Yup. Same ole stuff, shovelled out the same ole way. The part I find
aggravating was the report's brassy assurance that corporate users need
real-time surreptitious access to employees encrypted communications. In
Congressional testimony, not even DFBI Freeh can make that case with a
straight fa
I took the time to look at this report while stuck on an airplane (we use
Northwest up here) and I'm astonished that the FBI can't do any better than
this. They trotted out the same old anecdotes of this terrorist
"recommending" crypto to friends and that investigation "encountering"
encrypted fil
TECTED]>>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>>
Date: Monday, June 28, 1999 11:31 AM
Subject: FBI Report on Cryptography
>[I can't vouch for the origins of this document, but I suppose it is
>interest