You wrote: | Jeffrey I. Schiller scribbles: | > In order to fully protect RSADSI's intellectual property rights in | > public-key technology, PGP 2.6 will be designed so that the messages it | > creates after September 1, 1994 will be unreadable by earlier versions | > of PGP that infringe patents licensed exclusively to Public Key Partners | > by MIT and Stanford University. PGP 2.6 will continue to be able to read | > messages generated by those earlier versions. | | So how long do you think it'll take after the release of 2.6 for | patches that disable this "feature" to come out? | | And what about ViaCrypt's PGP 2.4? Well, clearly, 2.6 will have some very bright AI features, so that it will talk to people who'se Key-ID's identify them as being outside of the US, as their versions of PGP are perfectly legal. And 2.4 is legal, if the 2.6 code doesn't recognize that, well, then that code is buggy & will need to be fixed. :) Adam -- Adam Shostack adam@bwh.harvard.edu Politics. From the greek "poly," meaning many, and ticks, a small, annoying bloodsucker.