The Wassenaar Arrangement has put up the Dec. 3 lists agreed to by members:
To summarize the crypto rules: Software is freely exportable if it has been made available without restrictions upon its further dissemination. Copyright restrictions do not count. Mass market cryto software is no longer covered by the General Software Note, but by a Cryptography Note. Under that note, mass market software and hardware is not controlled if it does not use symmetric keys longer than 64 bits and the cryptographic functionality cannot easily changed by the user. Systems that do not meet those conditions are export-controlled if they use symmetric encryption with more than 56 bit keys, algorithms based on factorization or on logarithms in finite fields with more than 512 bit keys (e.g. RSA, DH) or on discrete logarithms in other groups (such as elliptic curves) with more than 112 bits. They may be exported for personal use. There are exceptions for execution of copy-protected software and read-only media and for phones without end-to-end encryption. The list contains an amusing editorial error which would for the first time allow the export of strong crypto hardware. "Symmetric algorithm" is defined to mean 'a cryptographic algorithm using an identical key for both encryption and decryption', whereas an algorithm using 'different mathematically-related keys for encryption and decryption' is an "asymmetric algorithm". Since the definition differentiates algorithms by symmetry rather than by their cryptographic properties, there is no restriction whatsoever on asymmetric secret-key encryption algorithms. Those algorithms typically are not based on factorization or discrete logarithms. That is, they are no longer controlled by the Wassenaar arrangement. Better yet, mass-market crypto systems are not controlled if they 'do not contain a "symmetric algorithm" employing a key length exceeding 64 bits'. So you can use, say, 2048 bit RSA with an asymmetric secret-key algorithm of 128 bit key length (so the system does not contain a symmetric algorithm), and you're free to export it.