Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998)
Craig JarvisReceived 26 Dec 2020, Accepted 21 May 2021, Published online: 26 
Jun 2021   
   - Download citation
    
   - https://doi.org/10.1080/24701475.2021.1935547

Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998)


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Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998)

Craig Jarvis

(2021). Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998). 
Internet Histories. Ahead of Print.
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Abstract

The cypherpunks were 1990s digital activists who challenged White House 
policies aiming to prevent the emergence of unregulated digital cryptography, 
an online privacy technology capable of frustrating government surveillance. 
Whilst the cypherpunk’s ideology, which is predominantly the output of Timothy 
C. May, is well understood, less is known about the composition of the 
cypherpunk’s community. This article builds on past studies by Rid and 
Beltramini by using the cypherpunk’s mail list archive to profile the most 
active and influential cypherpunks. This study confirms the May-derived 
ideology is broadly, though not entirely, representative of the cypherpunk 
community. This article assesses the cypherpunks were a highly educated, mostly 
libertarian community permeated by aspects of anarchism which arose from a 
societal disaffiliation inherited from the counterculture. This article further 
argues that the cypherpunks were also influenced by the hacker ethic and 
dystopian science fiction.

Keywords: 
Cypherpunkscryptographycyberspacepolicydigital privacydigital 
surveillancecrypto warsPrevious articleView latest articlesNext article
Introduction

The cypherpunks were a group of privacy activists who in the 1990s helped 
establish the use of unregulated digital cryptography within the United States. 
Digital privacy, better phrased as privacy in the digital age given the 
inexorable digital-physical convergence, is achieved principally via digital 
security. When considering the base elements of digital security, Professor 
Keith Martin comments that, “cryptography is pretty much the only game in town” 
(Martin, 2020, p. 2). Cryptography allows not only for a host of vital 
applications within our everyday lives, such as secure financial transactions, 
but also for capabilities the cypherpunks hoped would undermine the State (May, 
1988). Such encryption-dependent technologies include: block-chains, which can 
place financial transactions beyond the government’s ability to monitor and 
tax; whistleblowing platforms, capable of facilitating leaks whilst protecting 
the whistleblower; and anonymity networks, which can obfuscate a citizen’s 
physical location.

The cypherpunks helped shape our Internet. Beltramini comments they were, 
“perhaps the single most effective grassroots organization in history dedicated 
to protecting freedom in cyberspace” (Beltramini, 2020, p. 1). However, 
Dahlberg argues that cyber-libertarian visions of the future, such as those 
held by the cypherpunks, had mostly dissipated by 2000, he comments that by 
then the Internet was, “seen as part and parcel of “everyday life” – simply an 
extension of existing social systems, rather than being a revolutionary medium 
transcending offline political and economic constraints” (2010, p. 333). 
However, Dahlberg’s assessment fails to account for the significant 1990s 
cryptographic advances made by the citizenry, which included weakening export 
controls, defeating the Clinton administration’s attempts to further regulate 
cryptography, and establishing the foundation for current technologies such as 
crypto-currencies. Today, law enforcement does not consider unregulated 
encryption as a tolerable status quo as its use hinders their access to 
suspect’s data.1 In 2020 alone, two bills were introduced in Congress which 
could outlaw encryption not containing a government access method (commonly 
referred to as a “back door”) (United States Congress, 2020; United States 
Senate, 2020). When the Clinton administration sought to include a back door 
within encryption technologies in the 1990s, the cypherpunks led the successful 
battle to defeat government policy, thus helping to establish unregulated 
cryptography. The cypherpunk ideology now influences a new generation of 
digital privacy activists.2 These new activists are responsible for challenging 
today’s government policies to mandate encryption back doors.

It is important we understand the community which last successfully challenged 
the State’s attempt to regulate cryptography so that ongoing debates are 
informed by an accurate characterization of those who established today’s 
status quo. This article builds on the cypherpunk studies of Rid (2016) and 
Beltramini (2020


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Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998)

Craig Jarvis

(2021). Cypherpunk ideology: objectives, profiles, and influences (1992–1998). 
Internet Histories. Ahead of Print.
 |

 |

 |



) by using the cypherpunk mail list archive to profile the broader cypherpunk 
community. This profiling indicates that the cypherpunks were a highly 
educated, primarily libertarian community permeated by aspects of anarchism 
which arose from a societal disaffiliation inherited from the counterculture. 
The profiling further indicates that the cypherpunks objectives were directed 
to minimize, or even remove the State from public life, and that they were 
influenced by the hacker ethic and dystopian science fiction.



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