9 September 1999


Date: Wed, 08 Sep 1999 18:18:36 -0700
To: John Young <jya@pipeline.com>
From: Bill Stewart <bill.stewart@pobox.com>
Subject: Re: PECSENC Report Up
Cc: cypherpunks@algebra.com

Dorothy Denning's site now says

	"Liberalization 2000, the recommendations of the 
	President's Export Council Subcommittee on Encryption (PECSENC), 
	is temporarily unavailable.
	According to FACA, it was not to have been distributed 
	and discussed with the Press until after it was approved by the full PEC 
	and sent to the President. I did not know this at the time I posted it. 
	I had received a go-ahead from Commerce. 
	Everyone on the PECSENC has been asked
	to take it off their Web sites and to refrain from 
	further discussions with the press. 
	I believe the PEC is scheduled to meet the week of Sept. 20. 
	I will re-post as soon as possible."

Does anybody have a copy of Dorothy's version?

If I'm reading Crowell's version of the recommendations correctly,
the stuff ought to be currently stalled in a back room 
full of ranting anti-privacy cryptograbbers and their PR flacks
trying to figure out how to kill it without looking blatant,
or how to at least not _look_ like they're giving up.

I assume the recommendations still say "We're in charge here" and
"Our chief weapons are Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt, and an
almost fanatical devotion to government-excuse-of-the-month",
and that there will be serious badness in the implementations,
but in practice, they're recommending 
- legalizing 128-bit mass-market,
- strong crypto for client-server apps supporting e-commerce
(which means we can do encrypted portal-mail, 
if nobody reminds them that it means that), and 
- relatively unrestricted trade between well-behaved countries,
which presumably means at least the Wassenaar Arrangers,
and which is an obvious beginning of expansion to everybody except
the US Enemies List (plus whichever of China, Russia, and Narcolombia the
Congress is rattling sabres about at any given time.)

Is it as good as saying "The First Amendment applies to crypto,
so give up"?  No, but I expect the desire for speech control to
take a long time to die out.  But it looked like they were
beginning to acquire some clues about the importance of
crypto to commerce, and starting to follow the money.
On the other hand, the California legislature had passed
medical marijuana legalization twice (both vetoed by Pete Wilson)
before the people got fed up and passed a ballot initiative,
and even now the various flavors of police keep trying to attack it.
It'll get there, but it'll take a while.

					Bill

At 07:09 PM 8/25/99 -0400, JYA wrote:
>William Crowell has provided PECSENC's recommendations
>for revising encryption export regulations:
>   http://cryptome.org/LIB42.htm
>He writes:
>"Attached are the recommendations of the PECSENC from our 
>July meeting. These recommendations were sent to the BXA in 
>July for consideration of the Interagency Working Group, and are 
>today being forwarded to Secretary Daley and to the PEC 
>Chairman."
>
>There'll be more on this with comments by PECSENC members
>in a national daily tomorrow.
>Dorothy Denning offers it too:
>   http://www.cs.georgetown.edu/~denning/crypto/lib2000.html

				Thanks! 
					Bill
Bill Stewart, bill.stewart@pobox.com
PGP Fingerprint D454 E202 CBC8 40BF  3C85 B884 0ABE 4639