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Date: Fri, 10 Mar 1995 09:45:48 -0800
To: hungary-online@hungary.yak.net
From: Dave Del Torto <ddt@lsd.com>
Subject: (HOL) EFF sues USGovt over Crypto
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>From the current EFF Newsletter...

-------------------------------------------------------
Subject: EFF Sues to Overturn Cryptography Restrictions
-------------------------------------------------------

First Amendment Protects Information about Privacy Technologies

February 21, 1995
San Mateo, California

In a move aimed at expanding the growth and spread of privacy and security
technologies, the Electronic Frontier Foundation is sponsoring a federal
lawsuit filed today seeking to bar the government from restricting
publication of cryptographic documents and software. EFF argues that the
export-control laws, both on their face and as applied to users of
cryptographic materials, are unconstitutional.

Cryptography, defined as "the science and study of secret writing,"
concerns the ways in which communications and data can be encoded to
prevent disclosure of their contents through eavesdropping or message
interception. Although the science of cryptography is very old, the
desktop-computer revolution has made it possible for cryptographic
techniques to become widely used and accessible to nonexperts.

EFF believes that cryptography is central to the preservation of privacy
and security in an increasingly computerized and networked world. Many of
the privacy and security violations alleged in the Kevin Mitnick case, such
as the theft of credit card numbers, the reading of other people's
electronic mail, and the hijacking of other people's computer accounts,
could have been prevented by widespread deployment of this technology. The
U.S. government has opposed such deployment, fearing that its citizens will
be private and secure from the government as well as from other vandals.

The plaintiff in the suit is a graduate student in the Department of
Mathematics at the University of California at Berkeley named Daniel J.
Bernstein. Bernstein developed an encryption equation, or algorithm, and
wishes to publish the algorithm, a mathematical paper that describes and
explains the algorithm, and a computer program that runs the algorithm.
Bernstein also wishes to discuss these items at mathematical conferences
and other open, public meetings.

The problem is that the government currently treats cryptographic software
as if it were a physical weapon and highly regulates its dissemination. Any
individual or company who wants to export such software -- or to publish on
the Internet any "technical data" such as papers describing encryption
software or algorithms -- must first obtain a license from the State
Department. Under the terms of this license, each recipient of the licensed
software or information must be tracked and reported to the government.
Penalties can be pretty stiff -- ten years in jail, a million dollar
criminal fine,
plus civil fines. This legal scheme effectively prevents individuals from
engaging in otherwise legal communications about encryption.

The lawsuit challenges the export-control scheme as an ``impermissible
prior restraint on speech, in violation of the First Amendment.'' Software
and its associated documentation, the plaintiff contends, are published,
not manufactured; they are Constitutionally protected works of
human-to-human communication, like a movie, a book, or a telephone
conversation. These communications cannot be suppressed by the government
except under very narrow conditions -- conditions that are not met by the
vague and overbroad export-control laws. In denying people the right to
publish such information freely, these laws, regulations, and procedures
unconstitutionally abridge the right to speak, to publish, to associate
with others, and to engage in academic inquiry and study. They also have
the effect of restricting the availability of a means for individuals to
protect their privacy, which is also a Constitutionally protected interest.

More specifically, the current export control process:

  * allows bureaucrats to restrict publication without ever going to court;

  * provides too few procedural safeguards for First Amendment rights;

  * requires publishers to register with the government, creating in
    effect a "licensed press";

  * disallows general publication by requiring recipients to be
    individually identified;

  * is sufficiently vague that ordinary people cannot know what conduct
    is allowed and what conduct is prohibited;

  * is overbroad because it prohibits conduct that is clearly protected
    (such as speaking to foreigners within the United States);

  * is applied overbroadly, by prohibiting export of software that
    contains no cryptography, on the theory that cryptography could be added
    to it later;

  * egregiously violates the First Amendment by prohibiting private
    speech on cryptography because the government wishes its own opinions
    on cryptography to guide the public instead; and

  * exceeds the authority granted by Congress in the export control laws
    in many ways, as well as exceeding the authority granted by the
    Constitution.

If this suit is successful in its challenge of the export-control laws, it
will clear the way for cryptographic software to be treated like any other
kind of software. This will allow companies such as Microsoft, Apple, IBM,
and Sun to build high-quality security and privacy protection into their
operating systems. It will also allow computer and network users, including
those who use the Internet, much more freedom to build and exchange their
own solutions to these problems, such as the freely available PGP
encryption program. And it will enable the next generation of Internet
protocols to come with built-in cryptographic security and privacy,
replacing a sagging part of today's Internet infrastructure.

Lead attorney on the case is Cindy Cohn, of McGlashan and Sarrail in San
Mateo, CA, who is offering her services pro-bono. Major assistance has been
provided by Shari Steele, EFF staff; John Gilmore, EFF Board; and Lee Tien,
counsel to John Gilmore. EFF is organizing and supporting the case and
paying the expenses.

Civil Action No. C95-0582-MHP was filed today in Federal District Court for
the Northern District of California. EFF anticipates that the case will
take several years to win. If the past is any guide, the government will
use every trick and every procedural delaying tactic available to avoid
having a court look at the real issues. Nevertheless, EFF remains firmly
committed to this long term project. We are confident that, once a court
examines the issues on the merits, the government will be shown to be
violating the Constitution, and that its attempts to restrict both freedom
of speech and privacy will be shown to have no place in an open society.

Full text of the lawsuit and other paperwork filed in the case is available
from the EFF's online archives. The exhibits which contain cryptographic
information are not available online, because making them publicly
available on the Internet could be considered an illegal export until the
law is struck down. The non-cryptographic exhibits and other documents
including the complaint, as well as a series of letters between Bernstein
and various government people regarding crypto export are available at:

  http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/Bernstein_case/
  ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/Bernstein_case/
  gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/Bernstein_case

Press contact:  Shari Steele, EFF:  ssteele@eff.org, +1 202 861 7700.

For further reading, we suggest:

The Government's Classification of Private Ideas: Hearings Before a
Subcomm. of the House Comm. on Government Operations, 96th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1980)

John Harmon, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal Counsel,
Department of Justice, Memorandum to Dr. Frank Press, Science Advisor to
the President, Re: Constitutionality Under the First Amendment of ITAR
Restrictions on Public Cryptography (May 11, 1978). [Included in the above
Hearings; also online as http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/
ITAR_export/ITAR_FOIA/itar_hr_govop_hearing.transcript].

Alexander, Preserving High-Tech Secrets: National Security Controls on
University Research and Teaching, 15 Law & Policy in Int'l Business 173
(1983)

Cheh, Government Control of Private Ideas-Striking a Balance Between
Scientific Freedom and National Security, 23 Jurimetrics J. 1 (1982)

Funk, National Security Controls on the Dissemination of Privately
Generated Scientific Information, 30 U.C.L.A. L. Rev. 405 (1982)

Pierce, Public Cryptography, Arms Export Controls, and the First Amendment:
A Need for Legislation, 17 Cornell Int'l L. J. 197 (1984)

Rindskopf and Brown, Jr., Scientific and Technological Information and the
Exigencies of Our Period, 26 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 909 (1985)

Ramirez, The Balance of Interests Between National Security Controls and
First Amendment Interests in Academic Freedom, 13 J. Coll. & U. Law 179
(1986)

Shinn, The First Amendment and the Export Laws: Free Speech on Scientific
and Technical Matters, 58 Geo. W. L. Rev. 368 (1990)

Neuborne and Shapiro, The Nylon Curtain: America's National Border and the
Free Flow of Ideas, 26 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 719 (1985)

Greenstein, National Security Controls on Scientific Information, 23
Jurimetrics J. 50 (1982)

Sullivan and Bader, The Application of Export Control Laws to Scientific
Research at Universities, 9 J. Coll. & U. Law 451 (1982)

Wilson, National Security Control of Technological Information, 25
Jurimetrics J. 109 (1985)

Kahn, The Codebreakers: The Story of Secret Writing. New York: Macmillan
(1967) [Great background on cryptography and its history.]

Relyea, Silencing Science: national security controls and scientific
communication, Congressional Research Service. Norwood, NJ: Ablex
Publishing Corp. (1994)

John Gilmore, Crypto Export Control Archives, online at
http://www.cygnus.com/~gnu/export.html

EFF Crypto Export Control Archives, online at
ftp.eff.org, /pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/
gopher.eff.org, 1/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export
http://www.eff.org/pub/EFF/Policy/Crypto/ITAR_export/



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