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1867 lines
76 KiB
Plaintext
Date: Sun, 14 May 1995 20:41:00 -0400 (EDT)
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From: KALLISTE@delphi.com
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Subject: Re: money laundering & digital cash
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To: ramin@ping.at
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Message-Id: <01HQI8UYOBCI9I7QTO@delphi.com>
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X-Vms-To: IN%"ramin@ping.at"
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Mime-Version: 1.0
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Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; CHARSET=ISO-8859-1
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Content-Transfer-Encoding: QUOTED-PRINTABLE
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****************************************************
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* The End of Ordinary Money is copyrighted 1995 by *
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* J. Orlin Grabbe, 1280 Terminal Way #3, Reno, NV *
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* 89502. *
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****************************************************
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THE END OF ORDINARY MONEY
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by J. Orlin Grabbe
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Late one night while sharing a
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pharmacological product with a spook I met in the
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northeastern part of the United States, I mentioned I
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was studying cryptology.
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"Cryptology is the *future*," he responded
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emphatically. "It's what's going to protect us from
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Big Brother."
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Since he worked for the National Security
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Agency (NSA), the thought did occur to me that
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many would have taken the position that he and his
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colleagues *were* Big Brother. But I had learned
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years ago not to demonize people on the basis of an
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accidental profession. After all, if an ex-CIA
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employee like Kerry Thornley could become a
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staunch libertarian, the creator of Zenarchy and
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implied co-author of the Erisian holy book
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Principia Discordia [1], then there was hope for all
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of us. I additionally believed that one of our best
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defenses against the national security state was the
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perennial proclivity of clandestine organizations to
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piss off their own employees [2].
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At any rate, the spook spoke the truth:
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cryptology represents the future of privacy, and
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more. By implication cryptology also represents the
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future of money, and the future of banking and
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finance. (By "money" I mean the medium of
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exchange, the institutional mechanisms for making
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transactions, whether by cash, check, debit card or
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other electronic transfer.) Given the choice between
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intersecting with a monetary system that leaves a
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detailed electronic trail of all one's financial
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activities, and a parallel system that ensures
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anonymity and privacy, people will opt for the
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latter. Moreover, they will *demand* the latter,
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because the current monetary system is being turned
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into the principal instrument of surveillance and
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control by tyrannical elements in Western
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governments.
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These elements all want to know where your
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money comes from, and when and how you spend
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it. After all, you might be a terrorist, drug dealer,
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or spy. And if you try to hide your transactions, you
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are by definition a money launderer and perhaps a
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child pornographer.
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Say what? To understand this quaint
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accusatorial juxtaposition, one only has to grasp a
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few simple facts: Money is digital information.
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The way to hide digital information is through
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cryptography. The government doesn't want you
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using cryptography, because they want to know
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where your money is so they can get some of it.
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And they don't like you using drugs, unless the
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government is the dealer [3], or viewing child
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pornography, unless the government supplies it
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because it is setting you up for blackmail or a smear
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campaign [4].
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Okay, I'll admit it. I like privacy (I often
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send mail inside sealed envelopes, and sometimes
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close the door when I go to the bathroom), take
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drugs (nothing like a cup of expresso in the
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morning), and don't like to pay taxes (but doesn't
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H&R Block make a living off this same popular
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sentiment?). I don't know much about child
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pornography, but a friend of a friend is said to have
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a distant cousin who swears he keeps several
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hundred gigabytes of encrypted pictures of naked
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children stored in NSA computers at Ft. Meade. ("No
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one breaks in there," the cousin supposedly brags.)
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[5]
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This is serious stuff. Consider the following
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items as pieces of an overall mosaic, whose ultimate
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meaning will become even more obscure as we
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proceed.
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* Cryptography software is classified as
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munitions, and its export is restricted by the State
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Department. The International Traffic in Arms
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Regulations (ITAR) defines "encryption software"
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to include not only computer programs designed to
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protect the privacy of information, but all of the
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technical data about those programs. ITAR
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restrictions continue to be enforced, even though the
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Justice Department originally found them
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unconstitutional [6]. Mail a copy of your new
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encryption program to a friend in Italy, and--
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presto!--you are subject to prosecution as an
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international arms dealer. (It is not, however, illegal
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to export your program to outer space, or to deliver
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it to your friend by rocket, since a "launch vehicle
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or payload shall not, by the launching of such
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vehicle, be considered export for the purposes of
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this subchapter" (120.10).)
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* Steward Baker, Chief Counsel for NSA,
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points out how the spread of cryptology plays into
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the hands of pedophiles: "Take for example the
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campaign to distribute PGP ('Pretty Good Privacy')
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encryption on the Internet. Some argue that
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widespread availability of this encryption will help
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Latvian freedom fighters today and American
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freedom fighters tomorrow. Well, not quite. Rather,
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one of the earliest users of PGP was a high-tech
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pedophile in Santa Clara, California. He used PGP
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to encrypt files that, police suspect, include a diary
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of his contacts with susceptible young boys using
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computer bulletin boards all over the country. 'What
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really bothers me,' says Detective Brian Kennedy of
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the Sacramento, California, Sheriff's Department, 'is
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that there could be kids out there who need help
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badly, but thanks to this encryption, we'll never
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reach them' " [7] .
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Which does lead to a few questions. Since
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the NSA is the largest user of encryption software in
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the world, does that mean NSA is rife with
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pedophiles? Are police *suspicions* to be taken as
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convincing evidence? And what if this alleged
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pedophile had never kept notes in the first place?
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But never mind. What really bothers me is that there
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could be kids out there who need help badly, but
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thanks to sloppy records, extended ignorance, and
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appeals to national security, we'll never reach them.
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The NSA Chief Counsel also noted, as he
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had in previous speeches, ". . . it's the proponents of
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widespread unbreakable encryption who want to
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create a brave new world, one in which all of us--
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crooks included--have a guarantee that the
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government can't tap our phones." Which caused
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one observer, Bruce Sterling, to remark, "As a
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professional science fiction writer I remember being
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immediately struck by the deep conviction that there
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was plenty of Brave New World to go around" [8].
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* Georgetown University cryptologist
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Dorthy Denning reminds us that "Because
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encryption can make communications immune from
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lawful interception, it threatens a key law
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enforcement tool. The proliferation of high quality,
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portable, easy-to-use, and affordable encryption
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could be harmful to society if law enforcement does
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not have the means to decrypt lawfully intercepted
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communications. Although encryption of stored
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files is also of concern, 99% of the issue is
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telephone communications (voice, fax, and data)"
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[9].
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The reason for this is all those people on the
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phone dealing drugs. "Almost two thirds of all
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court orders for electronic surveillance are used to
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fight the war on drugs, and electronic surveillance
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has been critical in identifying and then dismantling
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major drug trafficking organizations. In an
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operation code named 'PIZZA CONNECTION,' an
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FBI international investigation into the importation
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and distribution of $1.6 billion worth of heroin by
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the Sicilian Mafia and La Cosa Nostra resulted in
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the indictment of 57 high-level drug traffickers in
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the U.S. and 5 in Italy . . .. The FBI estimates that
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the war on drugs and its continuing legacy of
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violent street crime would be substantially, if not
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totally, lost if law enforcement were to lose its
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capability for electronic surveillance" [10].
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In fact, that's supposed to settle the issue
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right there: "We need such-and-such to fight the
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war on drugs. Case closed." This argument is used
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ad nauseam in document after document. Nowhere
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is the issue raised: Oh yeah? So why are we
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fighting a war on drugs? Such questions are ruled
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out, because we're dealing with *needs* here, and
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needs spew forth their own logic and evolve their
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own morals.
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* One of governments' biggest needs is to
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get all that drug money for themselves, the part they
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don't already have. The U.S. State Department
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proposes a sort of international spree of
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government theft: "We must effect greater asset
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seizures, not just of bank accounts, but also
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corporate assets and even corporate entities . . . We
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must be ready to impose appropriate sanctions
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against banking institutions, as well as bankers . . .
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The FATF [Financial Task Force] countries, the 12
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EU [European Union] nations, the EFTA countries,
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and the majority of the 95 states party to the 1988
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UN Convention are adopting (if not yet fully
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implementing) legislation that will ultimately
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improve individual and collective capabilities." [11]
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Everyone is suspect. You say you want to
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buy some Portuguese escudos? We better keep our
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eye on you--you're a potential money launderer.
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According to the State Department, "Entry in the
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European monetary system has made the escudo,
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which became fully convertible in 1993, more
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attractive to potential money launderers" [12].
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Hmm. Hey, fellows. With that mentality, you
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should send some investigators from Foggy Bottom
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up to 19th Street. You'll find an entire building, an
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outfit called the International Monetary Fund, which
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was originally set up to work for currency
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convertibility. No telling what wicked *potential*
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money laundering havens they're working on next.
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* The Financial Crimes Enforcement
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Network (FinCEN) located in Vienna, Virginia, was
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set up in April 1990 to track money laundering, and
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given computerized access to data from pretty much
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everyone--FBI, DEA, Secret Service, Customs
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Service, Postal Service, CIA, NSA, Defense
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Intelligence Agency, National Security Council, the
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State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and
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Research, and, yes, the IRS (despite denials).
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FinCEN has a $2.4 million contract with Los
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Alamos National Laboratory to develop artificial
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intelligence programs to look for unexplained
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money flows [13]. FinCEN also proposed a
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"Deposit Tracking System" (DTS) that would also
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track deposits to, or withdrawals from, U.S. banks
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accounts in real time.
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* Now, if you were a drug dealer (or maybe
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just an average Joe), how would you react to all this
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unwanted attention? Try to keep a low profile,
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maybe? Perhaps opt out of the usual banking
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channels? "During the past two years, analysts saw
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an increasing use of non-bank financial institutions,
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especially exchange houses, check cashing services,
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credit unions, and instruments like postal money
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orders, cashiers checks, and certificates of deposit
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(particularly in 'bearer' form), with transactions
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occurring in an ever longer list of countries and
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territories" [12].
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This process whereby money flows through
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non-traditional banking channels is termed
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*disintermediation*. Disintermediation happens
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whenever a government manipulates banking
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services in such a way to make them less attractive.
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For example, if bank deposits have an interest rate
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ceiling of 3 percent, you may elect to pull your
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money out of bank deposits, and purchase Treasury
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bills which have no ceiling. In the same way, if the
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government is looking around in your bank account,
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perhaps with the idea of seizing it, or seizing you,
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you may elect not to have a bank account, or at least
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not one the government knows about. Or you may
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elect to use non-traditional financial channels which
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are less likely to be observed. The ultimate end of
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the process is completely anonymous banking
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through encrypted digital cash.
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The State Department also notes will alarm
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that "[drug] traffickers were employing professional
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money managers." Which does lead one to reflect,
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whatever is the world coming to? The next thing
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you know, drug dealers will be shopping at the
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local grocery store and sending their children to
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better schools. They'll be mowing their lawns and
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sprucing up the neighborhood. How could we live
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in such a society?
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* All this talk of computers has gotten the
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IRS hot and bothered also. Not in a negative way,
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mind you. The IRS has become obsessed with the
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noble goal to save us time by just sending us a bill:
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"In an effort to catch more tax cheats, the Internal
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Revenue Service plans to vastly expand the secret
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computer database of information it keeps on
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virtually all Americans. . . .'Ultimately, the IRS may
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obtain enough information to prepare most tax
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returns,' said Coleta Brueck, the agency's top
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document processing official. 'If I know what
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you've made during the year', she said, 'if I know
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what your withholding is, if I know what your
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spending pattern is, I should be able to generate for
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you a tax return...' " [14].
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We have nothing to fear, apparently, but
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*fiends who hide their spending patterns*. Well,
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Coleta, you had better prepare for a flood of data
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that is spending-pattern impaired, because
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according to the Crypto Anarchist Manifesto, "Just
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as the technology of printing altered and reduced
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the power of medieval guilds and the social power
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structure, so too will cryptologic methods
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fundamentally alter the nature of corporations and
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of government interference in economic
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transactions" [15].
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How did we come to this state of catch as
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catch can, and where are we going from here?
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Perhaps history will give some perspective. Let's
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start with that big bugaboo--drugs. In article logic,
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drug prohibition leads to money laundering, which
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leads to increased surveillance of banking
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transactions, and heightens interest in anonymity
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through cryptology.
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Oh, What a Lovely War!
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In the mid-1990s the United States and other
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countries were spending a good deal of money on a
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"war on drugs." What the phrase meant was unclear
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in a nation where 50 million people used tobacco,
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over 100 million used alcohol, and virtually
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everyone used aspirin or an equivalent pain-reliever.
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But certainly there was a prohibition in using, or
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dealing in, certain drugs. Naturally these drugs
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were still available on the black market despite the
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prohibition. The market supplied the consumption
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needs not only of the general public, but also of
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federal prisoners. Thus even if the country were
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turned into a police state, such drugs would still be
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available. Given this, what was the purpose or
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function of the prohibition? The simple economic
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rationale was this: the war on drugs was a source of
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profit both to those who dealt in prohibited drugs,
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and those who conducted the war against them.
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The prohibition of anything is a restriction
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in supply. Supply restriction drives up the price. In
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1973-4 the OPEC cartel caused a quick four-fold
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increase in the price of oil by restricting its supply.
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It also greatly increased the profit margin on each
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barrel pumped out of the ground. In a similar way,
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prohibition of drugs increases their black market
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price and the potential profit margin from supplying
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them to the public. But legitimate businessmen are
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deterred from entering the market. Hence drug
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prohibition creates a bonanza--high profit margins
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--only for those willing to deal in prohibited
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products. Just as alcohol prohibition financed the
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growth of powerful mobsters like Al Capone earlier
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in the century, so did prohibition of cocaine finance
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the growth of powerful production and supply
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cartels, such as the Cali cartel in Colombia. The
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U.S. government's prohibition made it possible for
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them to become rich, and then powerful.
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Because trade in drugs is illegal, contracts
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cannot be enforced in court. One cannot resort to
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common or commercial law. Hence contracts are
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often enforced via the barrel of a gun. And as there
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is no countervailing authority, those who enforce
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their contracts with guns may use the same method
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to simply eliminate competition. Territory is
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acquired or defended by force. Steven B. Duke, the
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Law of Science and Technology Professor at Yale
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University states simply: "The use of drugs--
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except, of course, alcohol--causes almost no
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crime." But drug *prohibition* does cause crime. The
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firearm assault and murder rates rose in the U.S.
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with the start of Prohibition in 1920, and remained
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high during it, but then declined for eleven
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consequence years after Prohibition was repealed.
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In the U.S. today, perhaps one-third of murders are
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related to contract enforcement and competition
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over dealing territory [16].
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Prohibition turns others into crime victims.
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Because certain drugs cannot be obtained at the
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local neighborhood drugstore, drug consumers visit
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unsafe parts of a city, and are simply assaulted.
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Such victims, naturally, are not in a position to
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complain to the police. Others become victims
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because of the lack of quality control. Because
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drugs are illegal, rip-off artists who deal in
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substitute or impure products know they will not be
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sued. Other suppliers simply make mistakes in
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production, but these mistakes are not caught right
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away because information flow is not efficient in a
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non-public market. This results in injuries, often
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caused not the use of the prohibited drugs
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themselves, but by the constraint on the flow of
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information brought about by prohibition.
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During the earlier era of alcohol Prohibition
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in the U.S., many of a city's leading citizens became
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criminals by the fact of visiting the bar of a local
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speakeasy. There, naturally, they associated with
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the proprietors, mobsters, who began to acquire
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increasing political influence. Today billions of
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dollars in cocaine profits leads to wide-spread
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corruption [17].
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About 1.2 million suspected drug offenders
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are arrested each year in the U.S., most of them for
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simple possession or petty sale [18]. Currently in
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the U.S., police spend one-half their time on drug-
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related crimes. The court system is on the verge of
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collapse because of the proliferation of drug cases,
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which-because they are criminal cases-have
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priority over civil cases. Six out of ten federal
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inmates are in prison on drug charges. Probably
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another two of the ten are there on prohibition-
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related offenses. There is a crisis in prison
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crowding (forty states are under court order to
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reduce overcrowding), with the result that violent
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criminals--including child molesters, multiple
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rapists, and kidnappers--are often released early.
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This is reinforced by mandatory sentencing laws.
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Consensual drug offenses are not only treated as the
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moral equivalent of murder, rape, or kidnapping:
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they are given harsher punishment. Youths are sent
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to prison for life for selling drugs, while murderers
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were eligible for early parole for good behavior
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[19]. As one example, Florida punishes "simple
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rape" by a maximum prison term of 15 years,
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second-degree murder with no mandatory minimum
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and a maximum of life in prison , first degree
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murder (where the death penalty is not imposed)
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with a mandatory minimum penalty of 25 years,
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after which one is eligible for parole, but trafficking
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in cocaine is punished with life imprisonment
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"without the possibility of parole."
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The war on drugs has turned into a war on
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civil liberties The reason is simple. The war is a
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war on people suspected of using, or dealing in, or
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otherwise being involved in drugs. But the drug
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industry survives because tens of millions of people
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engage in voluntary transactions, which they try to
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keep secret. Hence law enforcement must attempt
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to penetrate the private lives of millions of
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suspects, which could be almost anyone. A Nobel
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prize-winning economist wrote: "Every friend of
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freedom . . . must be as revolted as I am by the
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prospect of turning the U.S. into an armed camp, by
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the vision of jails filled with casual drug users and
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of an army of enforcers empowered to invade the
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liberty of citizens on slight evidence" [20].
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Unfortunately, not everyone is a friend of freedom.
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A mayor of New York advocated strip searching
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travelers from Asia and South America. A U.S.
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congressman introduced a bill to create an
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"American Gulag" of Arctic prison camps for drug
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offenders. And so on.
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The drug trade is sustained by prohibition
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itself. Agencies like the Drug Enforcement
|
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Administration (DEA) grew up to "fight" the drug
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war. Their budgets, prestige, and paychecks depend
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on the war's continuation. These agencies have vast
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sums to spend on public relations and propaganda
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|
("education"), and a vested interest against
|
|
legalization. Since these agencies profit from
|
|
crime, they have an incentive to cultivate
|
|
criminality as a natural resource. The sheriff of
|
|
Broward County, Florida, manufactured his own
|
|
crack cocaine to sell to buyers in order to arrest
|
|
them [21]. Others employ cocaine gigolos, who
|
|
then pressure unsuspecting boyfriends/girlfriends
|
|
into purchasing drugs from undercover agents (e.g.,
|
|
United States v. Eugenio Llamera, No. 84-167-Cr
|
|
(S.D. Fla. 1984)). Periodically a new "biggest ever"
|
|
drug bust (such as 22 tons of cocaine in a Los
|
|
Angeles warehouse) is proudly announced, with no
|
|
apparent perception that such busts prove the
|
|
agencies are failing in their alleged goal of drug
|
|
elimination. Meanwhile, some government
|
|
employees-drug warriors-themselves engage in
|
|
criminal acts for enjoyment or to supplement their
|
|
income. Drug dealers, in particular, can be killed
|
|
and robbed with impunity. Forfeiture laws, which
|
|
allow the seizure of money, houses, boats, cars,
|
|
planes, and other property on the basis of a
|
|
circumstantial connection with prohibited drugs,
|
|
have also been profitable. The associate deputy
|
|
attorney general in charge of the U.S. Justice
|
|
Department's forfeiture program said "we're not at
|
|
all apologetic about the fact that we do benefit
|
|
(financially) from it" [22].
|
|
|
|
Others are paid to extend the war
|
|
internationally. Examples include Latin American
|
|
coca crop eradication and substitution programs.
|
|
These have had almost no success, and have created
|
|
massive social problems [23]. Poor farmers can
|
|
make four to ten times as much growing coca as in
|
|
growing legal crops [24]; they can grow coca and
|
|
marijuana in regions with poor soil; and they can
|
|
avoid oppressive agricultural regulations
|
|
encountered with the production and sale of crops
|
|
lacking an efficient alternative to government
|
|
marketing organizations. The 200,000 peasant
|
|
families (1 million people) engaged in coca
|
|
production in Peru are oblivious to campaigns
|
|
urging them to "just say no" to the source of their
|
|
livelihood.
|
|
|
|
In the last few years, the use of, and hence
|
|
the demand for, cocaine has fallen. But there are
|
|
always new ways to justify increased drug war
|
|
budgets. The U.S. Department of State notes, with
|
|
no awareness of the irony of the statement: "The
|
|
economics of the heroin trade are also important.
|
|
While at U.S. street prices, cocaine and heroin are
|
|
competitive, at the wholesale level heroin has a
|
|
strong advantage. A kilo of cocaine wholesales for
|
|
between $10,500 and $40,000; a kilo of heroin will
|
|
fetch on average between $50,000 and $250,000.
|
|
With the likelihood that heroin will be to the 1990's
|
|
what cocaine was to the 1980's, Latin American
|
|
trafficking organizations are poised to cash in on a
|
|
heroin epidemic" [12]. And, naturally, so also are
|
|
those who fight them.
|
|
|
|
For at some point it occurred to these drug
|
|
warriors, mighty and bold, that there were easier
|
|
ways to make a living. Why not just go after the
|
|
cash? After all, if you go out to the poppy fields
|
|
you may get your boots muddy, and (more
|
|
importantly) bankers don't carry guns.
|
|
|
|
99 and 44/100 Percent Pure
|
|
|
|
The House of Representatives report on the
|
|
banking legislation leading up to the U.S. Banking
|
|
Secrecy Act of 1970 noted that "secret foreign bank
|
|
accounts and secret foreign financial institutions"
|
|
had been used, among other things, to "purchase
|
|
gold," and to serve "as the ultimate depository of
|
|
black market proceeds from Vietnam" [25]. The
|
|
report does not explain why the purchase of gold
|
|
was a menace to society, nor elaborate on the role of
|
|
the House in creating a black market in Vietnam.
|
|
Within a few years gold was legalized, and the
|
|
absence of U.S. military forces in Vietnam
|
|
eliminated the black market. The report also noted:
|
|
"Unwarranted and unwanted credit is being pumped
|
|
into our markets." This was also attributed to
|
|
foreign banks with secrecy laws, although the
|
|
Federal Reserve*the real source of excess credit in
|
|
the years leading up to the breakdown of Bretton
|
|
Woods*is not foreign. In short, the House report
|
|
was a broad-based attack with little rhyme or
|
|
reason, setting the tone for similar future studies.
|
|
|
|
As is usual in political double-speak, the
|
|
Banking Secrecy Act was an act of legislation
|
|
intended to prevent, not preserve, banking secrecy.
|
|
It created four requirements that were supposed to
|
|
address the issue of money laundering: 1) A paper
|
|
trail of bank records had to be maintained for five
|
|
years. 2) A Currency Transaction Report (CTR)
|
|
had to be filed by banks and other financial
|
|
institutions for currency transactions greater than
|
|
$10,000. CTRs were filed with the IRS. 3) A
|
|
Currency or Monetary Instrument Report (CMIR)
|
|
had to be filed when currency or monetary
|
|
instruments greater than $5,000 were taken out of
|
|
the U.S. CMIRs were filed with the Customs
|
|
Service. 4) A Foreign Bank Account Report
|
|
(FBAR) had to filed whenever a person had an
|
|
account in a foreign bank greater than $5,000 in
|
|
value. (The latter two requirements have been
|
|
increased to $10,000.)
|
|
|
|
These reports mostly collected unread
|
|
during the 1970s. But that was to change with the
|
|
growth in computerized recordkeeping and artificial
|
|
intelligence processing, and with the escalation of
|
|
the "war on drugs." In the early 1980s, a Senate
|
|
staff study noted in alarm "what appears to be
|
|
otherwise ordinary Americans engaged in using
|
|
offshore facilities to facilitate tax fraud. These
|
|
cases signify that the illegal use of offshore
|
|
facilities has enveloped 'the man next door'--a trend
|
|
which forecasts severe consequences for the
|
|
country" [26].
|
|
|
|
The same report made a concerted effort to
|
|
draw connections between the eurodollar market
|
|
and criminal activity, noting "few banking
|
|
authorities address the issue of primary concern to
|
|
us here: criminal uses of Eurobanking." The focus
|
|
was not banking fraud or theft: "The most visible
|
|
and notorious aspect of offshore criminality
|
|
involves drug traffic." One of the report's many
|
|
recommendations was that the Treasury Department
|
|
should work with the "Federal Reserve Board to
|
|
develop a better understanding of the financial
|
|
significance and use of currency repatriation data as
|
|
well as information about foreign depositors'
|
|
currency deposits." Subsequently, Panama was
|
|
identified as the major banking center for the
|
|
cocaine trade, and Hong Kong as the major center
|
|
for the heroin trade, based largely on the amount of
|
|
U.S. dollars, including cash, being return to the
|
|
Federal Reserve by, respectively, the Banco
|
|
National de Panama and by Hong Kong-based
|
|
banks [27].
|
|
|
|
Thus, with that simple act, the Federal
|
|
Reserve Board was transformed from an institution
|
|
that watched over the currency to a co-conspirator
|
|
that watched over currency users.
|
|
|
|
Efforts were extended internationally to
|
|
trace cash movements. The Bank for International
|
|
Settlements (BIS) Code of Conduct (1984)
|
|
recommended a global version of the CRT.
|
|
Information from the global CRT was to be
|
|
processed by the OECD and shared with tax
|
|
authorities in all industrialized countries. The G-7
|
|
countries in 1989 agreed to form the Financial
|
|
Action Task Force (FATF), with staffing and
|
|
support to be provided by the OECD. FATF now
|
|
includes 26 governments. In May 1990, FATF
|
|
adopted forty recommendations on money
|
|
laundering countermeasures. These included
|
|
provisions that a global currency tracking system
|
|
(the global CRT proposed earlier by the BIS) be
|
|
created, that financial institutions be required to
|
|
report "suspicious transactions" to law enforcement
|
|
authorities, that global sting operations be used
|
|
against launderers, and that electronic money
|
|
movements, especially international wire transfers,
|
|
be monitored.
|
|
|
|
So better beware your banker: by law, he's a
|
|
snitch. Maybe even a government employee. In
|
|
one recent example of a global sting, government
|
|
officials set up a bank in the Caribbean (Anguilla),
|
|
and advertised their services in confidential
|
|
banking. They then turned all the information over
|
|
to tax authorities. Did you ever wonder why
|
|
uneducated people believe in international banking
|
|
conspiracies?
|
|
|
|
The Digital World of Money
|
|
|
|
Money is a mechanism for making payment.
|
|
What we want from a payments mechanism is fast,
|
|
reliable (secure) service at a low cost. In current
|
|
technology that means that the payment mechanism
|
|
will be determined by transactions costs. Hence
|
|
money in a modern economy exists chiefly in the
|
|
form of electronic entries in computerized
|
|
recordkeeping systems or data bases. Money exists
|
|
as a number (e.g. 20) beside which is attached a
|
|
currency or country label (e.g. DM or BP or U.S.$)
|
|
and also an ownership label (e.g. "Deutsche Bank"
|
|
or "Microsoft" or "Jack Parsons"). Physical goods
|
|
are transported to different geographical locations,
|
|
but currencies by and large are not. This is true
|
|
both domestically and internationally. A bank in
|
|
London will sell British pounds to a bank in
|
|
Frankfurt for deutschemarks by having the
|
|
Frankfurt bank's name recorded as the new owner of
|
|
a pound deposit in London, while the London
|
|
bank's name is recorded as the new owner of a
|
|
deutschemark deposit in Frankfurt.
|
|
|
|
Payment between banks is made by an
|
|
exchange of electronic messages. The scope and
|
|
size of transactions mandates this type of payment
|
|
mechanism. The most important communications
|
|
network for international financial market
|
|
transactions is the Society for Worldwide Interbank
|
|
Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), a Belgian
|
|
not-for-profit cooperative. This system for
|
|
transferring foreign exchange deposits and loans
|
|
began actual operation in May 1977 and by 1990
|
|
had 1,812 members, and connected 3,049 banks and
|
|
securities industry participants in eighty-four
|
|
countries. It carried an average of 1.1 million
|
|
messages per day. SWIFT messages are transmitted
|
|
=66rom country to country via central, interconnected
|
|
operating centers located in Brussels, Amsterdam,
|
|
and Culpeper, Virginia. These three operating
|
|
centers are in turn connected by international data-
|
|
transmission lines to regional processors in most
|
|
member countries. Banks in an individual country
|
|
use the available national communication facilities
|
|
to send messages to the regional processor. A bank
|
|
in London, for example, will access SWIFT by
|
|
sending messages to a regional processing center in
|
|
the north of London [28]. The message will be
|
|
received by a bank in New York via the SWIFT
|
|
operating center in Culpeper, Virginia.
|
|
|
|
Within the U.S. the most important
|
|
communications-money-channels are Fedwire
|
|
and CHIPS. Eleven thousand depository
|
|
institutions have access to Fedwire, the electronic
|
|
network system of the Federal Reserve System.
|
|
(About a thousand of these access the system
|
|
through the New York Fed.) In 1991 an average of
|
|
$766 billion daily went through the net, of which
|
|
$435 billion involved the New York Fed. The
|
|
average size of a funds transfer was $3 million.
|
|
There were 258,000 average daily transfers.
|
|
|
|
The New York Clearing House Association
|
|
(twelve private commercial banks) operate the
|
|
Clearing House Interbank Payments System
|
|
(CHIPS) to settle foreign exchange and eurodollar
|
|
transactions. CHIPS connected 122 participants in
|
|
1991. On an average day $866 billion went through
|
|
the CHIPS network, with 150,000 average daily
|
|
transfers (or an average transfer size of about $5.7
|
|
million). Sometimes there are large fluctuations in
|
|
the level of payments. On January 21, 1992,
|
|
$1.5977 trillion went through the CHIPS system.
|
|
That is, the U.S. M1 money stock turned over
|
|
several times in a single day. The CHIPS system
|
|
maintains an account at the New York Fed. Much
|
|
of the nation's money flows through what is literally
|
|
an underground economy: the computer banks
|
|
located beneath 55 Water Street in Manhattan.
|
|
|
|
These systems, even the Fedwire system, did
|
|
not arise by centralized government planning. ". . .
|
|
it is historically accurate that the Fedwire system
|
|
evolved in almost a 'natural' manner; no one at the
|
|
Board or at a Reserve bank ever sat down and said
|
|
'let there be a wire transfer system.' Thus, Fedwire
|
|
can be regarded as an example of a market tendency
|
|
to evolve, over time, in an efficient manner" [29].
|
|
|
|
In Europe, banks have available
|
|
CEBAMAIL, a shared voice and data network
|
|
established by European central banks and later
|
|
expanded to other users. European banks also use
|
|
IBM's International Network and DIAL service to
|
|
communicate with the Bank for International
|
|
Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, and with each
|
|
other.
|
|
|
|
Money, then, is part of the worldwide
|
|
information superhighway (or infobahn). The
|
|
Clinton administration's proposal for a "National
|
|
Information Infrastructure" (NII) was announced in
|
|
1994: "All Americans have a stake in the
|
|
construction of an advanced National Information
|
|
Infrastructure (NII), a seamless web of
|
|
communications networks, computers, databases,
|
|
and consumer electronics that will put vast amounts
|
|
of information at users' fingertips. Development of
|
|
the NII can help unleash an information revolution
|
|
that will change forever the way people live, work,
|
|
and interact with each other" [30].
|
|
|
|
To be sure, the ensuing hype has made the
|
|
whole thing sound like more circuses to keep the
|
|
masses pacified and thirsty: 500 channels of MTV
|
|
with beer and Pepsi ads, and insurance salesmen
|
|
popping out of your home computer. But the
|
|
information revolution was already well underway,
|
|
and had been so for years. The real agenda for
|
|
government involvement was stated in the White
|
|
House Press release, April 16, 1993: "Sophisticated
|
|
encryption technology has been used for years to
|
|
protect electronic funds transfer. . . While
|
|
encryption technology can help Americans protect
|
|
business secrets and the unauthorized release of
|
|
personal information, it also can be used by
|
|
terrorists, drug dealers, and other criminals."
|
|
|
|
Now, in fact, almost all modern technology,
|
|
=66rom can openers to automobiles, can be used by
|
|
terrorists, drugs dealers, and criminals (even the
|
|
thieves in the Justice Department who preside over
|
|
asset forfeitures). But what is special about
|
|
cryptography is that it threatens to slow or nullify
|
|
the effectiveness of government-sponsored
|
|
computer surveillance of individuals and private
|
|
business. To get a handle on this, let's brush up our
|
|
high school cryptography, which has probably
|
|
grown rusty from lack of use. Eager students can
|
|
read an exhaustive history of the subject written by
|
|
David Kahn [31], but we will only focus on the tail-
|
|
end, post-Kahnian part of the story, on something
|
|
called "public key cryptography" [32].
|
|
|
|
Public Key Cryptography in One Easy Lesson
|
|
|
|
Public key cryptography relies on two
|
|
scrambling devices, called "keys", that have the
|
|
following relationship. There is a public key P and
|
|
a private key R. Suppose I write a sweet, sensitive
|
|
love letter, filled with spiritual values, genetic
|
|
imperatives, and sexual innuendo, to my current
|
|
flame Veronica. Let's refer to this letter as the
|
|
message M. I sign it with Veronica's public key P,
|
|
producing the encrypted message P(M). Anyone
|
|
looking at P(M) will only see a string of
|
|
meaningless symbols, gibberish. When Veronica
|
|
receives it, she will apply her private key R to the
|
|
encrypted message, producing R(P(M)) =3D M,
|
|
turning the apparent randomness into tears, joy, and
|
|
erotic fantasy.
|
|
|
|
The key pairs P and R must have the
|
|
relationship that for any message M, R(P(M)) =3D M.
|
|
In addition, it should be practically impossible for
|
|
anyone to determine M from P(M), without the
|
|
associated private key R. For any other private key
|
|
R', R'(P(M)) is not equal to M--it's still gibberish.
|
|
The key pairs P and R also have the commutative
|
|
relationship P(R(M)) =3D M: if you encrypt a
|
|
message with your private key R, then anyone can
|
|
decrypt it using your public key P.
|
|
|
|
Being able to send secure messages is one
|
|
function of public key cryptography. Another
|
|
function is authentication. Suppose you sent a
|
|
message M to Bill. He receives the
|
|
message M*. Bill doesn't know whether M* is
|
|
really from you; or, even if it is from you, whether it
|
|
has been altered in some way (that is, if the M* he
|
|
receives is the same as the M you sent). The
|
|
solution to this problem, using public key
|
|
cryptography, is that you also send Bill a digital
|
|
signature S along with the message M. Here is how
|
|
this authentication process works.
|
|
|
|
For simplicity, assume you don't even
|
|
encrypt the message to Bill. You just send him the
|
|
plain message M, saying "Dear Bill: You are wrong
|
|
and I am right. Here is why, blah blah blah [for a
|
|
few thousand words]." Then you just sign it by the
|
|
following procedure.
|
|
|
|
First you chop your message down to size,
|
|
to produce a (meaningless) condensed version,
|
|
where one size fits all. To do this, you need a
|
|
message chopper called a "hash function." You
|
|
apply the hash function H to the message M to
|
|
produce a "message digest" or "hash value" H(M)
|
|
which is 160 bits long. You then sign the hash
|
|
value H(M) with your own private key R, producing
|
|
the signature S =3D R(H(M)).
|
|
|
|
The receiver of the message, Bill, applies the
|
|
same hash function to the received message M* to
|
|
obtain its hash value H(M*). Bill then decrypts
|
|
your signature S, using your public key P, to obtain
|
|
P(S) =3D P(R(H(M))). He compares the two. If
|
|
H(M*) =3D P(R(H(M))), then he knows the message
|
|
has not been altered (that is, M* =3D M), and that you
|
|
sent the message. That's because the equality will
|
|
fail if either (1) the message was signed with some
|
|
other private key R', not yours, or if (2) the received
|
|
message M* was not the same as the message M
|
|
that was sent [33].
|
|
|
|
By some accident, of course, it could be that
|
|
Bill finds H(M*) =3D P(R(H(M))) even if the message
|
|
has been altered, or it is not from you. But the odds
|
|
of this happening are roughly 1 in 2^160, which is
|
|
vanishingly small; and even if this happens for one
|
|
message, it is not likely to happen with the next.
|
|
|
|
The Growth of the Information Superspyway
|
|
|
|
NSA is the U.S. intelligence agency located
|
|
in Ft. Mead, Maryland, which is responsible for
|
|
collecting electronic and signals intelligence.
|
|
Activities include monitoring the conversations of
|
|
foreign leaders, listening in on most international
|
|
communications (including financial transactions),
|
|
breaking codes, and setting the cryptological
|
|
standards for U.S. military and security agencies
|
|
[34]. In 1975 at the University of California at
|
|
Berkeley, I made a special trip over to the
|
|
employment office to see the NSA recruitment
|
|
posters. They were, after all, a novelty. Hardly
|
|
anyone knew the NSA ("No Such Agency") existed,
|
|
and the word was just getting around that
|
|
mathematicians could compete with physicists for
|
|
Defense Department largess.
|
|
|
|
A couple of years later, Bobby Inman
|
|
departed his post as head of Naval Intelligence,
|
|
=66rom which vantage point he had leaked Watergate
|
|
revelations to Bob Woodward, to become head of
|
|
NSA. Soon thereafter, the NSA began harassing
|
|
certain mathematicians in the private sector,
|
|
claiming "sole authority to fund research in
|
|
cryptography" [35].
|
|
|
|
In those days such a monopoly was possible.
|
|
The computer culture was hierarchically structured
|
|
and mind-bogglingly pedantic. Peon programmers
|
|
produced a token 20 lines of code per day, which
|
|
allowed them plenty of time to attend "efficiency"
|
|
meetings. Systems analysts involved themselves in
|
|
busy work--creating elaborate flow charts to explain
|
|
self-evident routines. Only those who learned to toe
|
|
the line were allowed gradual access to better
|
|
equipment and more CPU time. NSA, meanwhile,
|
|
was one of the top markets for expensive,
|
|
sophisticated computer equipment. If you wanted to
|
|
be a cryptologist [36], you bit the bullet and bowed
|
|
to NSA and IBM.
|
|
|
|
The federal encryption standard for
|
|
unclassified government computer data and
|
|
communications, an encryption algorithm called
|
|
Lucifer, had been developed by IBM in the early
|
|
70s. It was later certified by a civilian agency, the
|
|
National Bureau of Standards (now NIST), as the
|
|
Data Encryption Standard (DES) in 1976. Unlike
|
|
public key cryptography which uses two keys
|
|
(either one of which may be used to encrypt, and the
|
|
other to decrypt), DES was a symmetric key system,
|
|
using a single key to both encrypt and decrypt.
|
|
Because of the single key, DES could be used for
|
|
encryption or authentication, but not both
|
|
simultaneously.
|
|
|
|
Through the American Bankers Association
|
|
and ANSI's Financial Institution Wholesale Security
|
|
Working Group, DES entered the banking world as
|
|
a method of encryption and message authentication
|
|
in electronic funds transfer. But for digital
|
|
signatures it made more sense to rely on public key
|
|
cryptography. And although the NIST began to
|
|
solicit public-key cryptographic algorithms in 1982,
|
|
nothing would be approved for another decade, so
|
|
both federal agencies and private organizations,
|
|
including banks, began to look to commercial
|
|
sources of digital signature technology. (They
|
|
basically settled on one called the Rivest-Shamir-
|
|
Adleman (RSA) system.)
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, the anarchy of the personal
|
|
computer had been unleashed. The PC allowed one
|
|
person to be in charge of the entire software
|
|
development process. She could be hardware
|
|
technician, systems analyst, mathematician,
|
|
programmer, artist-in-residence, and general hell-
|
|
raiser rolled into one. Just as Gutenberg inspired
|
|
later generations to learn to read precisely because
|
|
they had, Pogo-like, acquired the ability to write, so
|
|
did the appearance of the microprocessor inspire a
|
|
generation of talented and creative people to absorb
|
|
themselves in computer-accentuated tasks which no
|
|
longer mandated interaction with a phalanx of
|
|
mandarins whose notion of Eros was a COBOL
|
|
routine to insert Tab A into Slot B. To be sure, the
|
|
PC was not powerful enough to break codes
|
|
(cryptanalysis), but it was a good enough tool for
|
|
creating cryptography software.
|
|
|
|
In 1984 Reagan's National Security Decision
|
|
Directive 145 (NSDD-145) shifted the
|
|
responsibility for certifying DES-based products to
|
|
NSA. Executive Order 12333 in 1980 had made the
|
|
Secretary of Defense the government's executive
|
|
agent for communications security, and NSDD-145
|
|
expanded this role to telecommunications and
|
|
information systems. The Director of NSA was
|
|
made responsible for the implementation of the
|
|
Secretary's responsibilites. In 1986 NSA created an
|
|
uproar by saying it would no longer endorse DES
|
|
products after 1988, and would substitute a new set
|
|
of incompatible, classified, hardware standards.
|
|
Banks and software vendors weren't happy with the
|
|
news because they had only recently invested
|
|
heavily in DES-based systems. But Congress
|
|
effectively rejected NSDD-145's federal computer
|
|
security plan by passing the Computer Security Act
|
|
of 1987, and DES was reaffirmed anyway (with the
|
|
NIST reinstated as the certifier of applications that
|
|
met the standard), and then affirmed again in 1993.
|
|
(The next DES review is scheduled for 1998.)
|
|
|
|
Changes in technology were creating both
|
|
new security concerns and spying opportunities. On
|
|
the one hand, a rank amateur with a scanner could
|
|
sit in his apartment and monitor his neighbors'
|
|
cordless and cellular telephone conversations. (After
|
|
all, if a signal makes it into your bedroom, you may
|
|
feel you have a right to tune it in.) On the other
|
|
hand, the NSA could in the same way make use of
|
|
the electromagnetic signals sent out by computer
|
|
hardware components. Unshielded cables act as
|
|
radio broadcast antennas. Related signals, especially
|
|
=66rom the computer monitor and the computer's
|
|
CPU, are sent back down the AC power cord and
|
|
out into the building's electrical wiring. Signals may
|
|
also be transmitted directly into the phone line
|
|
through a computer modem (which isn't in use).
|
|
These frequencies can be tuned, so that what
|
|
appeared on one person's computer screen can be
|
|
displayed on an observer's screen a block away.
|
|
(There were no laws against monitoring computer
|
|
radiation then, and there are none now, so the NSA
|
|
can take the position that it is doing nothing illegal
|
|
by parking its monitoring vans in domestic spots in
|
|
New York, Chicago, San Francisco, and
|
|
Washington, D.C. [37].)
|
|
|
|
The erosion of the spying monopoly lead to
|
|
the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act
|
|
(ECPA) which prohibited phone and data-line
|
|
tapping--except, naturally, by law enforcement
|
|
agencies and employers. ECPA made cellular (but
|
|
not cordless) phone monitoring illegal. President
|
|
Bush would later sign a second law which
|
|
prohibited even the *manufacture or import* of
|
|
scanners that are capable of cellular monitoring.
|
|
But the latter law was nonsensical, since *every
|
|
cellular phone is itself a scanner*. In a
|
|
demonstration for a Congressional subcommittee, it
|
|
took a technician only three minutes to reprogram a
|
|
cellular phone's codes so that it could be used for
|
|
eavesdropping [38].
|
|
|
|
With the worldwide collapse of
|
|
Communism, federal agents quickly discovered a
|
|
new fount of terrorist activity: American teenagers,
|
|
hackers. The Secret Service crusade to conquer
|
|
children started when Congress passed the
|
|
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act in 1986, and
|
|
culminated in May 1990 with Operation Sundevil,
|
|
in which 42 computer systems were seized around
|
|
the country, along with 23,000 floppy disks.
|
|
|
|
One college-age hacker, Chris Goggans
|
|
(a.k.a. Eric Bloodaxe) upon receiving information
|
|
which lead him to suspect the coming raid, went
|
|
home and (like any good host) cleaned and
|
|
vacuumed his apartment, placed little notes in
|
|
drawers ("Nope, nothing in here"; "Wrong, try
|
|
again"), and adorned his desk with brochures from
|
|
the local Federal Building--titles like How to
|
|
Become an FBI Agent, . . . Secret Service Agent, etc.
|
|
The raid came one morning while Goggans was in
|
|
bed. "Leading the pack is Special Agent Tim
|
|
Foley," Goggans recounts, "and he's got his service
|
|
revolver out, and he's got it pointed at me. He's a
|
|
pretty big guy and I'm me. . . . Hackers are a
|
|
notoriously violent group of people who are known
|
|
for their physical prowess, so guns are definitely
|
|
always necessary" [39 ].
|
|
|
|
Paranoia verged on the imbecilic. AT&T
|
|
Security found a description of 911 system
|
|
administration, called "E911," on one bulletin board
|
|
service. They claimed in court the theft of this
|
|
information was worth exactly $79,449, but the case
|
|
fell apart when the defense showed the same
|
|
information, with more technical details, about the
|
|
911 system was publicly available from AT&T for
|
|
the mere price of $13.
|
|
|
|
The FBI, meanwhile, was undergoing
|
|
culture shock. Telephone carrier signals were now
|
|
digital and multiplexed, so that any specific channel
|
|
might be interleaved among many others in a
|
|
continuous stream of bits which the FBI could no
|
|
longer access with only a pair of alligator clips. In
|
|
March 1992 the FBI proposed Digital Telephony
|
|
legislation (code-named in FBI documents
|
|
"Operation Root Canal") that would require private
|
|
industry to provide access ports in digital equipment
|
|
for the purpose of tapping specific conversations.
|
|
|
|
The FBI proposal didn't sit well with the
|
|
General Services Administration (GSA), the largest
|
|
purchaser of telecommunications equipment for the
|
|
U.S. government. GSA noted that the "proposed
|
|
bill would have to have the FCC or another agency
|
|
approve or reject new telephone equipment mainly
|
|
on the basis of whether the FBI has the capability to
|
|
wiretap it." So GSA opposed the legislation for
|
|
security reasons, noting it would "make it easier for
|
|
criminals, terrorists, foreign intelligence (spies) and
|
|
computer hackers to electronically penetrate the
|
|
public network and pry into areas previously not
|
|
open to snooping. This situation of easier access
|
|
due to new technology changes could therefore
|
|
affect national security" [40].
|
|
|
|
Ironically, the World Trade Center was
|
|
subsequently bombed by a group that was already
|
|
under FBI surveillance, so one could make a case
|
|
that *voyeurism*, not public security, was the real
|
|
intent of the proposed legislation [41]. The 1992
|
|
Digital Telephony proposal would have also given
|
|
the Justice Department the unilateral and exclusive
|
|
authority to enforce, grant exceptions, or waive
|
|
provisions of the law, or enforce it in Federal Court.
|
|
You know, the *Justice Department*: that splendid
|
|
collection of righteous lawyers, whose recent
|
|
triumphs include overseeing the slaughter of a
|
|
religious group in Waco, Texas [42], running a
|
|
software company into bankruptcy and
|
|
appropriating its software [43], and allegedly
|
|
manipulating the machinery of justice to cover
|
|
tracks left by financial thieves [44].
|
|
|
|
Now the Computer Security Act of 1987 had
|
|
authorized a U.S. government project to develop
|
|
standards for publicly-available cryptography. On
|
|
April 16, 1993 the Clinton Administration
|
|
announced two new controversial Federal
|
|
Information Processing Standards (FIPS) which
|
|
embodied Capstone's principal elements. These
|
|
were the Escrowed Encryption Standard (EES)--
|
|
a.k.a. "Clipper"--and the Digital Signature Standard
|
|
(DSS). All private companies doing business with
|
|
the government might be affected.
|
|
|
|
The Escrowed Encryption Standard
|
|
|
|
The EES was promulgated by the Clinton
|
|
Administration as a voluntary (for now, anyway)
|
|
alternative to the Data Encryption Standard (DES).
|
|
It involved a bulk data encryption algorithm called
|
|
Skipjack, which would be contained on a tamper-
|
|
resistant chip, called the Clipper Chip (or MYK-78).
|
|
The chip would be manufactured by VLSI Logic,
|
|
and programmed with the algorithms and keys by
|
|
Mykotronx at a facility in Torrance, California.
|
|
Each chip would contain a trapdoor that would
|
|
allow the government, using a two-part key (U =3D
|
|
U1+U2), each half deposited with a different escrow
|
|
agency, to decode any communications sent through
|
|
the chip [45].
|
|
|
|
Here is how the process works. (You can
|
|
skip this paragraph and the next one if you like.) In
|
|
addition to the Skipjack encryption algorithm, each
|
|
chip will contain a 80-bit family key F that is
|
|
common to all chips; a 30-bit serial number N; and
|
|
an 80-bit secret "unique" key U which can be used
|
|
to unlock all messages sent through the chip.
|
|
Suppose I have my secure device get in touch with
|
|
Veronica's secure device. The first thing that
|
|
happens is our two chips agree on a randomly
|
|
generated 80-bit symmetric session key K, which
|
|
will be used only for this one conversation. The
|
|
Clipper Chip takes our whispered message stream
|
|
M and encrypts it with K, using the Skipjack
|
|
algorithm, producing the encrypted message K(M).
|
|
Simple enough. But my chip also has other ideas.
|
|
As an entirely separate process, it also takes the
|
|
session key K and encrypts it with the secret key U,
|
|
producing U(K). Then it tacks the serial number N
|
|
on to the end of the encrypted session key, giving
|
|
the sandwich U(K)+N. Then it takes the family key
|
|
F and encrypts the sandwich, giving F[U(K)+N].
|
|
The encrypted sandwich, F[U(K)+N], is called the
|
|
LEAF, or "Law Enforcement Access Field." Both
|
|
my encrypted message K(M) and the LEAF,
|
|
F[U(K)+N], are sent out over the telephone line.
|
|
Veronica's chip receives both these, but mostly
|
|
ignores the LEAF. Her chip simply takes the
|
|
previously agreed session key K and uses it to
|
|
decrypt the encrypted message, yielding K[K(M)] =3D
|
|
M.
|
|
|
|
Now suppose Fred is a horny FBI agent who
|
|
wants to listen in on all this. He gets a warrant
|
|
(maybe), and has the phone company plug him into
|
|
the conversation. With his listening device, he
|
|
siphons off both my encrypted message K(M) and
|
|
the LEAF, F[U(K)+N]. As a member of the FBI he
|
|
is allowed to know the family key F, which he uses
|
|
to decrypt the LEAF, yielding the sandwich:
|
|
F{F[U(K)+N]} =3D U(K)+N. So now he knows the
|
|
serial number N. He then takes N along with his
|
|
warrant over to the first escrow agency, which gives
|
|
him half of the secret key, U1. He takes N with his
|
|
warrant over to the second escrow agency, which
|
|
gives him the other half, U2. He now knows the
|
|
secret key U =3D U1+U2. He uses U to decrypt the
|
|
encrypted session key: U[U(K)] =3D K. Now he
|
|
knows the session key K, which he uses to decrypt
|
|
my encrypted message: K[K(M)] =3D M. To his great
|
|
disappointment, he discovers I was only calling to
|
|
thank Veronica for the pepperoni and cheese pizza
|
|
she sent over.
|
|
|
|
Industry was urged to build the EES into
|
|
every type of communication device: computer
|
|
modem, telephone, fax, and set-top TV converter.
|
|
Of course to do so (surprise, surprise) will make a
|
|
product subject to State Department ITAR export
|
|
controls. But AT&T, at least, promptly popped the
|
|
Clipper Chip into the AT&T Security Telephone
|
|
Device 3600, which has a retail price of about
|
|
$1,100, because they had been "suitably
|
|
incentivised" (see below).
|
|
|
|
Another implementation of the ESS is the
|
|
Capstone Chip (Mykotronx MYK-80), which
|
|
includes Clipper's Skipjack algorithm, and adds to it
|
|
digital signature, hash, and key-change functions.
|
|
While Clipper is mostly intended for telephone
|
|
communication, Capstone is designed for data
|
|
communication. Finally there is Tessera, which is a
|
|
PCMCIA card that contains a Capstone Chip.
|
|
Despite generating universally negative comments,
|
|
EES was approved by the Department of
|
|
Commerce as a federal standard in February 1994.
|
|
|
|
The details of the NSA-developed Skipjack
|
|
algorithm are classified. However, it uses 80-bit
|
|
keys and scrambles the data for 32 steps or rounds.
|
|
The earlier standard, DES, uses 56-bit keys and
|
|
scrambles the data for only 16 rounds. But the
|
|
secrecy of Skipjack removed some of its credibility.
|
|
People are confident in the security of DES, because
|
|
its details are public. Hence people have probed
|
|
DES over the years and failed to find any
|
|
weaknesses. The primary reason for Skipjack's
|
|
classification appears to be an attempt to prevent its
|
|
use without transmission of the associated LEAF
|
|
field.
|
|
|
|
An outside panel of expects concluded there
|
|
was no significant risk that messages encrypted with
|
|
the Skipjack algorithm would be breakable by
|
|
exhaustive search in the next 30 to 40 years. The
|
|
same cannot be said for the EES protocol as a
|
|
whole. Matthew Blaze, a researcher at AT&T
|
|
showed there are ways to corrupt the LEAF, so that
|
|
the session key K cannot be recovered, and hence
|
|
messages cannot be decrypted [46]. Of course if
|
|
you are sending data files, and not voice, you can
|
|
ignore the presence or absence of the Clipper Chip
|
|
altogether. Just encrypt your file with, say, Pretty
|
|
Good Privacy, before you send it through the
|
|
Clipper Chip. Thus your original message is an
|
|
already-encrypted file, and it won't matter if FBI
|
|
Fred reads it or not. But things are not so simple
|
|
with voice messages. So the first target for a
|
|
government ban is alternative encryption devices
|
|
for voice communication, particularly if the Clipper
|
|
Chip doesn't catch on. Which would be nothing
|
|
new: for years ham radio operators have been
|
|
prohibited from using encryption on the air.
|
|
|
|
The future of the EES may depend on the
|
|
coercive purchasing power of the U.S. government.
|
|
A memorandum prepared for the Acting Assistant
|
|
Secretary of Defense had noted a number of U.S.
|
|
computer industries objections to a trapdoor chip,
|
|
such as the Clipper Chip: "The industry argues
|
|
persuasively that overseas markets (much less drug
|
|
lords or spies) will not look with favor on U.S.
|
|
products which have known trapdoors when
|
|
offshore products which do not have them are
|
|
available. In support of their argument, they note
|
|
that powerful public-key cryptography developed
|
|
and patented by RSA using U.S. tax dollars is free
|
|
to developers in Europe, subject to royalties in the
|
|
United States, and cannot be exported without
|
|
expensive and time-late export licenses. These
|
|
charges are true. . . .Despite these concerns, the
|
|
President has directed that the Attorney General
|
|
request that manufacturers of communications
|
|
hardware use the trapdoor chip, and at least AT&T
|
|
has been reported willing to do so (having been
|
|
suitably incentivised by promises of government
|
|
purchases)" [47].
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Digital Signature Standard
|
|
|
|
The second announced standard, DSS, uses
|
|
a digital signature algorithm (DSA) to authenticate
|
|
the source and validity of messages [48]. Digital
|
|
signatures are the equivalent of handwritten
|
|
signatures on legal documents. While there is yet
|
|
no body of case law dealing with the subject,
|
|
documents signed with proper digital signatures will
|
|
almost certainly be legally binding, both for
|
|
commercial use as defined in the Uniform
|
|
Commercial Code (UCC), and will probably also
|
|
have the same legal standard as handwritten
|
|
signatures.
|
|
|
|
The computer industry had generally wanted
|
|
the U.S. government to choose instead the RSA
|
|
algorithm, which was currently the most widely
|
|
used authentication algorithm. The banking and
|
|
financial services industry were using both the RSA
|
|
algorithm and a modified form of the DSA
|
|
algorithm [49].
|
|
|
|
As we saw previously, it is typically not the
|
|
entire message that is signed, but rather a condensed
|
|
form of it, a hash value. The hash function for the
|
|
DSS is the Secure Hash Standard (SHS), which
|
|
accepts a variable-size input (the message) and
|
|
returns a 160-bit string. SHS was adopted as a
|
|
government standard in 1993 [50].
|
|
|
|
That both EES and DSS were rushed forth in
|
|
an attempt to break the spread of good cryptography
|
|
in the private sector is acknowledged even by a
|
|
government agency, the Office of Technology
|
|
Assessment (OTA): "In OTA's view, both the EES
|
|
and the DSS are federal standards that are part of a
|
|
long-term control strategy intended to retard the
|
|
general availability of 'unbreakable' or 'hard to
|
|
break' cryptography within the United States, for
|
|
reasons of national security and law enforcement. It
|
|
appears that the EES is intended to complement the
|
|
DSS in this overall encryption-control strategy, by
|
|
discouraging future development and use of
|
|
encryption without built-in law enforcement access,
|
|
in favor of key-escrow encryption and related
|
|
technologies" [51].
|
|
|
|
Which brings us back to privacy and the
|
|
monetary system.
|
|
|
|
The Buck Stops Here
|
|
|
|
In 1993 SWIFT began asking users of its
|
|
messaging system to include a purpose of payment
|
|
in all messages, as well as payers, payees, and
|
|
intermediaries. This type of arrangement would
|
|
allow NSA computers to scan for any names in
|
|
which they were interested. To be sure,
|
|
$10,000,000 for the "Purchase of Plutonium" would
|
|
have been scanned for anyway. But now they can
|
|
search for "Hakim 'Bobby' Bey," because someone
|
|
has decided he's a terrorist. Or someone decided
|
|
they just don't like him, and so they claim he's a
|
|
terrorist.
|
|
|
|
In addition, proposals resurfaced for a two-
|
|
tier U.S. currency. When such a proposal was
|
|
rumored around 1970 during the slow breakdown of
|
|
the Bretton Woods agreement, the rumor was
|
|
dismissed as a paranoid fantasy. Recently the
|
|
proposal itself has been discussed on the Federal
|
|
Page of the Washington Post, which gives support
|
|
to the plan of "an expert on terrorism" (*another
|
|
one?*) to have two separate U.S. currencies, "new
|
|
greenbacks for domestic use and new 'redbacks' for
|
|
overseas use." The International Counterfeit
|
|
Deterrence Strike Force (an inter-agency working
|
|
group informally called the "Super-Bill
|
|
Committee") supports a revived 1989 DEA plan for
|
|
the forced conversion of "domestic" dollars into
|
|
"international" dollars by U.S. travelers at the
|
|
border, which would be re-exchanged on their
|
|
return [52].
|
|
|
|
While Customs deals with physical cash,
|
|
NSA is set to deal with the electronic variety. That
|
|
NSA has in some circumstances already monitored
|
|
international banking transactions since at least the
|
|
early 1980s seems evident from the inclusion of
|
|
detailed banking transactions between the
|
|
Panamanian branch of the Discount Bank and Trust
|
|
of Switzerland and a Cayman Islands bank in a
|
|
classified report to the Secretary of State during the
|
|
Reagan administration. The information in the
|
|
report seemingly could only have come from
|
|
electronic access to the bank's computerized
|
|
records. Some observers have speculated that a
|
|
bugged computer program, Inslaw's PROMIS, was
|
|
involved. This program, allegedly stolen from
|
|
Inslaw by the U.S. Department of Justice, was sold
|
|
to dozens of banks. (A federal bankruptcy judge
|
|
found that the Justice Department had purposefully
|
|
propelled Inslaw into bankruptcy in an effort to
|
|
steal the PROMIS software through "trickery, deceit
|
|
and fraud" [53].) The program was said to have
|
|
been altered in such a way to allow government
|
|
agencies trapdoor access into a bank's transaction
|
|
records [54].
|
|
|
|
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
|
|
(FDIC) is the government corporation that insures
|
|
deposits at U.S. member banks. The FDIC
|
|
Improvement Act of 1991 required the FDIC to
|
|
study the costs and feasibility of tracking every
|
|
bank deposit in the U.S. The notion was it was
|
|
necessary to compute bank deposit insurance
|
|
requirements in real time. Not everyone thought
|
|
this was a good idea. The American Banker's
|
|
Association noted it was inconceivable that such
|
|
data would "be used only by the FDIC in deposit
|
|
insurance coverage functions." And even though the
|
|
FDIC itself argued against the proposal in its draft
|
|
report to Congress in June 1993, FinCEN used the
|
|
occasion to propose a "Deposit Tracking System"
|
|
(DTS) that would also track deposits to, or
|
|
withdrawals from, U.S. banks accounts in real time.
|
|
|
|
So advances in cryptography come face to
|
|
face with round-the-clock, round-the-border
|
|
surveillance.
|
|
|
|
F.A. Hayek argued for the denationalization
|
|
of money, an abolition of the government monopoly
|
|
over the money supply, and the institution of a
|
|
regime of competitive private issuers of currency
|
|
[55]. One reason was to stop the recurring bouts of
|
|
acute inflation and deflation that have become
|
|
accentuated over this century. Another reason was
|
|
to make it increasingly impossible for governments
|
|
to restrict the international movement of
|
|
individuals, money and capital, and thereby to
|
|
safeguard the ability of dissidents to escape
|
|
oppression. He said that "attempts by governments
|
|
to control the international movements of currency
|
|
and capital" is at present "the most serious threat not
|
|
only to a working international economy but also to
|
|
personal freedom; and it will remain a threat so long
|
|
as governments have the physical power to enforce
|
|
such controls."
|
|
|
|
Two decades ago, Hayek's proposal seemed
|
|
to have scant probability of ever coming about. No
|
|
longer.
|
|
|
|
Hayek's dream is about to be realized.
|
|
|
|
PART II: DIGITAL CASH
|
|
|
|
[To Be Continued]
|
|
|
|
Footnotes
|
|
|
|
[1] The Principia Discordia, or How I Found
|
|
Goddess and What I Did to Her When I Found Her
|
|
was authored by Malaclypse the Younger (a
|
|
computer programmer named Greg Hill) and
|
|
recounts the visionary encounter he and Omar
|
|
Ravenhurst (Kerry Thornley) had with Eris, the
|
|
Goddess of Chaos, in an all-night bowling alley.
|
|
Kerry Thornley is also the author of Zenarchy as
|
|
well as a novel about Lee Harvey Oswald, whom
|
|
Kerry knew in the Marines. Some of the early
|
|
Erisian (Discordian) writings were mimeographed
|
|
at the office of Jim Garrison, the New Orleans
|
|
District Attorney, where a friend of Kerry's worked.
|
|
Principia Discordia may be found on the Internet at
|
|
the wiretap.spies.com gopher, in the directory
|
|
Electronic Books, filed under Malaclypse the
|
|
Younger. It and the other works mentioned in this
|
|
footnote are also available from Loompanics
|
|
Unlimited, P.O. Box 1197, Port Townsend, WA
|
|
98368. Phone: 206-385-2230, Fax: 206-385-7785.
|
|
|
|
[2] The NSA employee handbook notes:
|
|
"It is the policy of the National
|
|
Security Agency to prevent and
|
|
eliminate the improper use of drugs
|
|
by Agency employees and other
|
|
personnel associated with the
|
|
Agency. The term "drugs" includes
|
|
all controlled drugs or substances
|
|
identified and listed in the Controlled
|
|
Substances Act of 1970, as amended,
|
|
which includes but is not limited to:
|
|
narcotics, depressants, stimulants,
|
|
cocaine, hallucinogens and cannabis
|
|
(marijuana, hashish, and hashish oil).
|
|
The use of illegal drugs or the abuse
|
|
of prescription drugs by persons
|
|
employed by, assigned or detailed to
|
|
the Agency may adversely affect the
|
|
national security; may have a serious
|
|
damaging effect on the safety [of
|
|
yourself] and the safety of others;
|
|
and may lead to criminal
|
|
prosecution. Such use of drugs
|
|
either within or outside Agency
|
|
controlled facilities is prohibited."
|
|
A copy of this handbook may be found in the
|
|
hacker publication Phrack Magazine, No. 45, March
|
|
30, 1994, which is available on the Internet at
|
|
ftp.fc.net/pub/phrack.
|
|
|
|
[3] Governments have always been in the drug
|
|
business, and perhaps always will be. In earlier
|
|
times, governments attempted a monopoly on drugs,
|
|
sex, and religion. But in recent years the ungodly
|
|
have stopped paying tithes, so many governments
|
|
have gotten out of the religion business, and private
|
|
competition has forced them out of the sex business.
|
|
Of the big three, most governments are left with
|
|
only drugs, which explains why drugs are politically
|
|
more important than either sex or religion. Two
|
|
references on historical drug politics are Jack
|
|
Beeching, The Chinese Opium Wars, Harcourt
|
|
Bruce Jovanovich, New York, 1975, and Alfred W.
|
|
McCoy, The Politics of Heroin: CIA Complicity in
|
|
the Global Drug Trade, Lawrence Hill Books, New
|
|
York, 1991. Two references on more recent U.S.
|
|
government involvement include the well-
|
|
documented book by Peter Dale Scott and Jonathan
|
|
Marshall, Cocaine Politics: Drugs, Armies, and the
|
|
CIA in Central America, The University of
|
|
California Press, Berkeley, 1991, and the less well
|
|
substantiated, but provocative, Compromised:
|
|
Clinton, Bush, and the CIA, by Terry Reed & John
|
|
Cummings, Shapolsky Publishers, New York, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[4] The following may be related, although no
|
|
charges have been filed. In 1987 Tallahassee police
|
|
traced an alleged child porn operation back to a
|
|
warehouse in Washington, D.C. The warehouse
|
|
was operated by a group called The Finders, whose
|
|
leader has an extensive background in intelligence.
|
|
Customs agents had information that was, according
|
|
to Customs and FBI documents posted on the
|
|
Internet by Wendell Minnick (author of Spies and
|
|
Provocateurs: A Worldwide Encyclopedia of
|
|
Persons Conducting Espionage and Covert Action,
|
|
1946-1991), "specific in describing 'blood rituals'
|
|
and sexual orgies involving children, and an as yet
|
|
unsolved murder in which the Finders may be
|
|
involved." The evidence included a telex which
|
|
"specifically ordered the purchase of two children in
|
|
Hong Kong to be arranged through a contact in the
|
|
Chinese Embassy there" and a photographic album.
|
|
"The album contained a series of photos of adults
|
|
and children dressed in white sheets participating in
|
|
a blood ritual. The ritual centered around the
|
|
execution of at least two goats. . . ." As the
|
|
investigation proceeded, the "CIA made one contact
|
|
and admitted to owning the Finders organization as
|
|
a front for a domestic computer training operation,
|
|
but that it had 'gone bad.' CIA defers all further
|
|
contacts to FCIA (Foreign Counter Intelligence
|
|
Agency). FCIA is distinct and autonomous
|
|
organization within FBI. . . . FCIA contacts
|
|
[Washington] MPD Intelligence and advised that all
|
|
reports regarding Finders are to be classified at the
|
|
Secret level. FCIA also advised that no information
|
|
was to be turned over to the FBI WFO [Washington
|
|
Field Office] for investigation, and that the WFO
|
|
would not be advised of the CIA or FCIA
|
|
involvement/contact."
|
|
|
|
I've since checked with all my programming
|
|
friends, but no one remembers seeing a computer
|
|
training film involving the sacrifice of goats.
|
|
|
|
[5] It is argued that the creation and distribution of
|
|
images of nude children should be prohibited, since
|
|
they might be used "for the purpose of sexual
|
|
stimulation or gratification of any individual who
|
|
may view such depiction" (Edward De Grazia, The
|
|
Big Chill: Censorship and the Law, Aperture, Fall
|
|
1990, page 50). Where I grew up, children
|
|
sometimes played naked. However, I guess in that
|
|
case rays of natural light seen by the human eye
|
|
underwent a mysterious *transubstantiation* that
|
|
turned the data into *pastoral innocence* before
|
|
digitized messages were sent to the brain. By
|
|
contrast, .gif files stored in a computer have not
|
|
undergone transubstantiation, and remain slimy
|
|
with evil inherited from the Original Snub.
|
|
|
|
[6] The Justice Department's Office of General
|
|
Counsel issued a legal opinion on the First
|
|
Amendment constitutionality of ITAR restrictions
|
|
on public cryptography on May 11, 1978. The
|
|
opinion--addressed to Dr. Frank Press, the Science
|
|
Adviser to the President--concluded: "It is our view
|
|
that the existing provisions of the ITAR are
|
|
Unconstitutional insofar as they establish a prior
|
|
restraint on disclosure of cryptographic ideas and
|
|
information developed by scientists and
|
|
mathematicians in the private sector." The ITAR
|
|
regulations are also referred to as Defense Trade
|
|
Regulations. See Department of State, Defense
|
|
Trade Regulations, 22 CFR 120-130, Office of
|
|
Defense Trade Controls, May 1992. The State
|
|
Department turns all cryptology decisions over to
|
|
NSA.
|
|
|
|
[7] Stewart A. Baker, "Don't Worry, Be Happy,"
|
|
Wired Magazine, June 1994.
|
|
|
|
[8] Remarks at Computers, Freedom and Privacy
|
|
Conference IV, Chicago, March 26, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[9] Denning, Dorothy E., "Encryption and Law
|
|
Enforcement," Georgetown University, February
|
|
21, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[10] Which explains, I guess, why I am no longer
|
|
able to get any smack with my pepperoni and
|
|
cheese.
|
|
|
|
[11] U.S. Department of State, Bureau of
|
|
International Narcotics Matters, International
|
|
Narcotics Control Strategy Report, U.S.
|
|
Government Printing Office, April 1994.
|
|
|
|
[12] Ibid.
|
|
|
|
[13] Kimery, Anthony L., "Big Brother Wants to
|
|
Look into Your Bank Account (Any Time It
|
|
Pleases)," Wired Magazine, December 1993.
|
|
|
|
[14] Chicago Tribune, January 20, 1995.
|
|
|
|
[15] Timothy C. May, "The Crypto Anarchist
|
|
Manifesto," September 1992.
|
|
|
|
[16] Steven B. Duke and Albert C. Gross, America's
|
|
Longest War: Rethinking Our Tragic Crusade
|
|
Against Drugs, Putnam, New York, 1993.
|
|
|
|
[17] Examples may be found in Steven Wisotsky,
|
|
Beyond the War on Drugs, Prometheus Books,
|
|
Buffalo, New York, 1990.
|
|
|
|
[18] John Powell and Ellen Hershenov, "Hostage to
|
|
the Drug War: The National Purse, The
|
|
Constitution, and the Black Community,"
|
|
University of California at Davis Law Review, 24,
|
|
1991.
|
|
|
|
[19] David B. Kopel, "Prison Blues: How
|
|
America's Foolish Sentencing Policies Endanger
|
|
Public Safety," Policy Analysis No. 208, Cato
|
|
Institute, Washington, D.C., May 17, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[20] Milton Friedman, "Open Letter to Bill Bennet,"
|
|
Wall Street Journal, September 7, 1989.
|
|
|
|
[21] Larry Keller, "Sheriff's Office Makes Own
|
|
Crack for Drug Stings," Fort Lauderdale News &
|
|
Sun Sentinel, April 18, 1989.
|
|
|
|
[22] The quote may be found on page 5 in Andrew
|
|
Schneider and Mary Pat Flaherty, Presumed Guilty:
|
|
The Law's Victims in the War on Drugs, reprinted
|
|
=66rom The Pittsburgh Press, August 11-16, 1991.
|
|
|
|
[23] Melanie S. Tammen, "The Drug War vs. Land
|
|
Reform in Peru," Policy Analysis No. 156, Cato
|
|
Institute, Washington, D.C., July 10, 1991.
|
|
|
|
[24] Rensselaer W. Lee, The White Labyrinth:
|
|
Cocaine and Political Power, Transaction, New
|
|
Brunswick, NJ, 1989.
|
|
|
|
[25] House of Representatives, Banks Records and
|
|
Foreign Transactions concerning P.L. 95-508,
|
|
House Report 91-975, October 12, 1970.
|
|
|
|
[26] U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
|
|
Investigations, Crime and Secrecy: The Use of
|
|
Offshore Banks and Companies, U.S. Government
|
|
Printing Office, February 1983.
|
|
|
|
[27] President's Commission on Organized Crime,
|
|
The Cash Connection: Organized Crime, Financial
|
|
Institutions, and Money Laundering, U.S.
|
|
Government Printing Office, October 1984.
|
|
|
|
[28] Bank for International Settlements, Large
|
|
Value Funds Transfer Systems in the Group of Ten
|
|
Countries, May 1990.
|
|
|
|
[29] Ernest T. Patrikis, Thomas C. Baxter Jr., and
|
|
Raj K. Bhala, Wire Transfers: A Guide to U.S. and
|
|
International Laws Governing Funds Transfer,
|
|
Probus Publishing Company, Chicago, IL, 1993.
|
|
|
|
[30] The National Information Infrastructure:
|
|
Agenda for Action.
|
|
[31] David Kahn, The Codebreakers: The Story of
|
|
Secret Writing, Macmillan, New York, 1967.
|
|
|
|
[32] The best accessible book on the subject is
|
|
Bruce Schneier, Applied Cryptography, John Wiley
|
|
& Sons, New York, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[33] It could also fail for other reasons, such as a
|
|
signature garbled in transmission (solution: resend
|
|
it), or disagreement on the hash function (solution:
|
|
adopt a common standard, such as the Secure Hash
|
|
Standard, discussed later).
|
|
|
|
[34] The activities of the NSA were first
|
|
comprehensively surveyed in James Bamford, The
|
|
Puzzle Palace: a Report on NSA, America's Most
|
|
Secret Agency, Houghton Mifflin Company,
|
|
Boston, 1982.
|
|
|
|
[35] David Burnham, The Rise of the Computer
|
|
State, Random House, New York, 1983.
|
|
|
|
[36] Cryptology is divided into cryptography, the
|
|
art of secret writing (encryption), and cryptanalysis,
|
|
the art of code breaking. By analogy, thinking of
|
|
the world of banking divided into vault-keepers and
|
|
thieves.
|
|
|
|
[37] Computer Monitor Radiation (CMR) is
|
|
involved in the plot of Winn Schwartau's *Terminal
|
|
Compromise*, the best hacker novel available. A
|
|
freeware version, replete with misspellings and
|
|
other typos, under the filename termcomp.zip, is
|
|
available by ftp or gopher from many sites. One
|
|
location is ucselx.sdsu.edu/pub/doc/etext.
|
|
|
|
[38] Cindy Skrzycki, "Dark Side of the Data Age,"
|
|
Washington Post, May 3, 1993.
|
|
|
|
[39] Interviewed by Netta Gilboa in Gray Areas
|
|
Magazine. Interview reprinted in The Journal of
|
|
American Underground Computing, 1(7), January
|
|
17, 1995.
|
|
|
|
[40] Attachment to memo from Wm. R. Loy 5/5/92,
|
|
(O/F)-9C1h(2)(a)-File (#4A).
|
|
|
|
[41] I was a block away in a building with a view of
|
|
one of the World Trade Center towers when the
|
|
explosion occurred, but, along with all the Barclays
|
|
Precious Metals dealers, only found out about the
|
|
bomb when the news came across the Telerate
|
|
monitor a few minutes later.
|
|
|
|
[42] Not that there weren't good motives for the
|
|
operation. For example, the four BATF agents slain
|
|
in the attack on the Branch Davidians were all ex-
|
|
bodyguards for the Clinton presidential campaign,
|
|
and heaven knows we've already heard *enough*
|
|
revelations from Clinton's ex-bodyguards.
|
|
|
|
[43] INSLAW, discussed further below.
|
|
|
|
[44] The latter statement is speculation on my part,
|
|
and I have no evidence to back it up. I am certainly
|
|
*not* referring to the following alleged sequence of
|
|
events, cited by Nicholas A. Guarino ("Money,
|
|
Fraud, Drugs, and Sex," January 26, 1995): When
|
|
Madison Guaranty Savings and Loan folds, it is
|
|
somewhere between $47 and $68 million in the
|
|
hole. The tab is settled at $65 million. One of the
|
|
biggest debtors to Madison is a Madison director,
|
|
Seth Ward, who is the father-in-law of Webb
|
|
Hubbell. Webb is Hillary Clinton's former law
|
|
partner and afterward (until April 1994) Associate
|
|
Attorney General (the Number 3 position) at the
|
|
Justice Department, who gets assigned to
|
|
investigate Whitewater. But when the Resolution
|
|
Trust Corporation (RTC) takes over Madison
|
|
Guaranty Savings & Loans, Hillary has been on
|
|
retainer to Madison for many months. The RTC
|
|
brings suit to obtain $60 million from Madison
|
|
Guaranty's debtors. But Hillary negotiates the RTC
|
|
down from $60 million to $1 million. Hillary then
|
|
gets the RTC to forgive the $600,000 debt Seth
|
|
Ward owes the RTC, leaving the RTC with
|
|
$400,000 out of the original $60 million owed. But
|
|
(surprise) Hillary does this as the counsel for the
|
|
RTC, not Madison. Her fee for representing the
|
|
RTC? $400,000, which leaves the RTC with
|
|
nothing.
|
|
|
|
[45] Dorothy E. Denning, "The Clipper Encryption
|
|
System," American Scientist, 81(4), July/August
|
|
1993, 319-323. The NIST and the Treasury
|
|
Department's Automated Systems Division were
|
|
designated as the initial escrow agents.
|
|
|
|
[46] Matt Blaze, "Protocol Failure in the Escrowed
|
|
Encryption Standard," AT&T Bell Laboratories,
|
|
June 3, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[47] Ray Pollari, Memorandum for the Acting
|
|
Assistant Secretary of Defense (C31), April 30,
|
|
1993.
|
|
|
|
[48] National Institute of Standards and Technology
|
|
(NIST), The Digital Signature Standard, Proposal
|
|
and Discussion, Communications of the ACM,
|
|
35(7), July 1992, 36-54.
|
|
|
|
[49] American National Standards Institute,
|
|
American National Standard X9.30-199X: Public
|
|
Key Cryptography Using Irreversible Algorithms
|
|
for the Financial Services Industry: Part 1: The
|
|
Digital Signature Algorithm (DSA), American
|
|
Bankers Association, Washington, D.C., March 4,
|
|
1993.
|
|
|
|
[50] National Institute of Standards and Technology
|
|
(NIST), Secure Hash Standard (SHS), FIPS
|
|
Publication 180, May 11, 1993.
|
|
|
|
[51] Office of Technology Assessment (OTA),
|
|
Information Security and Privacy in Network
|
|
Environments, September 9, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[52] "TerrorDollars: Counterfeiters, Cartels and
|
|
Other Emerging Threats to America's Currency,"
|
|
Washington Post, March 6, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[53] Maggie Mahar, "Beneath Contempt Did the
|
|
Justice Dept. Deliberately Bankrupt INSLAW?,"
|
|
Barron's National Business and Financial Weekly,
|
|
March 21, 1988; and "Rogue Justice: Who and
|
|
What Were Behind the Vendetta Against
|
|
INSLAW?," Barron's National Business and
|
|
Financial Weekly, April 4, 1988; U.S. Congress,
|
|
Committee on the Judiciary, The Inslaw Affair,
|
|
House Report 102-857, September 10, 1992.
|
|
|
|
[54] Thompson's, Congress backs claims that spy
|
|
agencies bugged bank software, Thompson's
|
|
International Banking Regulator, Jan. 17, 1994.
|
|
|
|
[55] Hayek, Friedrich A. von, Denationalisation of
|
|
Money: An Analysis of the Theory and Practice of
|
|
Concurrent Currencies, The Institute of Economic
|
|
Affairs, Lancing, 1976.
|
|
|
|
|
|
1995 J. Orlin Grabbe, 1280 Terminal Way #3, Reno, NV
|
|
89502. Internet address: kalliste@delphi.com
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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|
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