|
NO REGRETS OVER
PRIVACY SOFTWARE
-SAYS INVENTOR
28th September, 2001
A PsyOpNews.com Alert
There are lies, damm lies and bad journalism.
After a Washington Post article described him "in tears"
because his encryption software might have helped terrorists to
communicate covertly, PGP inventor Phill Zimmerman denounces a gross
lie.
To Attacks'
Toll
Add a Programmer's
Grief

By Ariana Eunjung Cha
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, September 21, 2001;
Page E01
The tears have come in the kitchen, the car and the shower,
too. Like many Americans, Phil Zimmermann, a stocky, 47-year-old
computer programmer, has been crying every day since last week's
terrorist attacks.
He has been overwhelmed with feelings of guilt. Zimmermann is
the inventor of a computer program called Pretty Good Privacy,
or PGP. He posted the tool for free on the Internet 10 years
ago; it was the first to allow ordinary people to encrypt messages
so only those with a "key" could read them.
No government or law enforcement agency has been able to get
in.
[MORE]
|
No
Regrets About
Developing PGP
The
Friday September 21st Washington Post carried an article
by Ariana Cha that I feel misrepresents my views on the role of
PGP encryption software in the September 11th terrorist attacks.
She interviewed me on Monday September 17th, and we talked about
how I felt about the possibility that the terrorists might have
used PGP in planning their attack.
The article states that as the inventor of PGP, I was "overwhelmed
with feelings of guilt". I never implied that in the interview,
and specifically went out of my way to emphasize to her that that
was not the case, and made her repeat back to me this point so that
she would not get it wrong in the article.
This misrepresentation is serious, because it implies that under
the duress of terrorism I have changed my principles on the importance
of cryptography for protecting privacy and civil liberties in the
information age.
Because
of the political sensitivity of how my views were to be expressed,
Ms. Cha read to me most of the article by phone before she submitted
it to her editors, and the article had no such statement or implication
when she read it to me. The article that appeared in the Post was
significantly shorter than the original, and had the abovementioned
crucial change in wording. I can only speculate that her editors
must have taken some inappropriate liberties in abbreviating my
feelings to such an inaccurate soundbite.
In
the interview six days after the attack, we talked about the fact
that I had cried over the heartbreaking tragedy, as everyone else
did. But the tears were not because of guilt over the fact that
I developed PGP, they were over the human tragedy of it all. I also
told her about some hate mail I received that blamed me for
developing a technology that could be used by terrorists.
I told her that I felt bad about the possibility of terrorists using
PGP, but that I also felt that this was outweighed by the fact that
PGP was a tool for human rights around the world, which was my original
intent in developing it ten years ago. It appears that this nuance
of reasoning was lost on someone at the Washington Post. I imagine
this may be caused by this newspaper's staff being stretched to
their limits last week.
In
these emotional times, we in the crypto community find ourselves
having to defend our technology from well-intentioned but misguided
efforts by politicians to impose new regulations on the use of strong
cryptography. I do not want to give ammunition to these efforts
by appearing to cave in on my principles.
I think the article correctly showed that I'm not an ideologue when
faced with a tragedy of this magnitude. Did I re-examine my principles
in the wake of this tragedy? Of course I did. But the outcome of
this re-examination was the same as it was during the years of public
debate, that strong cryptography does more good for a democratic
society than harm, even if it can be used by terrorists. Read my
lips: I have no regrets about developing PGP.
The
question of whether strong cryptography should be restricted by
the government was debated all through the 1990's. This debate had
the participation of the White House, the NSA, the FBI, the courts,
the Congress, the computer industry, civilian academia, and the
press. This debate fully took into account the question of terrorists
using strong crypto, and in fact, that was one of the core issues
of the debate. Nonetheless, society's collective decision (over
the FBI's objections) was that on the whole, we would be better
off with strong crypto, unencumbered with government back doors.
The export controls were lifted and no domestic controls were imposed.
I feel this was a good decision, because we took the time and had
such broad expert participation. Under the present emotional pressure,
if we make a rash decision to reverse such a careful decision, it
will only lead to terrible mistakes that will not only hurt our
democracy, but will also increase the vulnerability of our national
information infrastructure.
PGP
users should rest assured that I would still not acquiesce to any
back doors in PGP.
It
is noteworthy that I had only received a single piece of hate mail
on this subject. Because of all the press interviews I was dealing
with, I did not have time to quietly compose a carefully worded
reply to the hate mail, so I did not send a reply at all. After
the article appeared, I received hundreds of supportive emails,
flooding in at two or three per minute on the day of the article.
I
have always enjoyed good relations with the press over the past
decade, especially with the Washington Post. I'm sure they will
get it right next time.
-Philip
Zimmermann
24 September 2001
PGP.COM
|