1995-07-24 - Re: Exporting from Canada (was Re: Let’s try breaking an SSL RC4 key)

Header Data

From: “Richard Martin” <rmartin@alias.com>
To: “M. Plumb” <aba@atlas.ex.ac.uk
Message Hash: 4c5dcac470dbc3a4d9a20d4b522e432d1e00d275cbaa0f7026307a8877137623
Message ID: <9507241057.ZM10085@glacius.alias.com>
Reply To: <199507241415.KAA26817@wink.io.org>
UTC Datetime: 1995-07-24 14:59:47 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 24 Jul 95 07:59:47 PDT

Raw message

From: "Richard Martin" <rmartin@alias.com>
Date: Mon, 24 Jul 95 07:59:47 PDT
To: "M. Plumb" <aba@atlas.ex.ac.uk
Subject: Re: Exporting from Canada (was Re: Let's try breaking an SSL RC4 key)
In-Reply-To: <199507241415.KAA26817@wink.io.org>
Message-ID: <9507241057.ZM10085@glacius.alias.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


On Jul 24, 10:15am, M. Plumb wrote:
> I have been checking out the Canadian rules for exporting crypto.
> Basically (according to "A Guide to Canada's Export Controls",
> published by the Department of Foreign Affairs and International
> Trade) public domain software can be exported from Canada -- one
> might need to file a form with Canadian Customs for each export,
> but the export it self is legal. (Public domain is defined as
> technology that has been made available without restrictions upon
> it's further dissemination. Copyright restrictions do not remove
> technology from the public domain. So, I'm not quite sure if PGP
> falls within that definition.)
Synchronicity! [argh] I had been considering making a posting along
the same lines. Note that the form required [EXT 1042(09/93)] has a
$15 processing fee. (Which might be peanuts if we're selling a
frigate, but which is a royal pain for a piece of crypto.)

Page 1, "A guide to Canada's Export Controls", April 1994

General "Software" Note
This list does not embargo "software" which is either:
1.	Generally available to the public by being:
	a.	Sold from stock at retail selling points, without
		restriction, by means of:
		1.	Over-the-counter transactions;
		2.	Mail order transactions; or
		3.	Telephone call transactions; and
	b.	Designed for installation by the user without further
		substantial support by the supplier; or
2.	"In the public domain".



<sigh>

Excerpts relating to Canadian Export controls on cryptography should
be up somewhere off http://www.io.org/~samwise/interesting.html#privacy
towards the end of the week.

frodo =)

-- 
Richard Martin 
Alias|Wavefront - Toronto Office [Co-op Software Developer, Games Team]
rmartin@alias.com/g4frodo@cdf.toronto.edu
Trinity College UofT ChemPhysCompSci 9T7+PEY=9T8 Shad Valley Waterloo 1992





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