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Strategies & Market Trends : Waiting for the big Kahuna -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: William H Huebl who wrote (37747)2/25/1999 7:03:00 PM
From: j g cordes  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 94695
 
Anyone care about this? INTC privacy issues..
" Intel won't back down on
chip ID feature
By Robert Lemos, ZDNN
February 25, 1999 9:59 AM ET

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. -- Intel Corp. has little intention
of backing away from plans to ship Pentium III chips
with a controversial ID tracking technology, two
company executives said.

Indeed, if Intel has learned anything, it is the value of
patience.

"The issue is what will be acceptable and when," said
Paul Otellini, executive vice president of Intel's
architecture business group, in an interview at Intel's
developer forum here.

While surprised at the level of public outcry at Intel's
(INTC) decision to add electronically identifiable serial
numbers in its next generation of processors, Otellini
has no doubt that the Santa Clara, Calif., company's
security scheme will eventually gain acceptance in the
market.

He pointed to the more than 500,000 people who signed
up for FreePC.com's giveaway of computers. To get one
of the 30,000 PCs, each customer would be subject to
constant advertisements and give up a great deal of
personal information.

"The people who are willing to give up their privacy for a
free PC are our market," he said.

Intel announced it had added a 64-bit serial number to
its processors that, along with a previous 32-bit CPU
ID, identifies every processor, acting like a vehicle ID
number. While Intel will not collect the serial numbers,
the company expects e-commerce companies and
corporations to use the identifiers to enhance security.

After outraged privacy advocates called for a boycott of
Intel products, the company backed off somewhat:
Although it preferred computer makers to keep the chip
"on" by default, it gave them the option of turning it off.
However, a report on Monday from a German computer
magazine that the serial number could be turned on by
hackers -- even when the consumer had turned it off --
has left the status of the ID number at shipping in
doubt.

What's the problem?

In the wake of the debate, Intel is having trouble
reconciling a public worried about privacy with
consumers who are willing to give it up for a free
product.

"Why does adding 64 fuses to a chip raise such a
brouhaha?" asked Pat Gelsinger, vice president and
general manager of Intel's desktop products group.
"You have no less than three ID numbers on your
computer that can be used to identify you."

Gelsinger believes that the actual debate is less about
Intel's plans and more about privacy-conscious
consumers becoming accustomed to the current lack of
privacy on the Internet.

"I think there is a bubbling concern about developing
relationships on the Internet," he said. "In our Internet
society, the mores and procedures for privacy and
social norms have yet to be developed. The Pentium III
just released the tension."

Intel had tried to avoid the controversy by polling privacy
advocates and the industry alike. "We had the
discussion -- whether to have it on or off -- and there
was no clear consensus," said Otellini. "Our belief is
that as long as people had informed choice there would
be no problem."

Shouldn't be regulated

Privacy advocates argue that there would be little
choice left to the consumers. Instead, key features --
such as financial transactions at banks and stock
trading at online services -- may require the consumer
to turn the processor on.

Still, Intel has taken a firm stance against regulating
privacy online. "Just as we don't want the Internet
regulated, we don't want to be regulated by privacy
policies," said Pat Gelsinger. "You will never hear Intel
say they need regulation."

David Sobel, general counsel for the Electronic Privacy
Information Center, called Otellini's and Gelsinger's
comments at the conference "disappointing and a little
bit surprising" given the outcry over the chip ID number.

"We have never been satisfied with the so-called fix
they have proposed," which involved asking OEMs to
turn the ID feature off before shipping systems equipped
with the chip, Sobel said. "For them to claim they have
made a concession on this is disingenuous,"
particularly in light of reports that the feature is
vulnerable to hacking, he