I partially agree with Tim, but RSA must be willing to make some compromises on this. Mathematical/Algorithmic patents already face lots of opposition in the user/programmer community, but charging high licensing fees on such patents will inevitably force programmers to develop freeware alternatives. I haven't seen Mailsafe, but from the reviews of it, it sounds like it is vastly inferior to PGP and not worth $125. It is also not "open" (e.g. you don't get source code?) which prevents the cypherpunk community from making modifications that they want. (I've also heard that RSA doesn't even support it well). A better course of action might be to remove the RSA engine from PGP and distribute the source code, and a binary for free, but require users to pay $30-50 to RSA to get the source code and binary for the RSA engine. This maintains our flexibility to modify PGP as we see fit, but preserves RSA's intellectual property. The downside is, platform portability will be impacted slightly. On the other hand, RSA could develop and maintain a PGP alternative which has all the bells and whistles we like, and market it at reasonable cost, say $50. (remember, Clipper chips will be cheaper than $40!) RSA's alternative is to have their patent become useless like most of the compression patents through wide spread unauthorized used of their algorithms. -- Ray Cromwell | Engineering is the implementation of science; -- -- EE/Math Student | politics is the implementation of faith. -- -- rjc@gnu.ai.mit.edu | - Zetetic Commentaries --