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Crypto controls to cost U.S. citizens $7.7bn

ZDNN, US ZDNet US

Published: 11 Jun 1998 14:23 BST

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The executives said at a news conference that the government's proposals for tapping into secret data and placing limits on exports of encryption software are expensive and increasingly irrelevant. Industry and law enforcement officials have been at odds over encryption for years, with the industry wanting strict U.S. export limits lifted and the FBI favouring stricter controls at home and abroad.

Gates, one of several chiefs at the Business Software Alliance news conference, said it was too late to prevent people from getting access to powerful encryption codes now that they are available outside the United States. "That's a change in the world of spying and law enforcement that we cannot effect,'' he said. And, as Novell chairman and CEO Eric Schmidt, put it: "The genie is out of the bottle."

The FBI has proposed a system known in the industry as ‘key escrow'. Under that system, companies that require their information to be encoded would have to give the ‘key' to a government-authorised third party. In this way, keys would be available to law enforcement officials should an investigation be deemed necessary.

Maintenance and administration of these keys is where the price tag resides. "The total cost of the kind of key escrow encryption system envisioned by the U.S. government is $7.7 billion a year and $38.5 billion over five years," the Business Software Association report said.

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Featured Talkback

On the contrary, if vendors were forced to stand behind their products it should increase innovation. It would force more, and better , testing before hitting the sales floor, resulting in fewer updates and less downtime for the consumer. At present the EULA removes responsibility from the vendor, and moves it to the user, which is a step backward. Make the vendor responsibility for their code.

By: ator1940

Read full story:
RSA: Vendor liability may stifle innovation