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To whom it may concern: Below you find my comments on Austria's comments on the November Draft of the OECD Cryptography guidelines. Yours sincerely, In general I support Austria's comments on the November Draft of the OECD Cryptography guidelines. They contain various suggestions that are essential for a reasonable international cryptography policy and consider the privacy concerns of users better than the September and November drafts. However, there are two clauses I'd like to specifically comment on: [69] ... This sentence is meaningless. How can you develop a cryptographic method that cannot be used for criminal purpose as well? I support Austria's position Austria repeats that this clause refers only to safeguards against abuse other than lawful access itself. which however implies that lawful access is an instance of abuse (which it *technically* of course is). [69] ... I suggest to add the clause which would clarify the issue and bring it to the point: In particular, governments should not create legislation that gives access to cryptographic keys or plaintext without knowledge of the user. Any other interpretation would in practice yield the possibility of uncontrollable interception of communication. With this clause being adopted, privacy concerns of users would be reasonably well considered. | |
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