LIBERTARIA IN CYBERSPACE or Cyberspace more hospitable to ideas of liberty and crypto anarchy by Timothy C. May
To: Extropians@gnu.ai.mit.edu
From: tcmay@netcom.com (Timothy C. May)
Subject: Libertaria in Cyberspace
Date: Tue, 1 Sep 92 11:42:12 PDT
Here
are a few points about why "cyberspace," or a computer-mediated network, is more
hospitable than physical locations for the kind of "crypto anarchy" libertarian
system I've been describing.
Several folks have commented recently about ocean-going libertarian havens,
supertankers used as data havens, and so forth. In the 1970s, especially, there
were several unsuccessful attempts to acquire islands in the Pacific for the
site of what some called "Libertaria." (Some keywords: Vanuatu, Minerva, Mike
Oliver, Tonga)
Obtaining an entire island is problematic. Getting the consent of the
residents is one issue (familiar to those on the this list who weathered the
Hurrican Andrew diversion debate). Being _allowed_ to operate by the leading
world powers is another....the U.S. has enforced trade embargoes and blockades
against many nations in the past several decades, including Cuba, North Korea,
Libya, Iran, Iraq, andothers. Further, the U.S. has invaded some
countries---Panama- is a good example---whose government it disliked. How long
would a supertanker "data haven" or libertarian regime last in such an
environment? (Stephenson's fascinating Snow Crash didn't address
tthe issue of why the "Raft" wasn't simply sunk by the remaining military
forces.)
I should note that the recent splintering of countries may provide
opportunities for libertarian (or PPL, if your prefer to think of it in this
way) regions. Some have speculated that Russia itself is a candidate, given that
it has little vested in the previous system and may be willing to abandon
statism. If several dozen new countries are formed, some opportunities exist..
The basic problem is that physical space is too small, too exposed
to the view of others. "Libertaria" in the form of, say, an island, is too
exposed to the retaliatation of world powers. (I won't go into the "private
nukes" strategy, which I need to think about further.)
A floating private nation (or whatever it's called) is too vulnerable to a
single well-placed torpedo. Even if it serves as a kind of Swiss bank, and thus
gets some of the same protection Switzerland got (to wit, many leaders kept
their loot there), it is too vulnerable to a single attacker or invader. Piracy
will be just one of the problems.
Finally, how many of us want to move to a South Pacific island? Or a North
Sea oil rig? Or even to Russia?
[ Top ]
Cyberspace looks more promising. There is more "space" in cyberspace, thus
allowing more security and more colonizable space. And this space is coterminous
with our physical space, accessible with proper terminals from any place in the
world (though there may be attempts in physical space to block access, to
restrict access to necessay cryptographic methods, etc.).
I won't go into the various cryptographic methods here (see my earlier
posting on the "Dining Cryptographers" protocol and various other postings on
public key systems, digital mixes, electronic cash, etc.). Interested readers
have many sources. (I have just read a superb survey of these new techniques,
the 1992 Ph.D. thesis of Jurgen Bos, "Practical Privacy," which deals with these
various protocols in a nice little book.)
Alice and Bob, our favorite cryptographic stand-ins, can communicate and
transact business without ever meeting or even knowing who the other is. This
can be extended to create virtual communities subject only to rules they
themselves reach agreement on, much like this very Extropians list. Private law
is the only law, as there is no appeal to some higher authority like the Pope or
police. (This is why I said in several of my potings on the Hurricane Andrew
debate that I am sympathetic to the PPL view.)
And this is the most compelling advantage of "Crypto Libertaria": an
arbitrarily large number of separate "nations" can simultaneously exist. This
allows for rapid experimentation, self-selection, and evolution. If folks get
tired of some virtual community, they can leave. The cryptographic aspects mean
their membership in some community is unknown to others (vis-a-vis the physical
or outside world, i.e., their "true names") and physical coercion is reduced.
Communalists are free to create a communal environment, Creative Anachronists
are free to create their own idea of a space, and so on. I'm not even getting
into the virtual reality-photorealistic images-Jaron Lanier sort of thing, as
even current text-based systems are demonstrably enough to allow the kind of
virtual communities I'm describing here (and described in Vinge's "True Names,"
in Gibson's Neuromancer, in Sterling's Islands in the
Net, and in Stephenson's Snow Crash...though all of them
missed out on some of the most exciting aspects...perhaps my novel will hit the
mark?).
But will the government allow these sorts of things? Won't they just torpedo
it, just as they'd torpedo an offshore ooirig data haven?
[ Top ]
The key is that distributed systems have no nexus which can be knocked out.
Neither Usenet norFidoNet can be disabled by any single government, as they are
worldwide. Shutting them down would mean banning computer-to-computer
communication. And despite the talk of mandatory "trap doors" in encryption
systems, encryption is fundamentally easy to do and hard to detect. (For those
who doubt this, let me describe a simple system I posted to sci.crypt several
years ago. An ordinary digital audio tape (DAT) carries more than a gigabyte of
data. This means that thhe least significant bit (LSB) of an audio DAT
recordingng carries about 8megabytes of data! So Alice is stopped by the Data
Police. They ask if she's carrying illegal data. She smiles inocently and say
"No. I know you'll search me." They find her Sony DATman and ask about her
collection of tapes and live recordings. Alice is carrying 80 MB of data---about
3 entire days worth of Usenet feeds!---on each and every tape. The data are
stored in the LSBs, completely indistinguishable from microphone and
quantization noise...unless you know the key. Similar methods allow data to be
undetectably packed into LSBs of the PICT and GIF pictures now flooding the Net,
into sampled sounds, and even into messages like this...the "whitespace" on the
right margin of this message carries a hidden message readable only to a few
chosen Extropians.)
I've already described using religions and role-playing games as a kind of
legal cover for the development and deployment of these techniques. If a church
decides to offer "digital confessionals" for its far-flung members, by what
argument will the U.S. government justify insisting that encryption not be used?
(I should note that psychiatrists and similar professionals have a
responsibility to their clients and to their licensing agencies to ensure the
privacy of patient records. Friends of mine are using encryption to protect
patient records. This is just one little example of how encryption is getting
woven into the fabric of our electronic society. There are many other examples.)
In future discussions, I hope we can hit on some of the many approaches to
deploying these methods. I've spent several years thinking about this, but I've
surely missed some good ideas. The "crypto anarchy game" being planned is an
attempt to get some of the best hackers in the Bay Area thinking along these
lines and thinking of new wrinkles. Several have already offered to help
further.
Some have commented that this list is not an appropriate place to discuss
these ideas. I think it is. We are not discussing anything that is actually
illegal, even under the broad powers of RICO (Racketeer-Influenced and Corrupt
Organizations Act, used to go after "conspiracies" of porn dealers and gun
dealers, amongst others). What we are discussing are long-range implications of
these ideas.
In conclusion, it will be easier to form certain types of libertarian
societies in cyberspace than in the real world of nations and physical
locations. The electronic world is by no means complete, as we will still live
much of our lives in the physical world. But economic activity is sharply
increasing in the Net domain and these "crypto anarchy" ideas will further erode
the power of physical states to tax and coerce residents.
Libertaria will thrive in cyberspace.
-Tim
May
[ Top ]
|