Order Code RL30836
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Encryption Technology:
the Debate in the
105th and 106th Congresses
January 22, 2001
name redacted
Specialist in Information Technologies
Resources, Science, and Industry Division
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

Encryption Technology: the Debate in the 105th and
106th Congresses
Summary
The controversy over encryption throughout the 1990s concerned what
access the government should have to encrypted stored computer data or electronic
communications (voice and data, wired and wireless) for law enforcement and
national security purposes.
Encryption and decryption are methods of using cryptography to protect the
confidentiality of data and communications. When encrypted, a message can only be
understood by someone with the key to decrypt it. Businesses and consumers want
strong encryption products to protect their information, while the Clinton
Administration wanted to ensure the law enforcement community’s ability to monitor
undesirable activity in the digital age.
Until 1998, the Clinton Administration promoted the use of strong encryption
(greater than 56 bits) here and abroad, only if it had “key recovery” features where
a “key recovery agent” holds a “spare key” to decrypt the information. The Adminis-
tration wanted key recovery agents to make the decryption key available to authorized
federal and state government entities. Privacy advocates argued that law enforcement
entities would have too much access to private information. Under this policy, the
Administration attempted to use the export control process to influence companies
to develop key recovery encryption products by making it easy to export products
with key recovery, and difficult for those products without. There were no limits on
domestic use or import of any type of encryption, so the Administration tried to
influence what was available for domestic use through export controls since most
companies do not want to incur the costs of creating two versions of the same prod-
uct—one for U.S. use and another for export. U.S. companies argued that U.S.
export policies hurt their market share while helping foreign companies not subject
to export restrictions. While many businesses and consumer groups agreed that key
recovery is desirable when keys are lost, stolen, or corrupted, they wanted market
forces to drive the development of key recovery encryption products. They also
objected to government having any role in determining who can hold the keys.
Although a general consensus emerged that encryption is essential to the growth
of electronic commerce and use of the Internet, opposition to the Clinton
Administration’s policy grew as industry and privacy rights groups lobbied Congress
to loosen export controls. In the 106th Congress, legislation was introduced intended
to foster widespread use of the strongest encryption (H.R. 850, S. 798). While the
Administration continued to oppose that legislation, H.R. 850 was marked up by five
Committees, resulting in widely varying and, in places, contradictory, provisions.
In September 1999, the Clinton Administration announced plans to relax its
encryption export policy by allowing unlimited key length (with some exceptions)
without key recovery, and reducing reporting requirements. The rules for
implementing that policy were issued by the Department of Commerce in January
2000. While the new policy appears to have satisfied industry interests, privacy rights
groups continue to express concerns about government surveillance.

Contents
Encryption, Computers, and Electronic Communications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Administration Policy and Industry Reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Industry Reactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Action in the 105th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Action in the 106th Congress . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Issues in the Debate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Key Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Export Restrictions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Domestic Use . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Final Clinton Administration Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

Encryption Technology: the Debate in the
105th and 106th Congresses
The congressional debate over encryption technology was resolved without the
enactment of legislation, with the Clinton Administration’s significant reduction of
restrictions on the use of encryption. Some groups, however, would like to see further
reductions in those restrictions, and would also like to have the new policy codified
in law. Others might want to reverse the current policy, to re-institute the previous
restrictions on encryption use. This report serves as a comprehensive overview of the
evolution of debate and legislation that led to modifications to the U.S. encryption
policy that took place in the 1990s and 2000.
Encryption, Computers, and Electronic
Communications
Encryption and decryption are procedures for applying the science of
cryptography to ensure the confidentiality of messages. Technically, the issue
discussed here is cryptography policy, but since encryption is the most controversial
application of cryptography, it is the term used popularly and in this report. (Other
methods of using cryptography to protect confidentiality–steganography and “chaffing
and winnowing”–will not be discussed in this report.) Also, for a discussion of the
specific issues regarding medical records privacy and security, see CRS Issue Brief
IB98002, Medical Records Confidentiality, updated regularly.
Encrypting messages so they can be understood only by the intended recipient
historically was the province of those protecting military secrets. The burgeoning use
of computers and computer networks, including the Internet, now has focused
attention on its value to a much broader segment of society. Government agencies
seeking to protect data stored in their databases, businesses wanting to guard
proprietary data, and consumers expecting electronic mail to be as private as first
class mail, all want access to strong encryption products. Other users of electronic
communications, for example cellular (wireless) phone users who expect calls to be
as private as wireline calls, also are showing increased interest in encryption. While
encryption is uncommon for telephone users today, the advent of digital telephone
services (particularly Personal Communication Services, PCS, a digital form of
cellular telephony) is expected to make encrypted voice and data communications
over telephones more common.
Whether hardware- or software-based, an encryption product scrambles a
message using mathematical algorithms. A corresponding key is needed to decrypt
(unscramble) the message, and the key itself also may be encrypted. The algorithm
is a series of digital numbers (bits), and the level of difficulty of breaking the code (its
“strength”) is usually represented by the number of bits in the key. (There are other

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factors that affect a key’s strength, but in this debate, bit length is used as a
benchmark.) Unencrypted data are referred to as “plaintext.” Encrypted data are
“ciphertext.”
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), in conjunction with
industry, developed an encryption standard using a 56-bit key in 1977. Called the
Data Encryption Standard (DES), it is widely used today in the United States and
abroad, often in an enhanced mode called “3-key triple DES” providing the equivalent
of a 112- bit key. NIST is currently working to establish a new, stronger standard
than DES referred to as the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES). The need for a
stronger standard was underscored in 1997 when DES was broken (see below).
Encryption
products
are
KEY RECOVERY AND
widely available today, including
KEY RECOVERY AGENTS
some that use 128-bit keys or
more. Some 128-bit encryption
Once called “key escrow,” key recovery means that when
stored data or electronic communications are encrypted, a
software can be downloaded from
third party has a copy of the key needed to decrypt the
the Internet. There are no limits on
information. The third party is called a key recovery agent
the strength of encryption products
(formerly a key escrow agent). Key recovery is useful in cases
where a key is lost, stolen or corrupted. Most parties to the
used in the United States, whether
encryption debate agree that market forces will drive the
acquired here or imported. The
development of key recovery-based encryption products for
only limits are on exports. This
stored computer data because businesses and individuals will
want to be sure they can get copies of keys in an emergency.
indirectly influences what is
It is less clear if market demands will drive key recovery
available domestically, however,
systems for electronic communications.
The controversy was over government's attempt to
since most U.S. companies are
“encourage” the development of key recovery-based products
reluctant to develop two products,
through the export control process, the government's role in
one for the U.S. market and
determining who can serve as key recovery agents, and the
another for export. For many
extent to which law enforcement agencies could obtain the key
if they suspect undesirable activity (terrorism, child
years, reflecting the policies of the
pornography, and drug cartels are often cited as examples).
past three Administrations, the
State Department did not allow
general exports of encryption with more than 40-bit keys, except for banking and
U.S.-owned subsidiaries (for a list of exceptions, see CRS Report 96-232). In
December 1996, the Clinton Administration raised the limit to 56 bits for easily
exportable encryption products that do not have key recovery features (see box), and
removed bit length limits entirely for products with key recovery. Breaking a message
encrypted with a 40-bit key by “brute-force” (trying every possible combination of
bits until the correct one is found) is not considered difficult. In January 1997, a 40-
bit key was broken in 3.5 hours. In general, for each bit added to the encryption key,
the time required to break the key doubles. Thus it takes 216 (65,536) times longer
to break a 56-bit key than a 40-bit key. In July 1998, a group from the Electronic
Freedom Foundation (an electronic privacy rights group) demonstrated (for less than
$250,000) the vulnerability of 40- and 56-bit keys by using a network of nearly
100,000 PCs on the Internet that broke a 56-bit key in 22 hours, 15 minutes. The
ability to break 128-bit encryption (considered strong encryption) has not yet been
demonstrated publicly.
In May 1996, the National Research Council (NRC) released a comprehensive
report entitled Cryptography’s Role in Securing the Information Society (the
“CRISIS” report). It stressed that national policy should make cryptography broadly

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available to all legitimate elements of society, promote continued economic growth
and leadership of key U.S. industries, and ensure public safety and protection against
foreign and domestic threats. Among the recommendations: key escrow is an
unproven technology and the government should experiment with it and work with
other nations, but not aggressively promote it now; export controls should be relaxed
progressively, but not eliminated; and encryption policy issues can be debated
adequately in public without relying upon classified information. The report also
recommended that no law should bar the manufacture, sale or use of any form of
encryption within the United States; and government should promote information
security in the private sector. The report underscored that utilization of strong
encryption and law enforcement objectives can be mutually compatible.
Business and consumer groups consider 56-bit keys inadequate to ensure privacy
and security. They oppose export encryption controls and requirements for key
recovery features. They object to the government using the export process to force
the development of key recovery encryption products, rather than allowing market
forces to prevail, and to the government’s role in determining who can serve as key
recovery agents. These groups argue that strong encryption is needed, for example,
to enhance the prospects for electronic commerce and other uses of computer
networks. The willingness of consumers to buy goods via the Internet could be
markedly affected by their beliefs as to whether credit card numbers will be secure.
Businesses using computers for either internal or external communications need to
ensure that competitors or other unauthorized parties cannot gain access to
proprietary information. Privacy advocates argue that consumers should be assured
that personal, medical and financial information transmitted by or stored in computers
will be protected. They note that since 128-bit non-key recovery encryption is
available worldwide either by downloading it from the Internet or buying it from
foreign firms, the U.S. government already has lost control of influencing its
availability. A 1997 survey conducted by Trusted Information Systems found 656
foreign encryption products available from 29 countries (in addition to 963 U.S.
products). A 1998 report by the Economic Strategy Institute, Finding the Key,
concluded that if the Administration’s policies remained in effect, the U.S. economy
would lose $35-96 billion by 2002 in lost encryption product sales; slower growth in
encryption-dependent industries; foregone cost savings and efficiency gains from the
Internet, intranets, and extranets; and indirect effects throughout the economy.
In June 1999, a study conducted by George Washington University, titled the
“Growing Development of Foreign Encryption Products in the Face of U.S. Export
Regulations,” found over 800 encryption products available from 35 foreign
countries.1 At least 167 of those products were found to use strong encryption. Over
512 companies either manufacture or distribute cryptographic products (of quality
comparable to U.S. products) in over 70 countries outside the United States. In June
1999, the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) produced its second annual
report on the encryption policies of foreign nations and international organizations
titled “Cryptography and Liberty,” concluding that “in the vast majority of countries
[both developed and developing] cryptography may be used, manufactured, and sold
without restriction.” On April 3, 2000, EPIC released its third annual international
1[http://www.seas.gwu.edu/seas/institutes/cpi]

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review of encryption policies, covering 135 countries. The report found the relaxation
of export controls was continuing, but that law enforcement agencies were seeking
new authority and new funding to gain access to private keys and personal
communications.
S u p p o r t e r s o f
PROPONENTS AND OPPONENTS OF
encryption export controls
ENCRYPTION EXPORT CONTROLS
agree that strong encryption
is needed but insist that law
Proponents: the Clinton Administration (notably the Department of
Justice and the National Security Agency) and others concerned about
enforcement and national
the ability of terrorists and other criminal groups to conduct activities
security concerns demand
unmonitored if strong non-key recovery encryption is widely available.
that, when authorized, the
Opponents:
government be able to
• computer hardware and software manufacturers who wanted to
intercept and decrypt
market the same products for domestic and foreign markets and worried
that they would lose market share to foreign competitors who did not
electronic communications or
have to abide by such limits. They were also concerned that no one
decrypt stored computer data
would buy encryption products for which the U.S. government could
where undesirable activity is
obtain the key.
• U.S. businesses that wanted to use the same computer systems they
suspected. Law enforcement
had in their home offices with their foreign clients; and
and national security officials
• privacy and consumer groups, which are still not satisfied with the
wanted to ensure their ability
latest Clinton Administration encryption policy, want individuals to have
access to the best encryption possible without regard to key recovery
to access the plaintext of the
features.
information. The method
most often discussed was to
obtain the key needed to unscramble encrypted information from key recovery agents.
Hence, they supported the use of strong encryption products as long as they included
key recovery features, and wanted to limit the development of strong non-key
recovery products. While conceding some strong non-key recovery encryption
products were already available, they claimed use of these products was not
widespread. They argued that while the U.S. government cannot prevent the
availability of strong non-key recovery encryption, at least it could be restrained, and
future generations of encryption products (with key recovery) would displace those
without key recovery capabilities.
Although the publicity surrounding the encryption debate centered on access to
stored computer data, electronic communications are equally important to the law
enforcement and national security communities. An Internet message, for example,
is stored data when it resides on a server or an individual’s computer, but it is an
electronic communication while it is being transmitted between computers. The
encryption export regulations apply to products for encrypting other electronic
communications, not just those between computers. Telephones, whether wired or
wireless, are also covered. The 1994 Communications Assistance to Law
Enforcement Act (CALEA, P.L. 103-414) requires telecommunications carriers to
ensure their equipment permits the interception of any electronic communication by
law enforcement officials.2 If the communication is encrypted, law enforcement
agencies want to ensure they can decrypt it, too. (CALEA requires the
2For further details, see CRS Report RL30677, Digital Surveillance: The Communications
Assistance for Law Enforcement Act and FBI Internet Monitoring
, January 25, 2001.

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telecommunications carrier to provide decrypted information if the carrier itself is
responsible for the encryption, but not if the customer has encrypted it.)
Administration Policy and Industry Reactions
The Clinton Administration consistently supported arguments by law
enforcement and national security agencies that the government must be able to gain
access to the plaintext of encrypted electronic data and messages when undesirable
activity is suspected. In addition to international criminal activity, the Administration
(notably the FBI) wants to be able to monitor domestic criminal activity. The
Administration always permitted use of any strength encryption, without a key
recovery requirement, in the United States. Rather than attempting to change that
policy directly, the Administration used the indirect route of export controls to
influence what types of encryption products were available, both here and abroad.
Initially, the Clinton Administration sought to restrain the development of strong
encryption products by prohibiting export of greater than 40-bit encryption (with a
few exceptions). The Administration also tried several approaches to promote
“voluntary” use of key recovery agents. In April 1993, the Administration released its
“Clipper chip” policy requiring emplacement of special encryption computer chips
(called Clipper, an encryption device used for unclassified but sensitive government
communications) into new government equipment for voice communications, with
two government agencies, NIST and the Department of Treasury, jointly serving as
key escrow agents (each holds part of the key). The Administration implemented this
policy in 1994 for sensitive but unclassified voice communications in the federal
government through a Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) called the
Escrowed Encryption Standard (EES, or FIPS-185). The Administration hoped that
industry would accept the Clipper chip for its own use, but industry strongly objected
to the key escrow provisions, particularly the fact that government agencies would
hold the keys. In July 1994, the Administration agreed to work with the private
sector to develop a “voluntary” key escrow system for data using “trusted third
parties” as escrow agents instead of government agencies. This proposal was referred
to by its detractors as “Clipper II.”
Industry continued to object to the key escrow concept as well as the export
controls, leading to the legislation discussed below. In May 1996, the Administration
released a draft paper on encryption policy, followed by a July statement by Vice
President Gore. Called “Clipper III” by its opponents, these documents outlined
policy changes the Administration was considering. Among other things, the term
“key recovery” replaced “key escrow” to emphasize the positive attributes of key
escrow in providing a means to recover a key that is lost, stolen, or corrupted.
Furthermore, “key escrow” had come to be identified with the concept of the
government holding the key. Under the key recovery policy, a trusted third party or
an organization itself can serve that function (“self escrow”) with some restrictions.
On October 1, 1996, Vice President Gore announced the changes to the
Administration’s policy, to focus on the need for strong encryption, as long as it
included key recovery features. The key recovery agent would be required to give the

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key to duly authorized law enforcement officials if undesirable activity is suspected
(the three types most often cited were drug cartels, child pornographers, and
terrorists). The associated executive order was signed November 15, and the
Administration published an “interim final” regulation on December 30, to last two
years, with the following details: continuation of no restrictions on domestic use or
import of any encryption; no key length restrictions on export of encryption products
if a key recovery system was used for that product; for 56-bit encryption products
without key recovery systems, a one-time review was required before exporting the
product, and within two years the exporter must have developed a key recovery
system; export licenses were granted in 6-month increments to hold exporters to a
timetable to ensure the key recovery systems were being developed (if not, the export
license was not renewed); trusted parties served as key recovery agents, and in some
cases, organizations were allowed to escrow keys themselves (self-escrow) if they met
certain requirements; and commercial encryption was removed from the Munitions
List and responsibility for commercial encryption export licensing was transferred
from the State Department to the Commerce Department, with the Department of
Justice serving an advisory role in commercial encryption export decisions. Foreign
governments would apply to U.S. courts to gain access to keys, as they do when
seeking other types of evidence. During the next two years, the Commerce
Department granted some waivers for banking and financial services.
On September 3, 1997, FBI Director Louis Freeh testified to the Senate
Judiciary Committee that there was a need for domestic use restrictions on encryption
products. Following that testimony, the existence of legislation proposed by the
Administration to impose domestic use restrictions became widely known among
congressional and industry groups. Vice President Gore later stated that Freeh’s
comments reflected the FBI’s view, but did not indicate a change in Administration
policy. The House Intelligence Committee, however, later approved an amendment
to legislation similar to Freeh’s position about the need for key recovery to be built
into encryption products.
In March 1998, Vice President Gore wrote to Senator Daschle restating the
Administration’s desire for a “balanced approach” to encryption policy and seeking
to “produce cooperative solutions, rather than seeking to legislate domestic controls.”
The discussions would also enable additional steps to relax export controls on
encryption products. Shortly afterwards, Secretary of Commerce Daley announced
the release of a new report on electronic commerce wherein he said that although the
Administration’s policy was the right one, its implementation was a failure. He urged
both industry and government to strive harder to reach consensus on the issue. The
Undersecretary of Commerce for the Bureau of Export Administration (BXA)
Reinsch later commented at a Congressional Internet Caucus meeting that the
Administration was no longer looking for a legislative solution to the encryption issue.
In July 1998, the Clinton Administration declassified two security algorithms
used in the Clipper chip. In September 1998 it announced plans to allow the export
of 56-bit encryption products without requiring provisions for key recovery, after a
one-time review, to all users outside seven “terrorist countries” (Cuba, Iran, Iraq,
Libya, North Korea, Syria, and Sudan). Export of encryption products of any
strength was permitted to 46 designated countries if key recovery or access to

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plaintext was provided to a third party. The Administration also supported an FBI
proposal to establish a technical support center to help law enforcement keep abreast
of encryption technologies. In December 1998, the BXA released interim rules to
implement the Administration’s export control policy initiative. The rules allowed for
the export of encryption commodities and software to U.S. companies or subsidiaries
in the finance, insurance, health-care and medical end-users, and electronic commerce
industries.
Industry Reactions
Most participants in the debate agreed that market forces would lead to the
development of key recovery-based encryption products for stored data because
companies and individuals would want to be able to replace lost, stolen or corrupted
keys. The debate was over the government’s role in “encouraging” the development
of key recovery products through export regulations and the access government
would have to the keys. Also of concern was the government’s inclusion of other
electronic communications.
While computer companies continued to argue against the Administration’s
policy, some also developed key recovery products to satisfy the policy. A group of
companies formed the Key Recovery Alliance in 1996 to identify barriers to the
development of marketable key recovery products. On March 4, 1998, a group of
more than 100 companies and organizations (some also members of the Key Recovery
Alliance) formed the Americans for Computer Privacy (ACP) coalition to lobby for
enabling the use of strong encryption, against export controls on strong encryption,
and against mandatory key recovery.3 Among the members are America On Line,
Microsoft, Sybase, the National Rifle Association, the Law Enforcement Alliance of
America, and the Business Software Alliance.
In March 1998, Network Associates announced that it had arranged for a Swiss
company to develop its own software product using specifications in a book by Philip
Zimmerman, the creator of Pretty Good Privacy (PGP). Network Associates bought
Mr. Zimmerman’s company in 1997. PGP was a 128-bit encryption product that
does not have key recovery and hence could not be exported under the current
regulations. (An older version is available via the Internet, however, which sparked
a multi-year Justice Department investigation of Mr. Zimmerman that resulted in no
action against him). Since the book could be exported, and the Swiss company
received no technical assistance from Network Associates, the company believed no
laws were broken. The Swiss product was sold by a Dutch firm under the PGP name.
Opponents of encryption controls pointed to this as evidence that the U.S.
government cannot control the spread of non-key recovery encryption.
In July 1998, as a possible compromise to the Clinton Administration, a group
of software companies announced plans to develop a product, “private doorbell”, to
capture data that could be given to law enforcement before it is encrypted and sent
over the Internet. While industry groups approved of the Administration’s encryption
export policy, they argued that 56-bit encryption had been broken and that stronger
3ACP’s web site is [http://www.computerprivacy.org].

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encryption was necessary. Furthermore, they asserted that the Department of
Commerce’s rules could render the policy ineffective in increasing their ability to
export encryption products. Privacy rights groups argued that while the new policy
may help big companies, it would not increase the availability or use of 56-bit or
stronger encryption by individual users of Internet communications.
Action in the 105th Congress
Three bills in the House and four in the Senate concerning encryption were
introduced in the 105th Congress; none were enacted, although one (H.R. 1903)
passed the House. Three (H.R. 695, S. 376, and S. 377) were versions of bills
considered in the 104th Congress, generally favoring relaxed encryption export
controls. Four new bills were also introduced. S. 909 reflected a philosophy closer
to that of the Clinton Administration than the three previous bills. H.R. 1903 focused
broadly on computer security issues and the role of NIST. H.R. 1964 focused broadly
on computer privacy and security issues. S. 2067 was generally viewed as pro-
industry and pro-privacy. Hearings were held by six House committees (Commerce,
International Relations, Intelligence, Judiciary, National Security, and Science) and
two Senate committees (Judiciary; and Commerce, Science, and Transportation).
The Security and Freedom Through Encryption (SAFE) Act (H.R. 695,
Goodlatte) originally sought to relax export controls on encryption, although versions
of H.R. 695 as reported from various committees had substantially different
provisions. The bill was eventually considered by the Committees on Judiciary,
International Relations, Commerce, National Security, and Intelligence. Amendments
adopted by the latter two committees reversed some of the provisions of the original
bill by maintaining or increasing restrictions on export controls of encryption. The
Rules Committee did not take action on the bills.
The Encrypted Communication Privacy Act of 1997 (S. 376, Leahy) prohibited
mandatory use of key recovery but allowed law enforcement to access the key under
court order if key recovery is used; codified existing domestic use policy; gave the
Secretary of Commerce exclusive jurisdiction over commercial encryption exports;
liberalized export controls; made it a crime to use encryption to obstruct justice; and
established liability protection and penalties for “key holders.” The bill also established
procedures for foreign governments to access keys or decryption assistance.
The Promotion of Commerce On-Line in the Digital Era (PRO-CODE) Act of
1997 (S. 377, Burns) prohibited mandatory key recovery and established an
Information Security Board as a forum to foster communication and coordination
between industry and government. The bill also codified existing domestic use policy
and gave the Secretary of Commerce exclusive jurisdiction over commercial
encryption exports. It liberalized export controls but required the publisher or
manufacturer of encryption software or hardware to report to the Secretary of
Commerce within 30 days after exporting a product on the product’s encryption
capabilities. The report would have included the same information required under the
December 30, 1996 regulations, but would be provided after export instead of as a
condition of obtaining a license.

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The Secure Public Networks Act (S. 909, McCain et. al.) codified existing
domestic use policy; established penalties for use of encryption in commission of a
crime; encouraged but did not require use of key recovery; established procedures for
government approval of key recovery agents and certificate authorities; required key
recovery agents, whether or not registered by the government, to disclose recovery
information to lawfully authorized federal or state government entities; provided
liability protection for key recovery agents acting pursuant to the Act; permitted
export of 56-bit encryption products without key recovery if they meet certain
conditions; permitted export of any strength encryption product if it is based on a
qualified key recovery system and meets certain other conditions; and allowed the
President to waive provisions of the bill for national security or domestic safety and
security reasons. During and after markup, the committee adopted amendments
establishing an Encryption Export Advisory Board (EEAB) with four government
(CIA, FBI, NSA and the White House) and eight industry representatives to make
recommendations on whether export exemptions should be granted for non-key
recovery products stronger than 56-bits. The committee ordered the bill reported, but
the report was never filed.
The Senate Judiciary Committee requested sequential referral of S. 909, and held
a hearing on July 9, 1997 where FBI Director Louis Freeh expressed reservations
about the bill because it allowed widespread use of strong encryption within the
United States regardless of whether it has key recovery. Freeh amplified his concerns
at a September 3 hearing before the Subcommittee on Technology, Terrorism, and
Government Information. He stated that he wanted U.S. manufacturers to be
required to build key recovery into encryption products, and that imported encryption
products also be required to include key recovery. He further stated that achieving
the goal of immediate lawful decryption “could be done in a mandatory manner. It
could be done in an involuntary manner. ...” He later added that he thought
legislation should first include the requirement that key recovery be built into
encryption products and “then take up the more complex discussion about how that’s
enabled....” He also stated that Internet service providers should be required to be
able to decrypt communications immediately.
The Encryption Protects the Rights of Individuals from Violation and Abuse in
Cyberspace (E-PRIVACY) Act (S. 2067, Ashcroft, et. al.) prohibited federal or state
agencies from linking the use of encryption for authentication or identification to the
use of encryption for confidentiality purposes; required that the use of encryption
products be voluntary and market-driven; outlined procedures for U.S. and foreign
law enforcement agencies to access decryption keys or assistance in decrypting
electronic communications or stored data; established a National Electronic
Technologies (NET) Center in the Department of Justice to help law enforcement
keep pace with encryption technology; made the use of encryption to obstruct justice
a crime; established an Encryption Export Advisory Board to determine whether
comparable foreign products are commercially available; maintained the President’s
authority to prohibit export of encryption products to countries that support
international terrorism or to impose embargoes on exports to or imports from a
specific country; made electronic records in networked storage be treated in law as
though the record had remained in the possession of the person who created the
record; and set the circumstances under which the government may require a mobile

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electronic communication service to reveal the real-time physical location of a
subscriber, and may obtain information from pen register and trap and trace devices.
The Computer Security Enhancement Act (H.R. 1903, Sensenbrenner) amended
and updated the Computer Security Act of 1987, enhancing the role of the National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). As passed by the House (H.Rept.
105-243), the bill required NIST to promote the use of commercial-off-the-shelf
encryption products by civilian government agencies; clarified that NIST standards
and guidelines are not intended as restrictions on the production or use of encryption
by the private sector; provided funding for computer security fellowships at NIST;
and required the National Research Council to conduct a study of public key
infrastructures. A section requiring NIST to develop standardized tests and
procedures to evaluate the strength of foreign encryption products was removed
before passage. The bill passed the House and was reported without amendment by
the Senate Commerce Committee October 13, 1998 (S.Rept. 105-412).
The Communications Privacy and Consumer Empowerment Act (H.R. 1964,
Markey) covered a range of computer privacy and security issues. With regard to
encryption, the bill codified existing domestic use policy, prohibited the government
(federal or state) from conditioning the issuance of certificates of authentication or
certificates of authority upon use of key recovery systems, and prohibited the
government (federal or state) from establishing a licensing, labeling or other
regulatory scheme that requires key escrow as a condition of licensing or regulatory
approval. The bill also required the National Telecommunications and Information
Administration (NTIA) to conduct a study on, inter alia, how data security issues
affect electronic commerce, including identification of generally available technologies
(including encryption) for improving data security.
Action in the 106th Congress
On February 25, 1999, Representative Goodlatte introduced a new version of
SAFE (H.R. 850), similar to the bill introduced in the 105th Congress, with a new
provision directing the Attorney General to compile examples in which encryption has
interfered with law enforcement. The bill was reported by the Judiciary Committee
on April 27, and was referred jointly and sequentially to Committees on International
Relations, Commerce, Armed Services, and Intelligence. Hearings were held by the
Committees on Commerce (May 5 and 25), International Relations (May 18) and
Intelligence (June 9 and July 14), Armed Services (July 1 and 13), . The bill has
gained 257 co-sponsors, with a majority of both Republican and Democratic
leadership. The bill was reported (amended) by the Committee on Commerce.
(H.Rept. 106-117, Part II) on July 2, and by the remaining three committees (parts
III, IV, and V) on July 23.
The five versions of H.R.850 differed significantly. The versions passed by the
Committees on the Judiciary, Commerce, and International Relations codified the
regulations for unrestricted domestic use and sale of encryption, prohibited the
government from mandating key escrow practices for the public, and liberalized the
controls governing the export of strong encryption. One of the amendments passed

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by the Commerce Committee made it a crime to fail to decrypt information upon
court orders, raising opposition from privacy rights advocates. The Armed Services
and Intelligence Committee versions, in contrast, had minimal or no mention of
domestic use of encryption, and increased the authority of the President in restricting
the controls governing the export of strong encryption. All of the bills, except for the
version by the Armed Services Committee, established criminal penalties for the use
of encryption in the furtherance of a criminal act. The Intelligence Committee bill,
however, provided greater details than the others for criminalizing the use of
encryption in a criminal act. In addition, each Committee added provisions for
specific agencies and circumstances. For example, the Commerce Committee
established a National Electronic Technologies (NET) Center in the Department of
Commerce to promote the exchange of information regarding data security techniques
and technologies, and the International Relations Committee directed the Secretary
of Commerce to consult with the Attorney General, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and the Drug Enforcement Administration before approving any license
to export encryption products to any country identified as being a major drug
producer. The Intelligence Committee bill authorized appropriations for the Technical
Support Center, at the FBI. The five versions were sent to the House Rules
Committee on July 23, 1999. No further action was taken.
In the Senate, On April 14, 1999, Senators McCain, Burns, Wyden, and Leahy
introduced S. 798, the Promote Reliable Transactions to Encourage Commerce and
Trade (PROTECT) Act. The bill would have immediately raised the maximum
exportable key length of encryption products to 64 bits; S. 798 also set a deadline of
January 1, 2002 for the federal adoption of the Advanced Encryption Standard (which
uses a 128 bit key length) and allowed the export of products employing AES at that
date. S.798 allowed the export of strong (greater than 64 bit) encryption products
with key recovery features, as well as the export of strong encryption products to
"legitimate and responsible entities," including publicly traded firms, U.S. corporate
subsidiaries or affiliates, firms required by law to maintain plaintext records, and
others. S.798 did not contain criminal provisions for the use of encryption in the
furtherance of a crime (unlike H.R.850), and prohibited domestic controls and
mandatory plaintext access. The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing on the
bill on June 10. The Senate Commerce Committee approved S. 798 on June 23,
1999. No further action was taken on the bill.
Deep divisions remained between those who oppose liberalizing encryption
policy and those who advocate it. While the computer industry, and privacy and
consumer advocacy groups generally favored both bills, H.R. 850 was considered
more pro-industry because of its greater liberalization of encryption export controls.
The Departments of Defense and Justice remained opposed to both bills, arguing that
the existing export restrictions were necessary to prevent the use of encryption by
undesirable groups. In addition, on July 27, 1999, Representative Goss introduced
two more bills on encryption policy: H.R. 2616 (which reflected House Intelligence
Committee mark-up of H.R. 850), and H.R. 2617 (which proposed tax incentives for
the nation's encryption software manufacturers to develop products with key
recovery).
Three other bills were introduced containing provisions regarding encryption.
On April 21, 1999, Senator Leahy introduced S. 854, which included provisions that

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promoted the use of encryption by (1) prohibiting government requirements for non-
federal use of key recovery or plaintext access practices, (2) prohibiting federal
agencies from requiring non-federal entities to use specific encryption products to
receive services, (3) prohibiting federal encryption products that interact with
commercial systems from interfering with the encryption capabilities of the
commercial products, and (4) prohibiting the disclosure of decryption assistance to
foreign governments without a court order. The bill was referred to the Committee
on the Judiciary. On June 9, 1999, Representative Sensenbrenner introduced H.R.
2086, which included a provision directing the National Science Foundation to
undertake a study comparing the availability of encryption technologies in foreign
countries to those subject to U.S. export restrictions. On July 1, 1999, Representative
Sensenbrenner introduced H.R. 2413, which contained provisions for establishment
of a public key management infrastructure and encryption standards for federal
computers.
On September 21, 1999, President Clinton sent to Congress proposed legislation
that would ensure that law enforcement maintained its ability to access decryption
information stored with third parties, and would be allowed to withhold information
in courtrooms on its techniques used in decryption. The bill also authorized $80
million over four years for the FBI Technical Support Center, which would serve as
a technical resource in responding to the use of encryption by criminals. That
legislation was never introduced in the 106th Congress.
Issues in the Debate
Key Recovery
Key recovery was the fundamental tenet of the Clinton Administration
encryption policy. The Administration wanted law enforcement access to keys for
encrypted data stored by computers, transmitted between computers, or other types
of electronic communications. Not only did the Administration view this as critical for
U.S. users, but it sought to create a global key management infrastructure (KMI, now
referred to as public key infrastructure, or PKI) to ensure confidentiality for the
growth of global electronic commerce, and monitoring undesirable activity (by
terrorists, drug cartels, or child pornographers, for example).
Many opponents of encryption controls agreed that key recovery has advantages
for recovering a lost, stolen, or corrupted key, but believed market forces would drive
the development of a PKI for stored computer data without government involvement.
Less likely is a market-driven demand for key recovery products for electronic
communications. In any case, opponents of controls insisted that the government
should have no role in choosing who holds the keys. They feared the government
would have unfettered access to private files and communications, though the Clinton
Administration stressed that proper legal authorization would be required. Liability
protection for proper release of keys and penalties for improper use or release of keys
were an important aspects of Administration policy.

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Questions about technical vulnerabilities that could be introduced if key recovery
is incorporated into computer systems were raised in a report (updated June 1998),
The Risks of Key Recovery, Key Escrow, and Trusted Third Party Encryption, by an
ad hoc group of cryptographers and computer scientists. They concluded that key
recovery “introduces a new and vulnerable path to the unauthorized recovery of data”
and the “massive deployment of key-recovery-based infrastructures to meet law
enforcement’s specifications will require significant sacrifices in security and
convenience and substantially increased costs....”
The Clinton Administration acknowledged that global agreement on key
recovery and PKI policy were essential to its policy and worked with the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to develop guidelines for a
global PKI. In 1997, the OECD released those guidelines, which stated that “national
cryptography policies may allow lawful access to plaintext, or cryptographic keys, or
encrypted data” (emphasis added). Hence, OECD neither endorsed nor rejected the
concept of law enforcement access to decryption keys. The European Commission
published a communication in October 1997 that noted the need for strong encryption
to advance electronic commerce and expressed strong reservations about regulating
encryption (by requiring key recovery, for example). Since then, Canada, Finland,
Germany, France, and Taiwan announced a relaxation or elimination of their key
recovery laws. Lacking international consensus, many believed it was unlikely that
mandated key recovery would survive.
Export Restrictions
Using the export process to influence the type of encryption products that were
available in the United States and abroad was one strategy of the Clinton
Administration's policy. The Administration points to threats to national security and
public safety that would arise if criminals and terrorists used encryption that the U.S.
government could not decrypt. Administration representatives argued that NSA, for
example, had been able to thwart criminals and terrorists because NSA intercepted
communications in time; if those communications had been encrypted with strong
encryption, their task would have been much more difficult. NSA opposed passing
a law that does not require companies to notify the government of what encryption
products are being exported and to whom. Others pointed to difficulties in stopping
future attacks in an era when terrorists could use strong encryption. Opponents of the
Administration’s policy countered that the United States, through export controls,
could not prevent access to strong non-key recovery encryption by criminals and
terrorists because it was already available elsewhere in the world. They further
pointed out that the current policy of no restrictions on domestic use or import of
encryption meant that domestic threats would not be affected.
Until its September 1999 announcement, the Clinton Administration used the
export process to encourage companies to develop products with key recovery
features. There were no limits on the strength of encryption products that could be
exported if they include key recovery. Opponents of export controls objected to the
government mandating the use of key recovery, arguing that foreign companies were
not bound by such restrictions. They argued that customers who did not want U.S.
law enforcement or national security agencies having access to decryption keys would
buy encryption products from foreign suppliers. They insisted that the U.S.

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government could not control the availability of strong non-key recovery encryption
products, since they already could be procured from foreign suppliers, or downloaded
from the Internet. They asserted U.S. policies simply ensured that U.S. companies
would lose market share to foreign competitors and would not achieve the overall
objective of assuring law enforcement access to encrypted information of criminal
groups. They pointed out that drug cartels, for example, could develop their own
encryption products rather than buying commercially available products that would
allow governments to access the keys.
Proponents of export controls conceded that some criminal groups could
develop their own encryption, but insisted that at some point they would have to
interact with mainstream companies (such as banks or airlines). If the mainstream
companies were using key recovery-based systems, this would provide an opportunity
for law enforcement to access at least some of the groups’ activities. They also
pointed out that even though law enforcement agencies were allowed to tap telephone
lines for decades, criminals still used telephones because the infrastructure is already
in place, easily used, and less costly than building an alternative system for their own
use. As for foreign competition, proponents argued that although some strong
non-key recovery products were available from the Internet or foreign suppliers, they
were not widely used and some were not as strong as their advertisements claimed.
Some cases involving encryption export controls have been the basis for legal
action. One involves University of Illinois Professor Daniel Bernstein and his
attempts to publish, both in print and on the Internet, the source code for his Snuffle
encryption algorithm. The government argued that the export required a license
under the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) and the International Traffic in Arms
Regulations (ITAR) through which AECA is implemented. On April 15, 1996, U.S.
District Judge Marilyn Patel ruled that computer source code is “speech” and
protected under the Constitution. On December 18, she further ruled that ITAR
represents an unconstitutional prior restraint on free speech. Following the December
30, 1996 shift in jurisdiction over commercial export products from the State
Department to the Commerce Department, Bernstein’s lawyers asked her to review
the new regulations. On August 25, 1997 she ruled that the new regulations also
violate the First Amendment. On June 21, 1999, the Department of Justice filed a
petition with a federal appeals court for reconsideration in the Bernstein case, which
on May 6 upheld a ruling that encryption source code is scientific expression
protected by the First Amendment.
An opposite ruling was made in March 1996 by Judge Charles Richey in a case
involving Philip Karn. Mr. Karn was denied permission to export source code on
diskette even though the source code had been published in a book and hence was in
the public domain. The State Department designated the diskette as a “defense
article” under AECA and denied its export. Judge Richey dismissed the complaint
because the AECA does not permit judicial review of what is designated by the
President as a “defense article.” Mr. Karn appealed the ruling, but by the time the
appeal was heard in January 1997, the export regulations had changed so the case was
remanded back to DC District Court. On July 7, 1998, U.S. District Judge James
Gwin ruled that an individual could not challenge encryption export restrictions on the
grounds that they abridge his right to free speech on the Internet.

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Domestic Use
The focus of the encryption debate has at times shifted to include potential
changes to domestic use policy. Current U.S. policy allows any type of encryption
to be used in or imported into the United States. Clinton Administration concerns
that attempting to change this policy would be unsuccessful was a factor in its choice
of using export controls to influence what encryption products are available for
domestic use. FBI Director Freeh’s testimony to the Senate Judiciary Committee on
September 3, 1997 heralded a shift in the debate toward the possibility of requiring
that key recovery be built into products manufactured in or imported into the United
States, and possibly enabled by the manufacturer, not only the user. The
Administration's policy, however, did not change on this issue.
In September 1999, questions were raised over the discovery of a software
element, labeled NSAKey, in the security code of the Microsoft Windows operating
system. Microsoft stated that the element was a back-up used for authentication of
encryption components if the first key is damaged. Some question whether the key
might enable the National Security Agency (NSA) to gain access to Windows
operating systems. While it is unlikely that Microsoft would have collaborated
surreptitiously with NSA, the dispute highlights the level of tension between industry
and privacy rights groups over key recovery practices.
Final Clinton Administration Policy
In September 1999, the Clinton Administration announced its new encryption
export policy, to make encryption products of any key length, after a technical review,
exportable without a license to users in any country except seven "terrorist countries".
Regulations implementing the Administration’s new encryption export policy were
issued by the BXA on January 14, 2000.4 According to these rules, retail encryption
commodities and software of any key length can be exported without a license to any
non-government end user in any country except the seven state supporters of
terrorism, and can be re-exported to anyone (including Internet and
telecommunications service providers). Exports previously allowed only for a
company’s internal use can now be used for communication with other firms, supply
chains, and customers. Exports to government end-users still require a license.
Exporters must report to BXA on where the encryption product is exported, and
BXA will determine whether products qualify as retail by reviewing their
functionality, sales volume, and distribution methods. In addition, if source code
(computer language instructions written by programmers) is made publicly available
(under “open source” policies) and no royalty is charged for its use, the code is not
subject to export restrictions, a provision that was not included in an earlier draft and
was the source of criticism by industry and privacy rights groups.
Over the next year, the Administration announced further updates to its
encryption policy. On July 17, 2000, changes were announced to allow exports of
any strength encryption products to the governments of European Union and eight
additional countries. It also allowed exports, without a technical review or reporting
4Complete regulations are posted at [http://www.bxa.doc.gov/encryption/default.htm]

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requirements, of encryption embedded in short-range wireless products (e.g., mobile
phones, audio devices, cameras, and videos). On October 2, 2000, the National
Institute for Standards and Technology announced its selection of a new Advanced
Encryption Standard for federal agency use to protect unclassified information. The
algorithm for the standard, known as Rijndael, was developed by Belgian scientists
and will be made freely available for use by the private sector.
While the computer industry is satisfied with the latest rules, some privacy rights
groups (including the American Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, and the Electronic Privacy Information Center) argue that the remaining
ambiguities in the rules make encryption technology overly cumbersome for
individuals to use. Because the regulations could be reversed by a future
Administration, these groups still advocate the passage of legislation to codify the
changes in U.S. encryption policy.

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