Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!swrinde!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!uupsi!sunic!kth.se!perand From: perand@admin.kth.se (Per Andersson) Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions Subject: Re: Unix software and USSR Keywords: USSR BSD Unix Message-ID: <1990Sep26.182109.8317@kth.se> Date: 26 Sep 90 18:21:09 GMT References: <1990Sep25.145615.29488@hq.demos.su> <4113@altos86.Altos.COM> Organization: Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden Lines: 27 In article <4113@altos86.Altos.COM> steve@Altos.COM (Steve Scherf) writes: >> Vadim Antonov >> DEMOS, Moscow, USSR >A while back you mentioned that you have the source to BSD, etc., over there >at the Kurchatov Institute of Atomic Energy. Tell me, do I just not understand >the technology protection rules in the U.S., or isn't Unix source barred from >the USSR? I suppose you also have source to the DES encryption algorithm? >We're not even allowed to ship the C library with the DES algorithm to Europe, >so I can hardly believe you are allowed to have the source! Enlighten me. You are allowed to ship - if you get a licence. Digital has one, so now they are the first to ship Kerberos outside US. But - back to DES - Unix was previously no no, don't know if that has been lifted, but when Berkley shipped 4.2 to Europe, and probably the rest of the world they forgot to take out DES. Rumours say that the lawyers said -'You shouldn't have done that' and Berkeley said -'Oh, you wan't to help us to retrieve the tapes?'. Apart from that there are many many DES implementations not written in the US, and therefore not restricted. Check out the one which was distributed in comp.sources.something, it was carefully set up not to pass the US, which is illegal, but sent both from Australia and Finland I think. Such rubbish. Per -- Per Andersson (perand@admin.kth.se, perand@stacken.kth.se) Trying a new job at Bofors Electronics, still reading news at the Royal Institute of Technology Time, got the time tick tick tickin' in my head - Joe Jackson