On Tue, 26 Aug 1997, John Gilmore wrote:
[There will be many chances to talk to the press today about this. Call them up. Tell them what it means.]
Lucky Green said:
The ruling provides an interesting data point, but is inconsequential to the software industry.
Jonathan Wienke said:
The decision seems to be a step in the right direction, but a VERY small one.
However you slice it, getting a Federal judge to declare both crypto export control regimes unconstitutional is a major accomplishment.
Of course, but Commerce may keep harassing people who attempt crypto export. One thing that occurred to me was that if Commerce prosecutes everyone but Bernstein, then Mr. Bernstein could become a _very_ wealthy man. Think about it. How hard would it be to include the Snuffle algorithm in PGP, etc. How much for a Bernstein crypto license? Talk about muddying the waters. Mr Bernstein keeps upgrading his algorithm until it becomes a major portion of most crypto packages. This decision looks like the first major chink in the armor. Depending on how long it takes to free up the rest of the algorithms (if ever) Bernstein could recoup his legal investment many times over. Better yet if its public domain then everybody could include it _now_. An interesting type of virus. Jim Burnes