From: reagle@rpcp.mit.edu (Joseph M. Reagle Jr.)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: dc7df39fa07752a2b35866e07722dac0584c021b34d9922eee14c762c0025a9a
Message ID: <9607241721.AA01343@rpcp.mit.edu>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1996-07-24 21:15:39 UTC
Raw Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 05:15:39 +0800
From: reagle@rpcp.mit.edu (Joseph M. Reagle Jr.)
Date: Thu, 25 Jul 1996 05:15:39 +0800
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: FTP Software Licenses Pretty Good Privacy 07/23/96
Message-ID: <9607241721.AA01343@rpcp.mit.edu>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
HAMBURG, GERMANY, 1996 JUL 23 (NB) -- By Sylvia Dennis. FTP Software,
the Internet/connectivity software company, has licensed Pretty Good
Privacy's encryption technology of the same name (PGP). Plans now call
for FTP to integrate PGP within its range of TCP/IP (Transmission
Control Protocol/Internet Protocol) software.
Under the terms of the agreement, PGP has licensed its encryption
software to FTP for use in OnNet32 2.0 for Windows 95 and Windows NT,
both versions of which will ship in the third quarter of this year on
both sides of the Atlantic.
Tom Steding, PGP's chief executive officer, said that a critical piece
of the company's business strategy is to proliferate the "seamless
integration of encryption technology" within e-mail applications
programs.
"We see this partnership as a powerful combination of two leaders who,
together, will use their considerable market weight and technical
expertise to promote and enhance the PGP towards becoming a
universally accepted industry standard," he said.
According to Rebecca Buisan, product marketing manager with FTP, the
company has made several enhancements to OnNet32 to integrate PGP into
its basic functions. There is now a two icon system which allows users
to access a tool bar, designating options to encrypt or decrypt a
message, and make a digital signature. Mail messages can also be left
on a server or computer in an encrypted format, to be decrypted and
read at will.
"Experience has proven that cryptography only works if implemented
effectively, so that it is simple for the user," she explained.
According to Buisan, FTP has conducted extensive human factors testing
to fine-tune PGP's cryptographic software into a "flexible and
intuitive application that people will be encouraged to use."
According to FTP, its implementation of the PGP encryption software
is interoperable with current freeware versions available for free
download from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) or one
of the many other FTP (File Transfer Protocol) sites that distribute
the package. The MIT site is at http://web.mit.edu/pgp .
PGP was originally developed in 1991 by Phil Zimmerman. The package
allowed PC users, for the first time, to send information in a secure
encrypted format without fear of intervention.
FTP's Web site is at http://www.ftp.com .
(19960722/Press & Reader Contact: Manuela Dorken, FTP Software,
+49-89-614130, Internet e-mail manuela@ftp.com; PGP, 415-631-1747,
Internet e-mail info@viacrypt.com)
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