1998-09-07 - Re: IP: Encryption Expert Says U.S. Laws Led to Renouncing of Citizenship

Header Data

From: Mok-Kong Shen <mok-kong.shen@stud.uni-muenchen.de>
To: cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Message Hash: 93bdeb118f168219c21adf434693e7e8dbaa26acc488963582341b51cc030c20
Message ID: <35F3A0CC.37385749@stud.uni-muenchen.de>
Reply To: <v0401173cb2186ae5e832@[139.167.130.246]>
UTC Datetime: 1998-09-07 09:04:09 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 7 Sep 1998 17:04:09 +0800

Raw message

From: Mok-Kong Shen <mok-kong.shen@stud.uni-muenchen.de>
Date: Mon, 7 Sep 1998 17:04:09 +0800
To: cypherpunks@cyberpass.net
Subject: Re: IP: Encryption Expert Says U.S. Laws Led to Renouncing of   Citizenship
In-Reply-To: <v0401173cb2186ae5e832@[139.167.130.246]>
Message-ID: <35F3A0CC.37385749@stud.uni-muenchen.de>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



Robert Hettinga wrote:
> 
> Sameer Parekh, the president of the Web server company C2 Net, said:
> "I think it's essential if you want business that you're doing your
> development overseas. It's pretty clear to anyone internationally that
> anything exportable [from the United States] is a joke."

Let's wait and see whether AES will be genuinely exportable.

M. K. Shen





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