From: Greg Rose <Greg_Rose@sydney.sterling.com>
To: Mark Aldrich <maldrich@grctechs.va.grci.com>
Message Hash: 9b6057457842a011c9401e47a3e47104b24c01c3253fcef5cc978e5482df10de
Message ID: <pgpmoose.199602261055.39873@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
Reply To: <Pine.SCO.3.91.960223131904.25492A-100000@grctechs.va.grci.com>
UTC Datetime: 1996-02-26 00:31:53 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 26 Feb 1996 08:31:53 +0800
From: Greg Rose <Greg_Rose@sydney.sterling.com>
Date: Mon, 26 Feb 1996 08:31:53 +0800
To: Mark Aldrich <maldrich@grctechs.va.grci.com>
Subject: Re: Ascom Tech License for IDEA
In-Reply-To: <Pine.SCO.3.91.960223131904.25492A-100000@grctechs.va.grci.com>
Message-ID: <pgpmoose.199602261055.39873@paganini.sydney.sterling.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
Mark Aldrich <maldrich@grctechs.va.grci.com> wrote:
"In the US, ViaCrypt pays the royalties to Ascom for every copy of
ViaCrypt PGP shipped. Users of ViaCrypt PGP have nothing to worry
about. Personal users of MIT PGP in the US also have nothing to worry
about because Ascom's published position deals with 'commercial use'. The
only people who need to do anything are people overseas using PGP 2.6i or
2.6ui in their businesses. They need to license IDEA from Ascom."
As another data point, I (sitting in Australia)
attempted to buy a licence through the Web page
and encrypted emailed credit card, and in return
received a phone call from Zurich. I was informed
that IDEA was not patented in Australia, and my
attempt to pay was appreciated but declined.
Europe generally has patent coverage I believe.
Greg.
Greg Rose INTERNET: greg_rose@sydney.sterling.com
Sterling Software VOICE: +61-2-9975 4777 FAX: +61-2-9975 2921
28 Rodborough Rd. http://www.sydney.sterling.com:8080/~ggr/
French's Forest 35 0A 79 7D 5E 21 8D 47 E3 53 75 66 AC FB D9 45
NSW 2086 Australia. co-mod sci.crypt.research, USENIX Director.
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