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APPENDIXES


A

Contributors to the NRC Project on National Cryptography
Policy

A.1  COMMITTEE MEMBERS

Kenneth W. Dam, Chair, is the Max Pam Professor of American
and Foreign Law at the University of Chicago Law School,
where he is also director of the John M. Olin Program in Law
and Economics.  Mr. Dam received his bachelor�s degree from
the University of Kansas and completed his graduate work at
the University of Chicago Law School.  During the period
from 1985 to 1992, he held the post of corporate vice
president for law and external relations at IBM.  Mr. Dam
served as deputy secretary of state (1982-1985) and as
provost of the University of Chicago (1980-1982).  Mr. Dam
currently serves on the board of Alcoa and on the boards of
a number of nonprofit institutions, including the Brookings
Institution and the Council on Foreign Relations.  He is
also co-chairman (with Senator Sam Nunn) of the Aspen
Strategy Group.  He has written books on the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the international monetary
system, U.S. economic policy, and the development of oil
resources, as well as many articles on economic policy and
antitrust law.

W.Y. Smith, Vice Chair, is president emeritus and a trustee
of the Institute for Defense Analyses; he was its president
from 1985 to 1991.  Prior to that he was a fellow at the
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars at the
Smithsonian Institution, 1983 to 1984.  His military posts
include deputy commander in chief of the European Command in
Germany, 1981 to 1983; chief of staff of SHAPE, Belgium,
1979 to 1981; assistant to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, 1975 to 1979; and director of Policy Plans and
National Security Affairs at the Office of the Assistant
Secretary for International Security Affairs.  He has a BS
from the U.S. Military Academy, 1948, and an MPA and a PhD
from Harvard University, 1961.  He is director and treasurer
of the Atlantic Council of the United States and a member of
the executive committee of the National Security Archives
Board of Directors.

Lee Bollinger has been provost of Dartmouth College since
July 1994.  Previously, he was a professor at the University
of Michigan Law School from 1973 and served as dean of the
law school from 1987 to 1994.  In 1983 he was a visiting
associate at Clare Hall, Cambridge University.  Mr.
Bollinger received his bachelor�s degree from the University
of Oregon and a law degree from Columbia University School
of Law.  In 1972-1973, he served as a law clerk to Supreme
Court Justice Warren E. Burger.  His books include Images of
a Free Press (University of Chicago Press, 1991) and The
Tolerant Society: Freedom of Speech and Extremist Speech in
America (Oxford University Press, 1987).  He has published
numerous articles on freedom of the press and free speech,
including �The First Amendment and National security� and
�The First Amendment and New Communications technologies�
He was co-author of the National Research Council
publication �Constitutional Issues in Regulating Televised
Presentations of violence� in 1982.  Mr. Bollinger is a
fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Ann Caracristi was appointed a member of President Clinton�s
Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board in September 1993.  She
was deputy director of the National Security Agency from
January 1980 to August 1982.  Ms. Caracristi holds a BA from
Russell Sage College and is a graduate of the Federal
Executive Institute.  She has received the Department of
Defense Distinguished Civilian Service Award, the National
Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal, and the United
States National Security Award.  Currently she is a
consultant to the NSA Scientific Advisory Board and a member
of the Board of Visitors of the Defense Language Institute
Foreign Language Center.  She served as a member of the
Chief of Naval Operations Executive Panel from October 1982
to September 1991.  She was a two-term president of the
Association of Former Intelligence Officers from 1989 to
1991.  Most recently she was a member of the Commission on
the Roles and Capabilities of the U.S. Intelligence
Community.

Benjamin R. Civiletti has been in private law practice with
Venable, Baetjer, Howard & Civiletti in Baltimore and
Washington, D.C., since 1981.  He is chairman of that firm.
Prior to 1981, he was U.S. attorney general from 1979 to
1981, deputy U.S. attorney general from 1978 to 1979, and
assistant attorney general for the Criminal Division of the
Department of Justice, 1977 and 1978.  He has an AB from
Johns Hopkins University, 1957, and an LLB from the
University of Maryland, 1961.  He is chairman of the board
of directors of Maryland Healthcorp; a director of MBNA
Corporation, MBNA International, Wackenhut Corrections
Corporation, and the Bethlehem Steel Corporation; a trustee
of Johns Hopkins University; former chairman of Maryland
Legal Services Corporation; and a chairman of the Governors
Task Force for Funding of Public Education.

Colin Crook is the senior technology officer of Citicorp.
He has governance and oversight responsibility for
technology at Citicorp, including operational management of
the global information network.  Mr. Crook is a graduate of
the United Kingdom�s Liverpool Polytechnic, where he earned
his degrees (electrical engineering) while working as a
computer designer for the Plessey Company.  Mr. Crook has
held various positions in top management for the Motorola
Corporation in the United States and Europe, as well as
positions with Rank Precision Industries, Zynar, Ltd., and
British Telecom.  He also was senior vice president with
Data General (USA).  Mr. Crook has been a key speaker at
international industry conferences, has published in
scholarly and professional journals, and has been the
subject of numerous interviews.  He is a member of the
Association for Computing Machinery, the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the Institution of
Electrical Engineers (United Kingdom).  In 1981, Mr. Crook
was elected to the United Kingdom�s Royal Academy of
Engineering, the youngest person to be so honored at the
time.

Samuel H. Fuller is currently a vice president and the chief
scientist of Digital Equipment Corporation.  Prior to
joining Digital in 1978, Dr. Fuller was an associate
professor of computer science and electrical engineering at
Carnegie Mellon University (CMU).  While at CMU, he was
involved in the performance evaluation and design of several
experimental multiprocessor computer systems.  His fields of
interest include computer science and electrical
engineering.  Dr. Fuller received his BS from the University
of Michigan (1968) and his MS (1969) and PhD (1972) in
electrical engineering and computer science from Stanford
University.  He is a member of the National Academy of
Engineering, Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers, and Association for Computing Machinery.  Dr.
Fuller was a founding member of the Computer Science and
Telecommunications Board (1986-1992) and served on the
steering committee for the Competitiveness Colloquium
Follow-up Workshop on Systems Integration (1989-1991).  Dr.
Fuller is on the board of directors of Analog Device Inc.
and INSO Corporation.

Leslie H. Gelb has been president of the Council on Foreign
Relations since 1993.  He is a trustee of the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and of Tufts University, a
board member of Columbia University�s School of
International and Public Affairs, and an advisory board
member for the Center on Press, Politics and Public Policy
at Harvard University�s John F. Kennedy School of
Government.  He is a member of the International Institute
for Strategic Studies and a fellow of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences.  In 1985, Mr. Gelb shared in the
winning of the Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism.
He was a senior associate for the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace from 1980 to 1981, and from 1977 to
1979, he served as director of the Bureau of Politico-
Military Affairs, where he received the Distinguished Honor
Award.  He was a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution
from 1969 to 1973 and also a visiting professor at
Georgetown University.  He was director of Policy Planning
and Arms Control for International Security Affairs at the
Department of Defense from 1967 to 1969, where he also
served as director of the Pentagon Papers Project.  While at
the Defense Department, Mr. Gelb won the Pentagon�s
Distinguished Service Award.  Mr. Gelb was executive
assistant to U.S. Senator Jacob K. Javits from 1966 to 1967
and an assistant professor at Wesleyan University from 1964
to 1966.  Mr. Gelb received a BA from Tufts University in
1959, and his MA in 1961 and PhD in 1964 from Harvard
University.  He is an author and a co-author of several
foreign policy studies.

Ronald Graham is director of Information Sciences Research
at AT&T Laboratories, which he joined in 1962, and has also
been a professor at Rutgers University since 1987.
Concurrently, he has been a Regents� Professor of
Mathematics at the University of California, Los Angeles,
and a frequent visiting professor of computer science at
Stanford University and Princeton University.  He was a
Fairchild Distinguished Scholar at the  California Institute
of Technology in 1982.  Dr. Graham�s research is in
combinatorics, number theory, graph theory, algorithms, and
combinatorial geometry.  He has a BS in physics from the
University of Alaska, 1958, and an MA and a PhD in
mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley,
1962.  Dr. Graham was awarded the Polya Prize in
combinatorics in 1972 and the Euler Medal in combinatorics
in 1994.  He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences
and a past president of the American Mathematical Society,
and he is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and
Sciences, the New York Academy of Sciences, and the American
Association for the Advancement of Science.

Martin Hellman is a professor of electrical engineering at
Stanford University, where he has been since 1971.
Previously, he was an assistant professor at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 1969 to 1971 and
a staff member at the IBM T.J. Watson Research Center from
1968 to 1969.  Dr. Hellman�s specialties are information and
communication theory, cryptography and data security, and
international security.  His BE is from New York University
and his MS and PhD in electrical engineering are from
Stanford University.  He is a fellow of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers and the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics.

Ambassador Julius Katz is president of Hills & Company,
International Consultants.  The firm provides clients with
strategic advice and risk analysis on trade and investment
interests abroad.  Ambassador Katz held the position of
deputy U.S. trade representative from 1989 to 1993.  During
this period, he was the U.S chief negotiator for the North
American Free Trade Agreement.  He also had senior
management responsibility for bilateral and regional
negotiations with Europe and the Western Hemisphere and for
the multilateral trade negotiations known as the Uruguay
Round.  Ambassador Katz previously worked as a public policy
consultant and from 1987 to 1989 was chairman of the
Government Research Corporation in Washington, D.C.  From
1980 to 1985, he worked in the financial services industry,
where he was chairman of Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette
Futures Inc.  Ambassador Katz joined the U.S. Department of
State in 1950 and on his retirement from the State
Department after 30 years of service held the position of
assistant secretary of state for economic and business
affairs.  While at the State Department, Ambassador Katz led
numerous U.S. delegations in negotiations on trade,
commodity, and transport matters.

Peter G. Neumann is principal scientist in the Computer
Science Laboratory at SRI, where he has worked since 1971.
His projects have involved computer systems security, high
assurance, human safety, and reliability.  He was a member
of the Air Force Studies Board database security study and
of the National Research Council�s System Security Study
Committee that produced the report Computers at Risk
(National Academy Press, 1991).  He also served on an expert
panel for the U.S. House Judiciary Committee�s Subcommittee
on Civil and Constitutional Rights.  Dr. Neumann received
his AB, SM, and PhD from Harvard University in 1954, 1955,
and 1961, respectively.  In 1960 he received a Dr. rerum
naturarum from the Technische Hochschule, Darmstadt,
Germany, where he was a Fulbright scholar for 2 years.  From
1976 to 1994, he was editor of SIGSOFT Software Engineering
Notes for the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), and
since 1985 he has been chairman of the ACM Committee on
Computers and Public Policy.  Dr. Neumann was awarded an ACM
Outstanding Contribution Award in 1992 and the first SRI
Exceptional Performance Award for Leadership in Community
Service, also in 1992.  He is a fellow of the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the ACM, and the
American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Raymond Ozzie is the founder and president of Iris
Associates, the developer of Lotus Notes.  Iris, which began
operations in 1984, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Lotus
Development Corporation and IBM Corporation.  Before
founding Iris, Mr. Ozzie worked at Lotus, where he was the
lead architect and developer of Lotus� Symphony product.
Prior to Lotus, he was an engineering manager at Software
Arts, the developer of the first electronic spreadsheet,
VisiCalc.  Mr. Ozzie received his degree in computer science
in 1978 from the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign,
where he did research in distributed computing and was a
systems programmer for PLATO, a pioneering distributed
computer-based education and collaboration system connecting
students and researchers at hundreds of locations worldwide.

Edward C. Schmults was senior vice president of external
affairs and general counsel of GTE Corporation from 1984 to
1995.  Previously he served as a deputy attorney general of
the United States from 1981 to 1984, deputy counsel to the
President from 1975 to 1976, and undersecretary of the
Treasury Department from 1974 to 1975.  Mr. Schmults was a
partner of the New York law firm of White & Case from 1965
to 1973 and from 1977 to 1981.  He sits on the board of
directors of the GreenPoint Bank, the Germany Fund, and the
Central European Equity Fund and is chairman of the board of
trustees of the Refugee Policy Group.  He served with the
U.S. Marine Corps from 1953 to 1955.  Mr. Schmults has a BS
from Yale University and a JD from Harvard University, 1958.

Elliot M. Stone has been executive director of the
Massachusetts Health Data Consortium since it was
established in 1978 as a private, nonprofit corporation and
a nonpartisan setting for the collection and analysis of the
state�s large health care databases.  The consortium
publishes annual reports and sets data standards for a broad
constituency of health care organizations and business
coalitions.  Previously, Mr. Stone served as director of the
state�s Center for Health Statistics in the Massachusetts
Department of Public Health.  Mr. Stone has been an advisor
to the Agency for Health Care Policy & Research, the
National Center for Healthcare Statistics, the Health Care
Financing Administration, and the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation.  He is an active member of the National
Association of Health Data Organizations and the Association
for Health Services Research.  Mr. Stone received his BA and
MS degrees from Boston University.  He was a member of the
Institute of Medicine study that produced the report Health
Data in the Information Age: Use, Disclosure, and Privacy
(National Academy Press, 1994).

Willis H. Ware is a member (emeritus) of the Corporate
Research Staff at the RAND Corporation.  His career has
spanned all aspects of computer science--hardware, software,
architecture, software development, federal agency and
military applications, real-time systems, networks,
management of computer-intensive projects, and public
policy.  In the late 1960s he developed a research interest
in the security of computer systems and networks, and
shortly thereafter, a corresponding interest in the personal
privacy consequences of record-keeping systems.  He has
written extensively on both topics.  He was the first
chairman of the American Federation of Information
Processing Societies (AFIPS) and in the early 1970s chaired
the Secretary�s Advisory Committee on Automated Personal
Data Systems of the Department of Health, Education, and
Welfare.  Its report was the foundation for the Federal
Privacy Act of 1974.  Subsequently, he was appointed to the
Privacy Protection Study Commission by President Ford and
served as both commissioner and vice chairman.  Its report
remains the most extensive examination of private sector
record-keeping practices.  He currently chairs the statutory
Computer System Security and Privacy Advisory Board.  Dr.
Ware received his BS from the University of Pennsylvania, an
SM from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and a PhD
from Princeton University--all in electrical engineering.
He is a fellow of the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers, the Association for Computing
Machinery, and the American Association for the Advancement
of Science, and he was elected to the National Academy of
Engineering in 1985.

A.2  ADDITIONAL CONTRIBUTORS TO THE PROJECT

    The following individuals provided the committee with
briefings, discussion, position papers, personal views, and
background materials.  They are listed alphabetically.
Individuals who explicitly requested complete anonymity are
not listed.

Edward Allen, Federal Bureau of Investigation; Edward J.
Appel, National Security Council; John A. Armstrong, IBM
(retired); Wendell Bailey, National Cable Television
Association; Stewart Baker, Steptoe and Johnson; Richard C.
Barth, Motorola; Bill Bauriedel; David C. Bedard; Sheldon R.
Bentley, Boeing Computer Services; Jerry Berman, Center for
Democracy and Technology; Tom Berson, Anagram Laboratories;
Rose Biancinello, Department of State; Robert Blandford;
Matt Blaze; Eric Blossom; William Earl Boebert, Sandia
National Laboratories; Barry Briggs, Lotus Development
Corporation; David Brin; Ken Bronstein, Hewlett-Packard;
Clinton Brooks, National Security Agency; Melinda Brown,
Lotus Development Corporation; Robert E. Bruccoleri,
Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute;
James Carr, U.S. District Court of Toledo; Vinton G. Cerf,
MCI Telecommunications Corporation; Jesse Choper, University
of California, Berkeley; Anthony Clark, House Science
Committee; Judi Clark; Floyd I. Clarke, MacAndrews & Forbes;
David Cohen, Central Intelligence Agency; Leroy L. Cook,
MITRE Corporation; Daniel Corcoran, Electronic Data Systems;
Aaron W. Cross, IBM; William Crowell, National Security
Agency; Walter Curtis, National Semiconductor Corporation;
David Decker, GTE Laboratories; Philippe Dejean, Service
Central de la Securite des Systemes d�Information, Service
du Premier Ministre (France); James X. Dempsey, Center for
National Security Studies; Dorothy Denning, Georgetown
University;

Whitfield Diffie, Sun Microsystems; M. Nanette DiTosto, U.S.
Council for International Business; Esther Dyson, EDventure
Holdings Inc.; Robert I. Eachus; Carl Ellison, CyberCash
Inc.; Glenn Everhart; Lincoln D. Faurer, National Security
Agency (retired); C. William Ferguson, Semaphore
Corporation; Robert Fielding, National Security Agency; Hal
Finney; Clifford S. Fishman, Catholic University of America;
William Flanagan, Lotus Development Corporation; Martin L.
Fogelman; Greg Frazier, House Intelligence Committee; Paul
Freedenberg, Baker and Botts; Louis Freeh, Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Roger E. French, Digital Equipment
Corporation; A. Michael Froomkin, University of Miami Law
School; Robert Gallagher, Department of Commerce; Roby
Gamboa; Richard Garwin, IBM T.J. Watson Research Center;
Toby Gati, Department of State; Jeffrey Gaynor, Department
of Defense; Kenneth Geide, Federal Bureau of Investigation;
Thomas A. Gilbert, Network Systems Corporation; Louis Giles,
National Security Agency; John Gilmore, Cygnus Support;
Ronald Goldstock, Kroll Associates; Jamie S. Gorelick,
Department of Justice; Rebecca Gould, Business Software
Alliance; Graham Greenleaf, University of New South Wales;
William F. Hagerty IV, Management Advisory Group; Keith
Hall, Department of Defense; Bruce Hamilton; Martha Harris,
Department of State; Matthew D. Healy, Yale Center for
Medical Informatics; Bruce Heiman, Business Software
Alliance; David A. Hendon, Department of Trade and Industry
(United Kingdom); David Henry, National Security Agency;
Richard Hertling, Senate Judiciary Committee; R.S. (Bob)
Heuman; Mack Hicks, Bank of America;

Richard Hill; K. Mignon Hoffman, Boeing Computer Services;
Lance Hoffman, George Washington University; Robert Hood,
Congressman Newt Gingrich�s Office; Eric Hughes; Deborah
Hurley, Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development; Rick Jinelsky, Hewlett-Packard; Michael Paul
Johnson; Thomas Kalil, National Economic Council; Raymond
Kammer, National Institute of Standards and Technology; Phil
Karn; Sally Katzen, Office of Management and Budget;
Elizabeth Kaufman, Citibank; Stephen T. Kent, BBN
Communications; Gordon Kettler, General Motors; Raymond
Khan, General Motors; Joseph Kielman, Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Steve Killion, Federal Bureau of
Investigation; Julie Krueger, Atmel Corporation; Susan
Landau, University of Massachusetts, Amherst; P.E. (Pat)
Lanthier, Pacific Bell; Tony Lauck; Joshua Lederberg,
Rockefeller University; Ronald Lee, National Security
Agency; James Leinweber, University of Wisconsin, Madison;
Blaise Liffick, Computer Professionals for Social
Responsibility; Steven B. Lipner, MITRE Corporation; Myles
Losch; Robert Lucky, Bell Communications Research; Deborah
Malamud, University of Michigan Law School; Noel Matchett,
Information Security Inc.; Timothy May; Bruce McConnell,
Office of Management and Budget; Kirk McConnell, Senate
Armed Services Committee; Kate McGee, Oracle Corporation; F.
Lynn McNulty, McNulty and Associates;

Catherine Medich, CommerceNet; Ken Mendelson, House
Judiciary Committee; Douglas Miller, Software Publishers
Association; John Millis, House Select Committee on
Intelligence; William Mockler, Drug Enforcement
Administration; Vera A. Murray, IBM; Michael Nelson, Office
of Science and Technology Policy; Robert Nieves, Drug
Enforcement Administration; Edward O�Malley, OSO Group;
Christopher Padilla, AT&T Government Affairs; Donn Parker,
SRI International Inc.; Kumar Patel, University of
California, Los Angeles; Bill Patterson; Nick Patterson,
Renaissance Technologies; Craig Paul, University of Kansas;
Paul J.J. Payack, Network Systems Corporation; Mona Peglow,
Novell; David Pensak, DuPont Corporation; Henry H. Perritt,
Jr., Villanova University; John Pescatore, International
Data Corporation Government; Charles C. Philipp, Department
of Energy; John Pignataro, New York City Police Department;
John Podesta, The White House; Carl Pomerance, University of
Georgia;
William Poulos, Electronic Data Systems; William Press,
Harvard College; Robert Prestel, National Security Agency
(retired); Todd Quinto, Tufts University; Jim Ray; Alfred
Reifman, Congressional Research Service; Robert Rich,
National Security Agency (retired); Ed Roback, National
Institute of Standards and Technology; Bruce Roberts,
Unisys; Cesare Rosati, Department of State;

Sholom Rosen, Citibank; Howard Rosenblum, National Security
Agency (retired); Marc Rotenberg, Electronic Privacy
Information Center; Lee D. Rothstein, VeriTech; Ira
Rubenstein, Microsoft Corporation; Clint Sare; John
Scheibel, House Foreign Affairs Committee; Roger Schell,
Novell; Jeff Schiller, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology; James Schindler, Hewlett-Packard; Kurt
Schneckenburger; William Richard Scruggs, Department of
Justice; Raymond R. Semko, Department of Energy; William S.
Sessions, Sessions & Sessions, L.C.; Edward Sheehan,
Electronic Data Systems; Alan Shipman, Enterprise
Integration Technology, CommerceNet; Gursharan Sidhu, Apple
Computer; Cheryl Simmons, Computer and Communications
Industry Association; Lori S. Sinton, National Semiconductor
Corporation; Landgrave T. Smith, Jr., Institute for Defense
Analyses; Peter Smith, member of Parliament, United Kingdom;
Teresa Smith, Central Intelligence Agency; Oliver Smoot,
Information Technology Industry Council; Carl Snyder,
Hewlett-Packard; Bill Sommerfeld; George Spix, Microsoft
Corporation; Edward Springer, Office of Management and
Budget; Ross Stapleton-Gray, TeleDiplomacy Inc.;

Vicki Stearn, Discovery Communications Inc.; Shari Steele,
Electronic Frontier Foundation; John D. Steinbruner,
Brookings Institution; Barry Steinhardt, American Civil
Liberties Union; Ivan Sutherland, Sun Microsystems
Laboratories; Raymond Tate, National Security Agency
(retired); Duane Thompson; George B. Trubow, John Marshall
Law School; Roger Ulbrich, Chevron Corporation; Paul Walker,
House Armed Services Committee; Stephen Walker, Trusted
Information Systems Inc.; Lester Waters, Microsoft
Corporation; Daniel Weitzner, Center for Democracy and
Technology; William Whitehurst, IBM; Daniel Whiteman,
General Motors; Randy Whiting, Hewlett-Packard; Philip
Wilcox, Department of State; Janice Williams, Central
Intelligence Agency; Charity Wilson, Senate Judiciary
Committee; Joan D. Winston, Office of Technology Assessment;
R. James Woolsey, Shey & Gardner.
-----
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Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
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