This really is _really_ bad. Finland, Canada, Ireland..all member countries of this arrangement, had previously liberalized their encryption export policies.
Date: Thu, 3 Dec 1998 15:55:01 -0500
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Kathleen Ellis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
Commerce News
International Trade Administration
Washington, DC
For Immediate Release
Tuesday, December 3, 1998
Contact: Maria Harris Tildon
(202)482-3809
Sue Hofer
(202)482-2721
P R E S S S T A T E M E N T
U.S. Applauds Agreement on Encryption in International Export Control Regime
Vienna, Austria -- The United States welcomed the decision taken Thursday in Vienna by the 33 members of the Wassenaar Arrangement to modernize and improve multilateral encryption export controls. Ambassador David Aaron, the President's Special Envoy for Cryptology, said that "the international agreement reached here goes a long way toward leveling the playing field for exporters and promoting electornic commerce. It provides countries with a stronger regulatory framework to protect national security and public safety."
The agreement caps a two year effort by the United States, to update international encryption export controls and to balance commercial and privacy interests with national security and public safety concerns. Thursday's agreement simplifies and streamlines controls on many encryption items and eliminates multilateral reporting requirements. Specific improvements to multilateral encryption controls include removing controls on all encryption products at or below 56 bit and certain consumer entertainment TV systems, such as DVD products, and on cordless telephone systems designed for home or office use.
Wassenaar members also agreed to extend controls to mass-market encryption above 64 bits, thus closing a significant loophole in multilateral encryption controls. This gives Wassenaar member governments the legal authority to license many mass market encryption software exports which were previously not covered by multilateral controls and enables governments to review the dissemination of the strongest encryption products that might fall into the hands of rogue end users. The new controls also extend liberalized mass-market hardware below 64 bits. Until today, only mass-market software products enjoyed this liberalized treatment.
"The decisions taken here in Vienna reinforce the Administration's efforts to promote a balanced encryption policy," Aaron confirmed.
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Kathleen Ellis Admin. Dir., Electronic Privacy Information Center
Voice Mail: (202)298-0833 http://www.epic.org
Keep up with the latest encryption news and events: http://www.crypto.org
PGP 5.0 Key ID 9bf725b4 65FF B997 62B8 C396 A527 2D6A 4901 F701 9BF7 25B4
