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PGP Encryption Will Survive, Inventor Says
Even though Network Associates has shelved the product, it remains a valuable tool to many.
Pretty Good Privacy will go on, despite a move by Network Associates to shelve the encryption product after it couldn't find a buyer, PGP inventor Phil Zimmermann says.
Although Zimmermann sold PGP to Santa Clara, California-based NAI in 1997, the protocols for the encryption code are open to all on the Internet.
"PGP is an institution," Zimmermann says in a telephone interview from his home in the Silicon Valley. "It is larger than any single code base from any single company. There are a lot of very concerned people from the PGP user community who want to try to find a solution to fill this niche."
NAI embarked on a plan to trim its product line in October and has been looking for a buyer for its PGP products. However, the company confirmed earlier this week that it had dropped its plans to sell PGP because it couldn't find a buyer willing to pay what the company wanted, says Jennifer Kevney, vice president of corporate communications at NAI.
"Obviously, we didn't get the offer we thought represented the value [of PGP]," she says.
Maintenance Mode
The products will be placed into "maintenance mode," she says, meaning that although they won't be developed any further, bug fixes will be released as necessary for one year, and service contracts will be honored until the end of their terms.
Despite this, Zimmermann says PGP will continue and will probably re-emerge in time.
"A lot of people are worried about PGP, and with enough political will, something will be done," Zimmermann says. "That does not necessarily mean buying the business from NAI."
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks on the U.S., Zimmermann says, there is an even greater need for a secure encryption protocol that the public can use. Companies need to be able to protect themselves from attack, and individuals need to be able to protect their own civil liberties from the government, he adds.
Government Intervention
Zimmermann got in trouble with the government in the early 1990s because federal authorities felt that the dissemination of PGP worldwide violated U.S. antiterrorism laws. The government dropped its case in 1996.
"We're going through hard times, and we've got to hang onto this thing," Zimmermann says. "Our civil liberties are likely to be eroded by this whole experience; that increases the need to keep our hands on strong crypto and keep a hold of it."
The creation of PGP began when members of the Internet Engineering Task Force began developing the encryption code in the 1980s and early 1990s. Zimmermann says a lot of people came together to help develop the encryption protocols and to create an industry standard for all to use. NAI was an active participant in creating that standard.
That public standard would allow other companies or individuals to create new PGP products, and Zimmermann says he's hopeful that someone picks up the challenge.
"Anyone contemplating such a development project should contact me," Zimmermann says. He can be contacted through his Web site.
Sam Costello of the IDG News Service contributed to this report.

For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2011 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.
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