From: djb@silverton.berkeley.edu (D. J. Bernstein) Newsgroups: sci.crypt Subject: Crypto censorship lives! The real story of export controls... Date: 30 Jul 93 23:41:55 GMT ``[Say] a reporter got his hands on some [USML technical data] from a company. I don't know what company would want to put it out, but let's suppose he did ... and he published that ... If he published it in such a way that he knew that it would get into the hands of foreign entities then he would be breaking the law ... Freedom of the press doesn't give you the right to break the law knowingly. And those reporters who do it knowingly usually do it willing to accept the punishment for their beliefs in the First Amendment.'' ---Charles Ray, Office of Defense Trade Controls Three years ago I designed Snuffle, a simple system which converts a one-way hash function into a cipher. For the crime of setting Snuffle down on paper, I am an arms manufacturer, and I must register with the State Department---or so I am told by DTC, the Office of Defense Trade Controls. DTC also insists that it would be a felony for me to publish Snuffle without their blessing and approval. My battle with the State Department has entered its second year and continues to thicken. For many months I did not tell the story of this battle, for I thought that the censors were reasonable men, and that quiet negotiation would succeed while confrontation would surely fail. I now know that I was wrong. I intend to ensure that the law does not prohibit my publication of Snuffle---or any other cryptographic materials I dream up. I hereby place these ten documents into the public record. These documents are far, very far, from a complete explanation of what has occurred; the entire saga will undoubtedly fill an entire book. But they will show you a bit of how the censors work. ---Dan