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At 03:32 PM 6/8/99 -0400, K. M. Ellis wrote:
> http://www2.epic.org/reports/crypto1999.html

Looking at countries in the green column, they tended to be
smaller countries, with the notable exception of Germany.  As
a general rule, the smaller a country, the more likely it was
to oppose controls on cryptography.

Some of them were merely backward "Huh? Cryptography?"

However many smaller countries did seem to display a fair bit
of conscious and intentional hostility to encryption
controls.

I conjecture that for a small country, communications with
the outside world are more important, and US spying upon your
citizens more disturbing and threatening, than they are for a
larger country.

The international export controls have been presented to the
US sheep as "Hey, let us spy upon the outside world.", a
presentation that like all good lies contains a large amount
of truth.  This presentation probably does not appeal to
citizens of the outside world. 

    --digsig
         James A. Donald
     6YeGpsZR+nOTh/cGwvITnSR3TdzclVpR0+pr3YYQdkG
     oQuGno2KeatkJ8lm5fJxZinp71JAuBDxmeQMRmf3
     4CY2kNueZuow8KiMnPEy3OQH9nc4WRft2RzeKpGTo

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