifically mention Freeh's proposal 
on Sept. 9.  But White House aides, speaking on condition of 
anonymity, told The Associated Press the vice president's brief 
comment was intended to respond to Director Freeh and "show that for 
now the administration is not changing its position on the sale of 
encryption devices in the United States."
         Last December a new administration plan took effect, giving U.S. 
companies more freedom to export high-tech encryption devices, but 
insisting manufacturers first guarantee that G-men -- upon court order 
-- would be able to crack the codes and intercept the communications.
         Will U.S. firms find it a crippling restriction when they try to 
enter international markets with "privacy" programs to which everyone 
knows the FBI and CIA already hold the secret keys?
         Probably.
         But the larger risk here is the spread of such an attractive tool 
for government snooping back into the domestic arena.
         If it were up to Judge Freeh, private letters dropped in the 
mailbox on the corner would have to be sealed in transparent 
envelopes, "to make it easier for us to check."
         Assurances that the administration is not going along with 
Director Freeh "for now" are welcome, though I can't help but wonder 
why Director Freeh was permitted to float such a balloon in the first 
place, except to see whether it might fly unopposed.
         This is a dangerous dalliance with the mindset of the police 
state.  The federal government shouldn't be opening our mail -- 
electronic or otherwise.
         If that means a few "dangerous conspirators" are allowed to move 
their earnings around without telling the IRS, so be it. Because the 
only alternative is the "safety" of a nation with a cop listening on 
every phone.
         No thanks.
Vin Suprynowicz is the assistant editorial page editor of the Las 
Vegas Review-Journal. Readers may contact him via e-mail at 
[email protected]. The web site for the Suprynowicz column is at 
http://www.nguworld.com/vindex/. The column is syndicated in the 
United States and Canada via Mountain Media Syndications, P.O. Box 
4422, Las Vegas Nev. 89127.