Elon University

Superdistribution

By separating revenue collection from acquisition of copies, hard drives and computers can disappear and become just part of the plumbing that conveys information-age goods between producers and consumers. Computers and telecommunications links become invisible, a transparent window through which individuals can communicate, cooperate, coordinate, and compete as members of an advanced socioeconomic community.

Superdistribution

Making software … count how many times it has been invoked is easy, but making it count how many times it has been copied is much more difficult. So why not build an information-age market economy around this difference? If revenue collection were based on monitoring the use of software inside a computer, vendors could dispense with copy protection altogether. They could distribute electronic objects for free in expectation of a usage-based revenue stream.

Prophet of Privacy: Whitfield Diffie Took Cryptography Out of the Hands of the Spooks and Made Privacy Possibly in the Digital Age – By Inventing the Most Revolutionary Concept in Encryption Since the Renaissance

One of the things that frightens me about this Clipper sort of thing is that if it’s accepted, society can have far more influence over people by governing what technology is available to them than it can by making laws about what they do and punishing them if they don’t obey the laws.

Prophet of Privacy: Whitfield Diffie Took Cryptography Out of the Hands of the Spooks and Made Privacy Possibly in the Digital Age – By Inventing the Most Revolutionary Concept in Encryption Since the Renaissance

The key-escrow proposal is dreadful … We’re moving our society into a telecommunications environment. I think security mechanisms are fundamental social mechanisms, and what is needed is widespread trust in them – but there’s no trusting secret mechanisms designed by an organization most of whose budget goes to spying.