May I ask what you strive to achieve by specifically stating in your license that: This software may not be used for terrorism, paedophilia or crimes against humanity. Or are you just trying to make sure that terrorists don't just get killed in action and/or sentenced to death (mutiple times in some countries) but also sentenced to whatever is says for breaking an arbitrary user agreement? It's not like a law, rule or ethic of any kind is going to stop any of those 3, if it did they wouldn't exist. We can therefore conclude that you cannot have included it to actually stop those three. Is it then a statement against those? Sort of a "I do not agree with (condone) the activities" of those three? Personally I think stating that you fear this to be used for those things is helping them, some of them exist only to cause such fear. And why should you poise technological process with such fear? -Lewis 2011/8/7 John Young <jya@pipeline.com>
Dear Sir/Madam,
I am trying to stir some interest in my cryptography software/algorithm website (which I consider to break new ground in the field of cryptography):
(It is C++ software for *BSD and Linux).
The 4 items available are:
C12G16 (E-mail crypto) L15 (CSPRNG). IBAA32/64 (CSPRNG).
Rick Carey