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Crypto Secrecy and
Privacy in the New Code War Stephen
Levy
Reviewed for the Sunday
Telegraph
At the start of “Crypto”, Stephen
Levy’s enthralling account of modern cryptography, the author
makes the following devastating
observation: “It may feel like we’re performing an intimate
act when, sequestered in our rooms and cubicles, we casually use our cell phones and
computers to transmit our thoughts, confidences, business plans, and even our money. But
clever eavesdroppers, and sometimes not-so-clever ones, can
hear it all. We think we’re
whispering, but we’re really broadcasting.”
“Crypto” is the story of the
technological developments that can potentially protect out
privacy, enable e-commerce and,
in short, provide the locks and keys of the Information Age.
Prior to the 1970s, research into codes and codebreaking was hidden away in shadowy
government laboratories, but as encryption has become a
matter of economic necessity it
has gradually emerged into the daylight. Levy, a highly
respected technology journalist, has painstakingly researched the
breakthroughs of the last thirty years, describing how a
matrix of mavericks broke the
government monopoly on cryptography.
In particular, the mavericks
overcame a problem that had seemed so formidable that for two
thousand years everyone had
assumed that it was insurmountable. Essentially, if I want to
send you an E-mail, but I am concerned that there is an eavesdropper, then I will
encrypt my message according to some recipe. In order for
you to decipher the E-mail, you
need to know the recipe so that you can reverse it, but
obviously the recipe has to be
kept secret from the eavesdropper. Hence, the problem is, how
do I get the recipe to you securely, when I know that there is an eavesdropper on the line?
For centuries, a sender and
receiver would often rely on a trusted third party to courier
the recipe between the two of
them, but even this jeopardises their privacy. As one security
expert put it, it is difficult for two people to have intimacy when someone else is in the
bed. Intuitively, there seems to be no way for two
people who have never met to
establish a secure communication channel without the help of a
third party. Nevertheless,
mathematics obliges us with a solution, one that was uncovered
step by step by half a dozen quirky Americans. Levy paints each of the
cryptographers in loving detail, establishing them as mighty
heroes in the battle for
privacy.
The solution is known as public key
cryptography. Unfortunately, there is not enough space in this
review to outline what must be
the greatest breakthrough in the history of cryptography, but
suffice to say that I still vividly remember the afternoon when I first read about
it some seven years ago. It is a concept of such audacity and elegance that, even today, the
mere thought of it makes me tingle.
The invention of public key
cryptography ignited a struggle between civil libertarians and
law enforcers. Modern
cryptography is so strong that any two people in world can
download free crypto-software and send each other an encrypted email that cannot be
deciphered by the combined forces of all the world’s secret
services. Some view this as an
opportunity to establish a golden age of privacy. However,
critics of freely available strong cryptography point out that it would allow
criminals and terrorists to evade police wiretaps.
Levy examines the political issues
surrounding encryption and outlines the story so far. What is
becoming clear is that the
civil libertarians are currently winning the argument thanks
to the support of the e-commerce lobby, which needs cryptography in order to conduct
secure transactions. However, this is an ongoing debate,
and one which we all need to be
aware of, because our privacy and security are at stake.
“Crypto” is an excellent primer
for those interested in both the politics and science of
cryptography and should be required reading for anybody interested in what will be one of
the most influential technologies of the next
decade.
Other
Books by Steven Levy
include:
Hackers: Heroes of the
Computer Revolution. Find out more from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.
Insanely Great: The
Life and Times of Macintosh, the Computer That Changed
Everything. Find out more from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com.
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