1993-02-13 - PGP Customs investigation

Header Data

From: geoffw@nexsys.net (Geoff White)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 9b11c34ed110a1d1a0e70696e0701fa7669a6688475f6fef237b4d2854c72542
Message ID: <9302132122.AA13118@nexsys.nexsys.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-02-13 21:40:46 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 13 Feb 93 13:40:46 PST

Raw message

From: geoffw@nexsys.net (Geoff White)
Date: Sat, 13 Feb 93 13:40:46 PST
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: PGP Customs investigation
Message-ID: <9302132122.AA13118@nexsys.nexsys.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


This might be old news by now but for what it's worth ...



----- Begin Included Message -----

[stuff deleted ... ]

Subject: PGP Customs investigation
Content-Length: 1235
X-Lines: 34
Status: RO

>Date: Fri, 12 Feb 93 14:47:55 -0800
>Originator: pgp-dev@oc.com
>Errors-To: hughes@soda.berkeley.edu
>Reply-To: pgp-dev@oc.com
>Sender: pgp-dev@oc.com
>Version: 5.5 -- Copyright (c) 1991/92, Anastasios Kotsikonas
>From: prz@sage.cgd.ucar.EDU (Philip Zimmermann)
>To:
>Subject: PGP Customs investigation
>
>
>I just got a call from a criminal investigator from the US Customs
>in San Jose.  She wants to fly out here to Colorado next Thursday to 
>ask me how PGP got out of the USA.  I told her I didn't export it,
>but software published on domestic Internet sites can leak overseas.
>She said I was not legally obligated to answer her questions, but that
>she would like to come here and ask me questions about the program, and
>any other information I wanted to provide on how it got exported.
>She had a copy of the PGP 2.0 User's Guide (and, I presume, the software).
>
>I thought this bit of news would be of general interest to PGPeople.
>
>
>Philip Zimmermann
>12 Feb 93
>
>
>

----- End Included Message -----






Thread