From: Ryan Anderson <randerso@ece.eng.wayne.edu>
To: Adam Back <aba@dcs.ex.ac.uk>
Message Hash: 1e2b2500468e65523121e597c852f749fdc5969c85161e4e0fa763e0b57a96e7
Message ID: <Pine.GSO.3.95.970811120026.29827A-100000@ece>
Reply To: <199708111432.PAA00907@server.test.net>
UTC Datetime: 1997-08-11 16:20:52 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 00:20:52 +0800
From: Ryan Anderson <randerso@ece.eng.wayne.edu>
Date: Tue, 12 Aug 1997 00:20:52 +0800
To: Adam Back <aba@dcs.ex.ac.uk>
Subject: Re: Comments on PGP5.0 OCR (was Re: fyi, pgp source now available , internationally)
In-Reply-To: <199708111432.PAA00907@server.test.net>
Message-ID: <Pine.GSO.3.95.970811120026.29827A-100000@ece>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Mon, 11 Aug 1997, Adam Back wrote:
> How about a book full of 2D barcodes?
>
> As a plus perhaps the book would be more compact, as you could gzip it
> first -- the full source tree looks to be over a foot of doublesided
> paper!
Well, remember the reason we did this: to get the code out of the US in a
way that the government couldn't screw with at all. Readable text is
clearly a publication, and thus unrestrictable. There is a chance,
however small, that gzip (and tarring I'd assume) the tree and then
putting it in as text (or bar-coding it) would cloud the issue some.
(Isn't part of this to do with human-readable as opposed to machien
readable?)
Besides, this way it's easier to spot the errors simply by comparing, with
bar-codes and such you'd never ever be able to look at the errors yourself
and find them.
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Ryan Anderson - <Pug Majere> "Who knows, even the horse might sing"
Wayne State University - CULMA "May you live in interesting times.."
randerso@ece.eng.wayne.edu Ohio = VYI of the USA
PGP Fingerprint - 7E 8E C6 54 96 AC D9 57 E4 F8 AE 9C 10 7E 78 C9
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