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Poll Says Most Americans Favor Crypto Backdoors 931

Sideways The Dog writes: "According to this MSNBC article, "72 percent of Americans believe that anti-encryption laws would be 'somewhat' or 'very' helpful in preventing a repeat of last week's terrorist attacks on New York's World Trade Center and the Pentagon in Washington, D.C." I realize that I'm preaching to the choir here, but it is scary how many people do not realize that the bad guys are not going to play fair here. Even granted that people may not realize the tools are already out there for the bad guys to use, I wonder what the polls will say when the backdoor gets compromised and 72% of people get their bank accounts wiped." Update: 09/19 19:26 PM GMT by T : Declan McCullagh adds a link to "the actual text of the question asked by the pollsters, which Princeton Survey Research Associates describes here." Note the numbers on this page as well.
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Poll Says Most Americans Favor Crypto Backdoors

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  • by waldoj ( 8229 ) <<waldo> <at> <jaquith.org>> on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:36PM (#2320721) Homepage Journal
    I'd like to see a new survey:

    Should you be allowed to have secrets?

    I imagine that we'd see considerably different results.

    -Waldo
  • by nebby ( 11637 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:40PM (#2320768) Homepage
    From reading the article, it seems the questions asked weren't "Do you support anti-crypto?" but instead "Do you think anti-crypto would help catch terrorists?"

    Of COURSE anti-crypto has a chance of helping catch terrorists.. if your doctor for example has encrypted files for one of them or something random like that. That doesn't mean I support it or think it's worth it! They're extrapolating people's opinions based upon the not-so-earthshattering observation that crackable crypto has a good shot of helping catch terrorists (and this, in itself, is debatable since they already have strong-crypto for their own internal communications)

  • by sulli ( 195030 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:40PM (#2320782) Journal
    Clearly the poll was skewed in favor of backdoors. What if they were told that "you would need to modify programs you use on a regular basis on your computer, and as a result the feds would have access to your computer at any time"? I bet the answer would be different.

    Anyway, it's MSNBC, which is crap. But it's an important wake-up call.

  • by CrudPuppy ( 33870 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:44PM (#2320830) Homepage
    the government has announced that it will soon be
    mandatory to use state-approved envelopes to send
    all mail.

    these new envelopes will be entirely transparent
    when viewed under a federally produced lightbulb,
    but there is no need to worry about these lamps
    getting out to bad people, since it is time-tested
    proof that all government employees are completely
    honest and lack all self-serving traits present
    in every other human being.

    besides, it's for your own good and protection!

    and if you have something to write that you don't
    want everyone to read, maybe it's time for that
    all-important self-examination to reveal your
    underlying paranoia complex...
  • by christrs ( 187044 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:46PM (#2320853)
    What the american people, states, of feds want. I will have my own encryption software without the backdoors. I will have encrypted backups, and encrypted filesystems. My business is not your business not the new "police" state.

    And for what I want to keep really secret, the good old one-time pad will do nicely.

    Chris
  • by led ( 3096 ) <pmiguel.maquina@com> on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:56PM (#2320942) Homepage
    worst, another country without those encryption laws cracks the backdoor...
    say the terrorists do that... so you now have a lot of people, some potencialy working on important places with no protection...

    If the united states passes such law it will make them open to all outside bandits... even comercial ones...
  • by FortKnox ( 169099 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @01:58PM (#2320962) Homepage Journal
    72 percent of Americans believe that anti-encryption laws would be 'somewhat' or 'very' helpful in preventing a repeat of last week's terrorist attacks

    Read it over and over again. It is not stating that 72 percent of people want their rights taken away. It just states that they think anti-crypto might of helped.

    Redo the poll to:
    How many people think that the attack wouldn't happen if the US was a cruel military dictatorship?

    I bet it would be like 90 percent. Its true. It doesn't mean we want to be a dictatorship, just that it might of prevented it.

    Stop knee-jerking, people.
  • by FortKnox ( 169099 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:03PM (#2321016) Homepage Journal
    Its an entirely different poll.

    The poll in the article is about whether people thought it would of helped prevent the attack. Your post is about whether people want it. These are two different things.

    A military dictatorship would of helped prevent the attack, but I don't want a military dictatorship.
  • by neema ( 170845 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:08PM (#2321069) Homepage
    This is a chance for alot of politics to do things they always wanted to.

    One of these things is what is described here.

    Also, some law written in the 70s (I believe) stated that America can not legally issue assasination orders. They want to repeal that.

    Also, they wnat to make phone tapping much easier. The law right now is you have to not only get a warrant to tap a phone, but you can't monitor a person, just a specific phone line.

    And finally, all military upgrades are going to be majorily supported by the public (can you see more republican support?) in the near future.

    Lets not let our rage cloud our vision.

    Politicians will always be politicians.
  • by MO! ( 13886 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:09PM (#2321077) Homepage
    I the poll simply asked "Do you think law enforcement having 'backdoors' in crypto tools would help reduce terrorism?" then of course a majority would say yes. It is true as well - it would help.


    However, if the question was asked as "Do you support the government having unlimited backdoors into all crypto tools, even if it meant your ecommerce transactions were more vulnerable to hacking as an unintentional result?" - I HIGHLY doubt we's see 72% saying yes!

  • Banning Firearms (Score:2, Insightful)

    by gatorBYTE ( 93755 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:11PM (#2321087)
    The argument that we should have backdoors on everything crypto, is very simular to the logic "we should ban guns to keep the public safe." The problem of course, is that the criminal still has a gun, and you are unable to defend yourself.
  • by AugstWest ( 79042 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:17PM (#2321135)
    There is no explicit mention of the word "privacy" in the constituion. The closest thing is in the 4th Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable search and seizure.

    With the current tapping abilities, both legal [eff.org] and illegal [igc.org], it looks like soon, if not already, warrants will be unnecessary for law enforcement to peruse all of your communications. Also, remember that your cell phone has a GPS chip in it, so you are carrying a "leaky" communications device with a tracking chip built into it.

    Unreasonable search is what we're talking about here. If the government decides to allow tapping into 100% of my communications, even though I'm not conversin with people about illegal activities, I want to make sure that I have the right to avoid plaintext and keep what I talk about unavailable if I so choose.

    This is my right. It is being trampled.

    Did you notice that the cell phone calls that have been reported throughout this whole ordeal were recorded and traced? Doesn't that frighten you in the least? Don't you feel you have the right as an American to some modicum of privacy?
  • by ttyRazor ( 20815 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:20PM (#2321163)
    It's not what they do with it now, when the only thing they care about is terrorism, but what they do 20 years from now or however long it is when all this terrorism stuff evaporates and the infrastructure is still in place that worries me. Then a bored intelligence infrastructure trying to justify its own existence will start abusing their resources and go after the trivial stuff that isn't worthy of such invasiveness. Many of the defenders of such a scheme that I've heard suggest that it'd have as stringent safeguards as wiretapping, and of course we all know how rluctant the courts are to give those sorts of warrants out.
  • by cheesyfru ( 99893 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:22PM (#2321192) Homepage
    The very idea of doing this is ridiculous not just from the standpoint of the loss of privacy, but because the technology for strong encryption is already all over the place. This isn't a situation where a law is passed and suddenly every existing crypto program self-destructs to make way for the new system. No terrorist in his/her right mind would use the system with the backdoor. They have people who are willing to commit a suicide bombing. Surely they wouldn't have a problem with bending the law and using an old unprotected crypto program.

    By this logic, we should also outlaw guns. They might be used for terrorist operations. We all know that passing a law against the use of guns will cause every one of the millions of guns in this country to vanish as well.
  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:24PM (#2321207) Homepage
    • then it'll be easy to spot terrorists : it will be all those who have software with no backdoor

    In case anyone takes you seriously, I'll just point out that you first encrypt your message in you own 4096 bit MujaCrypt 3.0, then wrap that in the backdoored Fed-O-Crypt 1.0 and it all looks lovely and innocent.

    (Or you use disposable phones, face to face meetings, mail drops and personals ads like they actually do...)

  • by cavemanf16 ( 303184 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:25PM (#2321218) Homepage Journal
    Doesn't anyone realize that just like in the non-technical world, humans are the single leading cause of a security breach? It's not how powerful a lock, how many escape routes you have, or how much digitally encrypted info you have. If one person starts bragging about their passwords or security access levels in a bar one night, you might as well throw all the tech out the window.

    The media should quit talking about script kiddies and address the real threats: social engineering. I guarantee you that after working for a couple years in a financial, customer care workplace where we were making outbound calls to resolve financial matters for our customers, it wasn't the phone that was the limiting factor on obtaining information, it was the person on the other end of the line. Probably 1 time out of 15 I can get a customer service rep to give me more than enough info on someone given certain little bits of data. With smaller companies, sometimes just the name, and a well-meaning rep will be all I need to get more info than I could possibly even want (once in a great while I actually had to cut people off while they dropped all kinds of info because I was too busy to write it all down!). That's not to say that I would ever think of trying to breach security for my own personal illegal use, because I expect others not to misuse my personal data either, but let's quit cracking down on the technical factors, and crack down on the degenerate human factor instead...

  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:39PM (#2321321) Homepage

    I find myself overcome with heartfelt respect and admiration for this brave, principled person. Perhaps there is hope for us after all. Thank you for posting this.

  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @02:44PM (#2321362) Homepage
    • I the poll simply asked "Do you think law enforcement having 'backdoors' in crypto tools would help reduce terrorism?" then of course a majority would say yes. It is true as well - it would help

    How? You just crypto your stuff with a strong non-backdoored package, then wrap it in the Fed approved stuff. It doesn't even help you to spot it unless you habitually decrypt and examine the contents of all traffic.

  • Death Tolls (Score:4, Insightful)

    by FFFish ( 7567 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:15PM (#2321583) Homepage
    Disclaimer: I am not denying that the WTC attack is a tragedy, I am not denying that something needs to be done. I am merely presenting some facts that may place things into a bit better perspective.

    WTC death toll: ~5200
    US weekly deaths attributable to smoking: ~9000
    US weekly deaths attributable to traffic accidents: ~3400
    US weekly deaths attributable to drinking: ~2300

    Five thousand dead in a single accident is, indeed, highly tragic and morally outrageous: our anger is justified.

    We have far, FAR more people dying of smoking, including a lot of deaths caused by second-hand smoke. Yet the government is doing nothing to protect the victims -- often children in a smoking household -- from this attack on their right to life.

    We have far, far more people dying in traffic accidents, and it's very likely that nearly half those deaths are victims of another driver's idiocy. Yet the government is doing nothing to protect us from those drivers, even though the solution is as simple as instituting mandatory driver training and a higher quality of testing.

    We also have too many people dying because of alcohol. Yet the government isn't serious about cracking down on, say, drinking drivers; nor does it get tough on violence that's been exacerbated by drinking.

    My point? There are plenty of tragedies happening every day. But this time it's got people panicked, so it's far easier to get draconian laws in place.

    Trust the government? No. It doesn't act rationally.

    [Sources: US CDC, NHTSA]
  • by kikta ( 200092 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:24PM (#2321637)
    We should all agree with the statement that it would be very helpful in preventing terroist attacks. Of course it would be! So would random house-to-house searches! However, what was not asked was "Do you think we should?", "Would you be willing to trade this liberty away?", etc. Poll questions are oftentimes baited - remember they're looking for a story more than public opinion. Don't believe the hype. Thanks.
  • translation (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:24PM (#2321640)
    what they really meant to say was when polled 72% of americans said "what the hell is crypto?"
  • by LazyDawg ( 519783 ) <`lazydawg' `at' `hotmail.com'> on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:24PM (#2321642) Homepage
    Should we have products that perform their stated function?

    Of course not! says the American people. Most people will say yes to a poll question, which is why you have to ask the right questions in official surveys.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:36PM (#2321707)
    It seems that the majority of Americans are suffering from a severe cognitive disconnect. What they fail to realize is that criminals, by definition, fail to abide by the laws. Therefore, making more laws, expecially against things which are already illegal, rarely has any effect on criminal activity. In stead the primary effect is to criminalize innocent activity.
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @03:53PM (#2321838)
    I am a computer scientist and from my experience most computer scientists that do not specialise in security don't understand the specific questions. However they usually do know about this lack of knowledge and that it takes some time to fill it.

    The technical questions are not for the public to decide on. The public should however listen to the experts what the impact of these measures on them and on terrorism would be and then decide about these impacts.

    The problem is that a lot of politicians at the moment present a drastically simplified view of things. To me (being knowlegeable in computer security) it seems that backdoors in crypto would do exactly nothing against this kind of well executed operation. (Yes, these people don't qualify as civilized human beings, but thinking in abstract military terms the effort-to-gain ratio of the attack was close to optimum, and underestimating an enemy is a deadly mistake.)

  • by Teancum ( 67324 ) <robert_horning AT netzero DOT net> on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @04:09PM (#2321947) Homepage Journal
    What do you mean by saying that the government is doing nothing?

    For traffic accidents:

    There are seatbelt laws, vehicle safety standards, lighting standards, collision tests, traffic laws (that comprise whole chapters in most state legal codes), civil engineering to design highways that reduce accidents, and much more.

    In fact, the red tape you need to go through to build a production motor vehicle is incredible... I would like to see you just try and get a few buddies to build a car, and try to give it away (with a helpful donation from somebody like Wm. Gates III or equivalent). Half of your development team would have to be doing nothing but dealing with government regulations and filling out paperwork.

    Regarding drinking:

    Ever heard of the 18th Ammendment to the US Constitution? Read it sometime. I would say that is a rather drastic approach to dealing with drinking, and there are substantial laws to deal with it, including one case where somebody who just killed somebody in an accident will now spend the rest of his life in jail because he was drunk while driving. What more do you want, the death peanalty for driving drunk? I'll admit though that I get surprised when I hear about people that have been arrested 30+ times for a DUI and somehow still keep their license (being a friend of the mayor, bribing judges, finding a loophole in the law, the arresting officer doesn't show up to the trial, etc.)

    In some ways I regret that the 18th Ammendment was repealed, but even with that off the books now, there are still many regulatory laws controlling how alcoholic is produced and consumed... even if it is just going to be used in a fuel take on a car (complicating the issues I mentioned above).

    Smoking:

    Why do you think the tobacco companies setteled out of court with the law suits from most of the US states? Almost every state in the US now has some sort of "indoor clean air act" that prohibits smoking in public areas. Despite warnings from the US Surgeon General, countless piles of money spent on public service ads (including television, radio, newspaper, and magazine ads, not to mention billboards, posters, and anti-smoking programs for schools), a heavy public relations effort (including entire episodes of television news magazines like 60 Minutes or Dateline), millions of people still smoke.

    ********************

    OK, I'll presume for a moment that you meant the United States Government. (I was presuming that you were an American... which isn't always good on /. to assume.) What more do you want?

    There is a difference between passing laws and actually getting them enforced. And in all of the cases I'll admit that we as citizens of this country can do more to help improve what we are doing in these areas.

    But to say that the government is doing nothing is really stretching the imagination.
  • Re:Death Tolls (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Gruneun ( 261463 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @04:25PM (#2322034)
    WTC death toll: ~5200
    US weekly deaths attributable to smoking: ~9000
    US weekly deaths attributable to traffic accidents: ~3400
    US weekly deaths attributable to drinking: ~2300


    US weekly deaths of innocent people attributable to smoking: ~0
    US weekly deaths of innocent people attributable to drinking: ~0

    The outrage was the number of innocent people killed not just the number of deceased individuals. You put a cigarette in your mouth or a get behind a steering wheel after drinking and your death is your own fault.

    p.s. Yes, I realize there are innocent people killed by drunks, too, but I'll assume they're listed under your extremely vague statistics for car accidents.
  • Re:Death Tolls (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @06:15PM (#2322526)
    I agree with what you say, but this is not the place for it. This was an ASSAULT on American people going about their every day lives. This should be respected, just as we should respect other countries and their peoples.

    Remember that respect when the first missile your military fires at a man who has yet to be proven guilty of anything kills some Afghan civilians.

    I think this very much is the place to say things like this. Right about now, most of the western world is sounding altogether too trigger-happy. Your President talks of war, without knowing who the enemy is. Your media, and ours, freely accuse bin Laden, yet when the government of Afghanistan ask for evidence, nothing is provided. If anyone else did this at any other time, there would be outrage, cries of the US throwing its weight around, and calls for the head of the man who put aside due process and "innocent until proven guilty". Of course there are strong emotions right now, and people are justifiably upset and angry at those they perceive to be responsible. But the leadership and media of the western world appear to be dangerously forgetting themselves.

    I'm as angry as the rest of you that terrorists should do this, but now is the time to remember your principles and keep things in perspective, not to forget or ignore or conveniently overlook.

  • by Sigh Phi ( 324315 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @06:58PM (#2322693)
    Except that a careless parent who left his strong crypto software out doesn't have to worry nearly as much about his emotionially troubled teen taking the stuff to school and hurting his classmates with it.

    Not that I'm not also concerned about erosion of the rights you're talking about, but the analogy is a poor one.
  • Backdoors?! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by rice_burners_suck ( 243660 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @08:29PM (#2323020)

    You know what? Let them pass legislation like this. Several months will go by--or a year--and suddenly, some hacker in Russia or some other nice country will figure out the backdoor, and voila! Billions of dollars in business and legal damages. Patient records, trade secrets, copyrighted material... they'll all be compromised. That'll teach 'em a lesson.

    Sure, if you're honest like most of us, this will be a huge problem for you. If you're a crook on the other hand, the legislation doesn't apply to you. Remember: when inlaws are outlawed, only outlaws will have inlaws.

    Oh yeah, and don't even bother to try and stop this... the idiots in government will be convinced by some glossy shrink-wrapped corporation that the backdoor will be 100% secure against hackers. Just wait and see... it'll happen.

  • by Peyna ( 14792 ) on Wednesday September 19, 2001 @10:01PM (#2323282) Homepage
    Am I the only one who finds it mathematically impossible to have a back door with public key encryption? There is no "magic key" which will decrypt everything that is generated by these functions. If that were the case, they would be useless!!

    I bet the entire NSA would laugh their asses off if someone came in and asked them to develop an encryption algorithm with a backdoor. As far as I'm concerned, we don't have much to worry about.

  • pinheads (Score:2, Insightful)

    by OsamaBinLogin ( 522314 ) on Thursday September 20, 2001 @12:34AM (#2323654)
    it's the american public, they don't understand. Here's some arguments that can help them understand, in your coctail conversations:

    Would you give the police department a key to your home, so that they can protect you from crime? No. Think of why not - several reasons, like an out of control cop could terrorize you, etc. Meanwhile, anybody who's a criminal will NOT give the police a key to their home, or will give the wrong key, or will put on an additional padlock.

    Why not strip search, for drugs, all people crossing the Mexican/US border at Tiajuana? Because it's a pain for those being searched. And, the real people smuggling drugs will drive a truck along a back road into arizona or new mexico. The stripsearch will be totally ineffective.

    Why not make backdoors for encryption? Because that jepordizes all law abiding encryption users. The crackers will figure it out before the law is even passed. Meanwhile, no criminal or terrorist in their right mind will use that encryption, they'll use their own. Even if they have to break the law ... they're already breaking the law anyway. Computers don't change anything, especially not for technophobes living in tents in afghanistan.

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