Lucky Green writes: : At 4:17 1/24/96, Timothy C. May wrote: : : >The usual issue: That if a foreign-originated product even appears to be a : >standard (so far, none have been), and includes strong crypto, then the NSA : >and other agencies will simply change the rules. Thus, if extremely strong : >crypto from "Netscape-Zurich" starts to have a significant market presense : >in the U.S., then some law will be passed to restrict it. : : I agree. The reason for enforcing ITAR is to keep good crypto of the : *domestic* market. If ITAR no longer accomplishes that, new laws will be : passed. That is not so clear. The ITAR are regulations, not a law passed by Congress. The ITAR regulations relating to the export of cryptography are probably not authorized by any law (as well as being unconstitutional). The reason for all the silly twists and turns under the ITAR is that the censors never succeeded in getting any law forbidding the use of cryptography, and it is not at all certain that they could get such a law passed. There is very little that can be done under the ITAR to keep Netscape-Zurich from spreading and it is Congress, not the Office of Defense Trade Controls or the NSA that passes laws. -- Peter D. Junger--Case Western Reserve University Law School--Cleveland, OH Internet: junger@pdj2-ra.f-remote.cwru.edu junger@samsara.law.cwru.edu