1995-09-10 - Re: Bizdos citizenship?

Header Data

From: Andrew.Spring@ping.be (Andrew Spring)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: 520464793e8019d3fb382d84d2a4e026bf6527614b03c39b8607aea9d07a589f
Message ID: <v01510100ac78c76f2125@[193.74.217.15]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-09-10 20:10:58 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 10 Sep 95 13:10:58 PDT

Raw message

From: Andrew.Spring@ping.be (Andrew Spring)
Date: Sun, 10 Sep 95 13:10:58 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: Re: Bizdos citizenship?
Message-ID: <v01510100ac78c76f2125@[193.74.217.15]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

>In correspondence with someone outside the US regarding ITAR regulations,
the remark was made that Jim Bizdos was Greek and not a U.S. citizen.  Is
this statement in the same class as an Elvis sighting?  Or if it is true,
what impact would ITAR have on foreign nationals working for a US company
involved with export restricted crypto?
>
>Please don't get carried away and turn this into a Net rumor.  I'm just
curious if anyone on the list can confirm or deny the citizenship comment.

Jim Bidzos is a US Permanent Resident Alien and Greek citizen.  He has a
Green Card.  It doesn't have any ITAR impact, since the ITAR term 'Foreign
Person' doesn't include Green Carded Resident Aliens.

It probably wouldn't have any impact anyway, since he's a business weenie,
and not a software weenie.  Now, if he had a _programmer_ that wasn't a US
Citizen, that would be a-whole-nother kettle of fish.

He's previously stated that he would become a US Citizen, if it were not for
the fact that Greece would require him to give up his Greek (and hence his
EC) citizenship.  See Simson Garfinkle's book on PGP for more details.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: 2.6.2

iQCVAwUBMFMZFI4k1+54BopBAQGK7gP+Oq+FjqjCeQziC16Ryq64i1tXMAhV/jaX
86TBumss/GPpaVfLGtDS3FZARK9eTo4gVPTfABtvIa/u6QzZGL9zCT5z5nWT5QJ4
Koj5jnGsnNpXx3YGa1bJfZOI4ctkRovPWpyPa4jWOEooJz5UbvCCwGW/YoYMlvCs
sQ//Qs7uDPs=
=ARLj
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----







Thread