Security bosses seek to dissolve encryption bans

"Variable nightmare" gives e-commerce a headache

NEWS An international security consortium is set to lobby governments around the world to withdraw restrictions on encryption standards.

The Jericho Forum, whose membership includes many chief security officers from FTSE 100 companies, will push for the removal of encryption restrictions within the next three-to-five years.

Nick Bleech, a member of the Jericho Forum and an IT security director for Rolls Royce, said: "This is a big problem for us. We have 200 locations [around the world]. In industrialised countries it's not a problem, the real problem comes from places such as China. But the Chinese government is extremely keen to further new development."

Countries such as China, Israel, Russia and Saudi Arabia, have stipulated strict rules governing the use of encryption tools, and in some cases have banned the practice. The Jericho Forum, which is looking to move away from the perimeter model for cybersecurity in favour of an approach that would make data totally secure, hinted this could cause problems for e-commerce.

"We can solve this," Bleech added. "But I don't think we'll come up with a universal solution that will solve everything. We don't have the clout to do that yet."

"We've got to lobby governments across borders, find out what restrictions there are and close them. At the moment it is a variable nightmare. The timeframe is three to five years before this comes to fruition."

Bleech said that governments usually respect each others' encryption policies and make concessions for each other.

Bleech was speaking at Infosecurity 2005.

Dan Ilett writes for ZDNet UK

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