17.4.1. "What are some future directions?" 17.4.2. The Future of the List + "What can be done about these situations?" - That is, given that the Cypherpunks list often contains sensitive material (see above), and given that the current membership list can be accessed by..... what can be done? - Move central server to non-U.S. locale - Or to "cyberspace" (distributed network, with no central server...like FidoNet) - subscribers can use pseudonyms, cutouts, remailers 17.4.3. What if encryption is outlawed? - can uuencode (and similar), to at least slow down the filter programs a bit (this is barely security through obscurity, but....) - underground movements? - will Cypherpunks be rounded up? 17.4.4. "Should Cypherpunks be more organized, more like the CPSR, EFF, and EPIC?" - Those groups largely are lobbying groups, with a staff in Washington supported by the membership donations of thousands or tens of thousands of dues-paying members. They perform a valuable service, of course. - But that is not our model, nor can it plausibly be. We were formed as an ad hoc group to explore crypto, were dubbed "Cypherpunks," and have since acted as a techno-grasssroots anarchy. No staff, no dues, no elections, no official rules and regulations, and no leadership beyond what is provided by the power of speech (and a slight amount of "final say" provided by the list maintainer Eric Hughes and the machine owner, John Gilmore, with support from Hugh Daniel). - If folks want a lobbying group, with lawyers in Washington, they should join the EFF and/or CPSR. - And we fill a niche they don't try to fill. 17.4.5. Difficult to Set Directions - an anarchy...no centralized control - emergent interests - everyone has some axe to grind, some temporary set of priorities - little economic motivation (and most have other jobs) 17.4.6. The Heart and Soul of Cypherpunks? + Competing Goals: + Personal Privacy - PGP, integration with mailers - education + Reducing the Power of Institutions - whistelblowers group - - Crypto Anarchy + Common Purposes + Spreading strong crypto tools and knowledge - PGP + Fighting government restrictions and regulations - Clipper/Skipjack fight was a unifying experience + Exploring new directions in cryptology - digital mixes, digital cash, voting 17.4.7. Possible Directions + Crypto Tools...make them ubiquitous "enough" so that the genie cannot be put back in the bottle - can worry about the politics later (socialists vs. anarchocapitalists, etc.) (Although socialists would do well to carefully think about the implications of untraceable communications, digital cash, and world-wide networks of consultants and workers--and what this does to tax collection and social spending programs--before they work with the libertarians and anarchocapitalists to bring on the Crypto Millenium.) + Education - educating the masses about crypto - public forums - this was picked by the Cambridge/MIT group as their special interest + Lobbying - talking to Congressional aides and committee staffers, attending hearings, submitting briefs on proposed legislation - coordinating with EFF, CPSR, ACLU, etc. - this was picked by the Washington group as their special interest, which is compellingly appropriate (Calif. group is simply too far away) - Legal Challenges + mixture of legal and illegal - use legal tools, and illegal tools - fallback positions - enlist illegal users as customers...help it spread in these channels (shown to be almost uncontrollable) 17.4.8. Goals (as I see them) + Get strong crypto deployed in such a way as to be unstoppable, unrecallable - "fire and forget" crypto - genie out of the bottle - Note that this does _not_ necessarily that crypto be _widely_ deployed, though that's generally a good idea. It may mean seeding key sites outside the U.S. with strong crypto tools, with remailers, and with the other acouterments. + Monkeywrench threats to crypto freedom. - economic sabotage of those who use statist contracts to thwart freedom (e.g., parts of AT&T) + direct sabotage - someday, viruses, HERF, etc. 17.4.9. A Vision of the Future - encrypted, secure, untraceable communications - hundreds of remailers, in many countries - interwoven with ordinary traffic, ensuring that any attempt to quash crypto would also have a dramatic effect on business - data havens, credit, renters, etc. - information markets - ability to fight wars is hindered - U.S. is frantic, as its grip on the world loosens...Pax Americana dies 17.4.10. Key concepts are the way to handle the complexity of crypto - The morass of protocols, systems, and results is best analyzed, I think, by not losing sight of the basic "primitives," the things about identity, security, authentication, etc. that make crypto systems work the way they do. + Axiom systems, with theorems and lemmas derivable from the axioms - with alternate axioms giving the equivalent of "non- Euclidean geometries" (in a sense, removing the physical identity postulate and replacing it with the "the key is the identity" postulate gives a new landscape of interactions, implications, and structures). - (Markets, local references, voluntary transactions, etc.) - (ecologies, predators, defenders, etc.) - (game theory, economics, etc..)
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