1994-08-28 - Re: PGP availiable on magazine cover

Header Data

From: Phil Karn <karn@qualcomm.com>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: c9f9f3188f6b4b26e77d7445de056399d327ea97a63282561d2593eb088c37f7
Message ID: <199408280701.AAA13684@servo.qualcomm.com>
Reply To: <199408280257.TAA10532@kaiwan.kaiwan.com>
UTC Datetime: 1994-08-28 07:01:00 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 28 Aug 94 00:01:00 PDT

Raw message

From: Phil Karn <karn@qualcomm.com>
Date: Sun, 28 Aug 94 00:01:00 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: PGP availiable on magazine cover
In-Reply-To: <199408280257.TAA10532@kaiwan.kaiwan.com>
Message-ID: <199408280701.AAA13684@servo.qualcomm.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


>This is a good thing.  By being published in that fashion, PGP thus meets
>the requirements under ITAR to be classified public domain, and can thus
>now be legally exported from the US.

Uh, my experience so far with the book "Applied Cryptography" shows
that the government discriminates on the basis of recording medium --
inked Roman characters on paper are okay, but magnetic ASCII bytes on
mylar aren't, even if the information is exactly the same.

And yes, I've explained to them in great detail, in a formal
administrative appeal, why this distinction is silly, stupid, absurd
and most likely unconstitutional.

Stay tuned. The latest word is that a response to my appeal (filed in
early June and still pending despite a rule that calls for a 30-day
response) is supposed to arrive in mid-September. For background, see
the files ftp:/ftp.cygnus.com/pub/export/applied*.

Phil





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