Title
Government, Cryptography, and the Right to Privacy
Abstract
The notion of a right to privacy of citizens in their communications is discussed in the context of an international movement by governments towards regulation of cryptography, and consideration of key forfeiture systems in national cryptography use. The authors argue that the right to privacy in communications networks is an issue of major importance, assuring freedom of the individual in national and global communications. Regulation and control of cryptography use on the Internet by national governments may lead to an imbalance in the citizen/government power relationship, with sequelae including unprecedented surveillance of citizens, disruption of international commerce due to lack of powerful cryptography (and lack of standardisation), human rights abuses by less dem ocratic or non-democratic governments, and limiting of the political potential of an Internet global political system. Category: K.4.2 Social Issues (Computers and Society); K.5.2 Governmental Issues (Computers and Society); E.3 Data Encryption
Year
Venue
Keywords
1996
J. UCS
social issues,standardisation
Field
DocType
Volume
The Right to Privacy,Cryptography law,Computer security,Computer science,Cryptography,Human rights,Right to privacy,Politics,Government,The Internet
Journal
2
Issue
Citations 
PageRank 
3
1
0.60
References 
Authors
10
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Jenny Shearer143.26
Peter Gutmann210.94