Wednesday May 25 1994 23:50 danisch@ira.uka.de (Hadmut Danisch) wrote: [edited] HD> Subject: Re: My 2.3a Key is listed as a 2.6 (Aaargh!) HD> Message-Id: <9405252138.AA24321@tartarus.ira.uka.de> HD> Date: 25 May 1994 23:50:52 +0200 HD> Haa, HD> *my* key was also converted to a 2.6 key HD> (certainly just s/2.3a/2.6/g; , but it _is_ a 2.6-Key now). Mine says it's 2.7. ;-) HD> Now my public key is a 2.6 key and I am not allowed HD> to have or use 2.6, because I'm german. Isn't it lovely? I don't like to read this list and see that many posts are about the political problems with ITAR, patents and copyrights. Actually, I'm just a simple software type, so I'm glad I read somewhere (here?) that the source to PGP 2.6 will be released, so that we can correct any problems introduced in it for political reasons. As to not being allowed to have or use 2.6 in Europe, what makes you think so? I may be wrong, but I thought the only obstacle was that it may not be exported to us due to ITAR. Once it's available here there's nothing wrong with having or using it. I've seen PGP 2.5 flowing through European wires, so I think that 2.6 will come here too (if it hasn't come already). Which makes this whole mess with ITAR, patents, copyrights and US and maybe Canada only ftp sites even more difficult to understand for an outsider like me. What's the point of all this, if cyberspace knows no borders? What are MIT and RSA up to? Should this be discussed in alt.conspiracy? ;-) I humbly admit that I'm clueless... HD> Hadmut CU, Sico (sico@aps.hacktic.nl). [PGP public key:] bits/keyID Date User ID 1024/5142B9 1992/09/09 Sico Bruins <Fido: 2:280/404> Key fingerprint = 16 9A E1 12 37 6D FB 09 F6 AD 55 C6 BB 25 AC 25 (InterNet: sico@aps.hacktic.nl)