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[FYI] (Fwd) US Encryption Export Policy Held Unconstitutional
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- Subject: [FYI] (Fwd) US Encryption Export Policy Held Unconstitutional
- From: Horns@t-online.de (Axel H. Horns)
- Date: Fri, 7 May 1999 10:00:06 +0100
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------- Forwarded Message Follows -------
Date: Thu, 06 May 1999 17:26:57 -0400
From: Barry Steinhardt <Barrys@aclu.org>
Subject: US Encryption Export Policy Held Unconstitutional
To: gilc-plan@gilc.org
Reply-to: gilc-plan@gilc.org
Scientist gets court relief from encryption limits
By Aaron Pressman
WASHINGTON, May 6 (Reuters) - A U.S. Appeals Court on Thursday
found that
strict export limits on computer data scrambling technology violated
the free speech rights of a computer scientist who wanted to post his
encryption software program on the Internet.
While the scope of the decision by a three-judge panel of the Ninth
Circuit
Court of Appeals was limited to the scientist, University of Illinois
professor Daniel Bernstein, other academics and numerous
high-technology companies that oppose the export rules are likely to
seek a broader ruling.
The Department of Commerce, which oversees the export limits, could
also
appeal the decision to the the full Ninth Circuit or the Supreme
Court.
A spokeswoman for the agency said officials were still reviewing
the
decision
on Thursday and declined to comment.
In Thursday's decision, the court ruled that a version of
Bernstein's
encryption program, called Snuffle, written in a way that humans could
understand known as "source code" was protected by the First
Amendment's free speech clause.
Source code must be run through another program to create code
readable
by a
computer known as object code.
The court did not strike down the rules as applied to working
computer
software programs, written to actually run on a computer.
"To the extent the government's efforts are aimed at interdicting
the
flow of
scientific ideas (whether expressed in source code or otherwise), as
distinguished from encryption products, these efforts would appear to
strike deep into the heartland of the First Amendment," the court
said.
Bernstein's attorney, Cindy Cohn, said the decision meant the
export rules
were unconstitutional for anyone living in the Ninth Circuit
territory, which includes California. "This is precedent for them that
it is unconstitutional in the ninth circuit," Cohn said.
The case arose in 1995 after Bernstein, then a graduate student at
the
University of California, asked the State Department for permission to
put source code for Snuffle on the Internet. The department said the
posting would violate the export rules, so Bernstein sued.
The Ninth Circuit court itself could have run afoul of the export
regulations. Thursday's decision, which included source code of
Bernstein's program, was posted on the Internet and could be seen by
viewers around the world. ((Aaron Pressman, Washington newsroom,
202-898-8312)) Thursday, 6 May 1999 17:19:17 RTRS [nN06125376]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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sender, except where the sender specifically states them to be
the views of Reuters Ltd.
Barry Steinhardt 125 Broad Street
Associate Director New York,NY 10004
ACLU 212 549 -2508 (v)
Barrys@aclu.org 212 549-2656 (f)
http://www.aclu.org