--- begin forwarded text


Date: Sun, 18 Jun 2000 09:46:13 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: "Bill Frezza ([EMAIL PROTECTED])" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: My Latest InternetWeek Rant

Bob,

OK, my latest InternetWeek op-ed on HavenCo just went up on the web. It
will run in the paper issue tomorrow. Thanks for your help researching
this. Please feel free to pass the attached around to your cypherpunk
friends, and ask them to keep in touch. The original can be found at:

http://www.internetwk.com/columns00/frezz061900.htm

Regards,

Bill
______________________________
Bill Frezza, General Partner
Adams Capital Management
668 Stoney Hill Rd., Suite 155
Yardley, PA 19067
Phone: 215-321-0929
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Web: www.acm.com

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Achieving Economic Privacy One Data Haven At A Time
by Bill Frezza
Copyright InternetWeek June 19, 2000

I recently had the pleasure of attending an offshore Internet conference on
the island of Nevis, in the Eastern Caribbean, called "Lex Cybernetoria II:
Voluntary Rule of Law in a Transnational Medium."

The conference attracted a fascinating mix of radical scholars and
propeller-head geeks -- including a famous supply-side economist from the
Reagan administration; a bevy of world-class financial cryptologists; the
director of offshore gaming from Antigua; a Slovenian Web entrepreneur; a
member of Iceland's Parliament; the chairman of the Internet Bearer
Underwriting Corp.; and the founders of what amounts to the first central
bank of cyberspace, who, when they are not busy organizing conferences in
exotic places, are quietly issuing gold-backed digital currency.

What made this group different from the think-tank ideologues I've met over
the years was not their philosophical defense of free enterprise or their
conviction that the Internet will inevitably halt the pervasive invasion of
privacy that makes systematic government economic intrusion possible. What
distinguished them was the fact that they were actually doing something
about it with their day jobs.

While there was little agreement over which technical approach might best
hasten the day when individuals and corporations could securely transact
business with neither support nor interference from national sovereigns,
their belief that the market would provide solutions through Darwinian
trial and error was unanimous.

The privacy market took an extraordinary jump with the official launch of
HavenCo this month (www.havenco.com), the first carrier-class, Internet
data haven. Founded on an abandoned World War II anti-aircraft platform six
miles off the British coast, this self-proclaimed independent territory
will soon be hosting anonymous data storage and transaction services on
tamper-resistant and cryptographically secured servers a mere 3
milliseconds away from London. Using satellite, microwave and fiber route
diversity, blending their traffic with other commercial users to raise the
political cost of interdiction, HavenCo will be the closest place on earth
to a completely free, unregulated and untaxed data market.

For added protection from tort lawyers and machine-gun-toting bureaucrats,
HavenCo will not have clear-text access to the encrypted contents of its
customer's traffic, whose prepaid accounts do not have to be linked to
real-world identities. This means that even when the black helicopters one
day arrive to confiscate HavenCo's equipment on some anti-money
laundering/terrorist/pornography pretext, customer information will not be
compromised.

It sounds wacky. But it's another step along a technology road map that
will inevitably enable the separation of economy and state, much like the
American Revolution achieved the separation of church and state. HavenCo
will temporarily rely on jurisdictional diversity, with additional data
havens planned for small countries hospitable to unfettered capitalism,
allowing the company to stay in business even if one of its havens goes
dark.

But true political independence can only be achieved when operations such
as HavenCo can be hosted across the street from the White House. For a
suitable architecture, one needs to delve into the quirky realm of the
Cypherpunks. While only a design concept today, technology will someday
allow the organic growth of a completely distributed system wherein
encrypted data is striped across multiple hosting centers, similar to a
RAID disk farm, such that no one facility stores enough information to
reconstruct anything of value and multiple facilities can be simultaneously
compromised without loss of data.

Imagine a sea of servers connected by broadband Internet connections across
the globe with terabytes of storage and gigaflops of processing power in
aggregate, each server operated as in independent for-profit business, some
by multinational corporations and some by teenagers in their basement. How
will these server operators get paid, since they won't know who their
customers are? That's where Internet bearer settlements come in, using
nonaccount-based, anonymous stored value and transaction instruments
denominated in units from a hundredth of a penny to a million dollars.
Piggyback a digital micropayment stream on top of the data bits, squirt
this at the sea of servers, all bidding against each other for a piece of
the action, and you're in business, everywhere and nowhere at the same time.

Science fiction? So were submarines, rockets to the moon and pocket
computers -- until motivated geeks made them real.

Bill Frezza is a general partner at Adams Capital Management. He can be
reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED] or www.acm.com.

--- end forwarded text


-- 
-----------------
R. A. Hettinga <mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
The Internet Bearer Underwriting Corporation <http://www.ibuc.com/>
44 Farquhar Street, Boston, MA 02131 USA
"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'

Reply via email to