Bill Sommerfeld says:
They also confirmed Tom Knight's suspicions about what they're going to do when someone reverse engineers the chip and publishes the Skipjack algorithm & the family key: they've got a patent application filed, under a secrecy order; if the algorithm is published, they'll lift the secrecy order and have the patent issued, and use that to go after anyone making a compatible version.
Since when can the government patent its work? I thought that works produced by government agencies could not be copyrighted or patented. In any case, they cannot refuse to license a patent, so this isn't real protection anyway. (The hope behind people patenting things they may release in the future is to make it commercially less attractive, not to utterly prevent use.) Perry