From: Hal Abelson <hal@martigny.ai.mit.edu>
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: de0624f3fc676cba2161696101b16df481612760b5fd8ae37bd63ec22654800a
Message ID: <9405261731.AA02933@toad.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-05-26 17:31:21 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 26 May 94 10:31:21 PDT
From: Hal Abelson <hal@martigny.ai.mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 26 May 94 10:31:21 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: MIT Statement on PGP
Message-ID: <9405261731.AA02933@toad.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE, May 26, 1994
Contact: Ken Campbell, Director, MIT News Office
(617 253-2703 or 2700
NON-COMMERCIAL USE
MIT Issues Software Codes
To Promote Internet Privacy
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology has issued--for
non-commercial use--a free public software package that will allow
people to send private coded messages on electronic networks in
the United States.
The release provides non-commercial U.S. users of the Internet
with the ability to obtain secure communication and data
protection. Commercial versions have been licensed to over four
million users.
The software, known as PGP Version 2.6 (for "pretty good privacy")
uses the RSAREF(TM) Cryptographic Toolkit, supplied by RSA Data
Security, Inc. of Redwood City, Calif. It is being released by MIT
with the agreement of RSADSI.
PGP 2.6 is fully licensed, for U.S. non-commercial users, to use
public-key technology that has been licensed by MIT and Stanford
University to RSA Data Security and Public Key Partners.
Public-key technology gives users of electronic mail the ability
to sign messages in an unforgeable way, as well as the ability to
send confidential messages that can be read only by the intended
recipients, without any prior need to exchange secret keys.
"This agreement solves the problem of software being distributed
on the Internet which potentially infringed the intellectual
property of MIT and the licensee, RSA, " said Professor James D.
Bruce, vice president for information systems.
Although prior versions of PGP have been available on the
Internet, the potential infringement of MIT and Stanford
University patents has prevented it from coming into widespread
adoption.
END
Return to May 1994
Return to “m5@vail.tivoli.com (Mike McNally)”