1998-09-01 - Please help! Snakeoil offers on the Canadian Firearms Digest mailing list…

Header Data

From: “Jean-Francois Avon” <jf_avon@citenet.net>
To: “Cypherpunks” <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Message Hash: 0634b2321419b2b45522de14f0dd7163286ac22060086f251441972c004fee2f
Message ID: <199809010219.WAA26139@cti06.citenet.net>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1998-09-01 02:16:38 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 19:16:38 -0700 (PDT)

Raw message

From: "Jean-Francois Avon" <jf_avon@citenet.net>
Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 19:16:38 -0700 (PDT)
To: "Cypherpunks" <cypherpunks@toad.com>
Subject: Please help!  Snakeoil offers on the Canadian Firearms Digest mailing list...
Message-ID: <199809010219.WAA26139@cti06.citenet.net>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Please Reply To: cdn-firearms-digest@broadway.sfn.saskatoon.sk.ca

As of today, I'm off the list.  It must be the Fickle Finger of Fate
that made that post appear on the CFD today!


It looks like snake oil, it taste like snakeoil, is smell like snakeoil;
Is *it* snakeoil?

======= forwarded by JFA, from Canadian Firearms Digest ==========

Date: Mon, 31 Aug 1998 15:30:34 -0600
From: Lee Scroggins <goobr2@ptd.net>
Subject: New/easy to use strong file encryption fyi

For anyone interested in easy to use strong file encryption, or just
afraid that your gun related data/Emails may be too tempting for the
officials, the following article points to an interesting site
(http://www.filesafety.com).

Please note that the US govt seems to be having a hissy fit about it
(you might want to look while it still exists).


>
> - - The Strange Case of Charles Booher - -
>
> The California man whose software drew the interest of the Commerce
Department
> now has been hit with a subpoena. Charles Booher must appear before a U.S.
> District Court grand jury in San Jose to explain what he is doing with his
> encryption software, SecureOffice.
>
> Individuals can be charged with violating federal restrictions on the
export
> of encryption software, but the government also appears to be worried that
> Booher has simply made it to easy to use extremely secure
encryption--with or
> without export. Booher's software scrambles data with long 168-bit keys.
>
> The subpoena Booher received also ordered him to bring to the courthouse
the
> source code for his product, suggesting the government wants to reverse
> engineer it.
> Booher intends to patent his source code and says he does not plan to
hand it
> over to anyone.
>
>
http://foxnews.com/js_index.sml?content=/scitech/wires2/0827/t_rt_0827_27.sm
l
> View the Commerce Dept.'s subpoena at http://www.filesafety.com




========= end of forwarded text==========


Jean-Francois Avon, B.Sc. Physics, Montreal, Canada
  DePompadour, Socit d'Importation Lte
     Limoges fine porcelain and french crystal
  JFA Technologies, R&D physicists & engineers
     Instrumentation & control, LabView programming
PGP keys: http://bs.mit.edu:8001/pks-toplev.html
PGP ID:C58ADD0D:529645E8205A8A5E F87CC86FAEFEF891
PGP ID:5B51964D:152ACCBCD4A481B0 254011193237822C







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