1993-05-03 - government free reign on RSA – from whence?

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From: ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 7959e4903c292d2e8ca7751102e25464629da99e7bf02233fe87660366d8d59a
Message ID: <9305030311.AA11639@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1993-05-03 03:11:52 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 2 May 93 20:11:52 PDT

Raw message

From: ld231782@longs.lance.colostate.edu
Date: Sun, 2 May 93 20:11:52 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: government free reign on RSA -- from whence?
Message-ID: <9305030311.AA11639@longs.lance.colostate.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


This is driving me crazy. I have asked many people that refer to the
U.S. government's free reign on the use of patents in general and RSA
technology in particular. There are a lot of very respectable and
reputable specialists on this list and I hope they can answer my question.

What *specifically* gives the government the *right* to use patents
developed `with public money' without licensing, or the RSA patent in
particular (if the two are not the same)?

Court precedents? A specific law? `congressional hearings'?  A
condition of agreement to receive NSF funds?

>what< ?

This little tidbit of information has gotten tossed around so
frequently and haphazardly (a bit like an Urban Legend) and it really
deserves some sharp scrutiny, at least a bit more than I have ever
seen, I suspect it might have some interesting implications to consider.





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