EFF John Gilmore a legend leaves

John Gilmore, 76, co-founded the EFF in 1990 and in 31 years since then "has provided leadership and guidance on many of the most important digital rights issues we support today," the EFF said in a statement Friday, saying goodbye to Gilmore.

"But in recent years, we haven't had the best way to communicate and s", they add, announcing that "we were unable to agree and move forward with Gilmore in a governance role".

eff john gilmore

This is why the EFF Board of Directors recently made the difficult decision to vote for Gilmore's removal from the board.

"We are deeply grateful for the many years that Gilmore has given to the EFF as a leader and advocate, and the Board has elected him as an Emerging Board Member."

"I'm so proud of the impact the EFF has had on maintaining and extending individual rights and freedoms as the world has adapted to major technological change," Gilmore said.

"My departure will leave a strong board and an even stronger staff that is deeply interested in these issues."

John Gilmore co-founded the EFF in 1990 with John Perry Barlow, Steve Wozniak and Mitch Kapor and provided significant financial support that was critical to the organization's survival and growth for many years.

Since then, Gilmore has worked closely with EFF's staff, board, and attorneys on privacy, , The , encryption and more.

In the 1990s, Gilmore found government documents confirming the First Amendment problem with government controls on the export of encryption and helped launch Bernstein's lawsuit against the US Department of Justice (DOJ), which ended in a lawsuit. decision that wants the source code of each software to be protected by the First Amendment.

Thus, the government's regulations that prevented its publication were deemed unconstitutional. The decision made it legal in 1999 for web browsers, websites and software such as PGP and Signal to use encryption of their choice.

Gilmore also led the EFF effort to design and build DES , which was seen as a fundamental breakthrough in how we evaluate computer security and the public policies that control the use of encryption.

At that time (1970), the data encryption standard (DES) was integrated into ATMs and banking networks, as well as popular software around the world.

But U.S. government officials claimed the DES was safe and could steal it.

The EFF DES Cracker publicly demonstrated that DES was actually so weak that it could be cracked in a week with an investment of less than $350.000. This catalyzed the creation and adoption of the much stronger Advanced Encryption Standard (AES by Encryption Standard), now widely used for information security worldwide.

The EFF always valued Gilmore's opinions, even when they disagreed. It is no exaggeration to say that he would not exist without him.

Gilmore also co-founded the alt * hierarchy on Usenet, co-founded the Cypherpunks mailing list, and co-founded Cygnus Solutions (according to his Wikipedia page).

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Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

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