ITAR Amended to Allow Personal Use Exemptions
Today's Federal Register contains a notice from the Department of State, Bureau of Political Military Affairs, announcing final rule of an amendment to the International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR) allowing U.S. persons to temporarily export cryptographic products for personal use without the need for an export license. The product must not be intended for copying, demonstration, marketing, sale, re-export, or transfer of ownership or control. It must remain in the possession of the exporting person, which includes being locked in a hotel room or safe. While in transit, it must be with the person's accompanying baggage. Exports to certain countries are prohibited -- currently Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria. The exporter must maintain records of each temporary export for five years. See Federal Register, Vol. 61, No. 33, Friday, February 16, 1996, Public Notice 2294, pp. 6111-6113.
Since we don't need a license, what records are we supposed to keep? | Today's Federal Register contains a notice from the Department of | State, Bureau of Political Military Affairs, announcing final rule of | an amendment to the International Traffic in Arms Regulation (ITAR) | allowing U.S. persons to temporarily export cryptographic products for * personal use without the need for an export license. The product must | not be intended for copying, demonstration, marketing, sale, re-export, | or transfer of ownership or control. It must remain in the possession | of the exporting person, which includes being locked in a hotel room or | safe. While in transit, it must be with the person's accompanying | baggage. Exports to certain countries are prohibited -- currently | Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan, and Syria. The exporter * must maintain records of each temporary export for five years. See | Federal Register, Vol. 61, No. 33, Friday, February 16, 1996, Public | Notice 2294, pp. 6111-6113. -- "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -Hume
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"Adam" == Adam Shostack <adam@homeport.org> writes:
Adam> Since we don't need a license, what records are we supposed to Adam> keep? When IBM internally transfer crypto-software to locations outside US they have to keep * Name of sender + receiver * date of transmission * method of transmission I'd assume that with this personal-use exection you have to keep the date of your travel and the location(s) you traveled to. (Your name might be something you remember without keeping track of it ;-) Olmur - -- "If privacy is outlawed, only outlaws will have privacy" --- P. Zimmermann Please encipher your mail! Contact me, if you need assistance. finger -l mdeindl@eisbaer.bb.bawue.de for PGP-key Key-fingerprint: 51 EC A5 D2 13 93 8F 91 CB F7 6C C4 F8 B5 B6 7C -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.3i Charset: latin1 Comment: Processed by Mailcrypt 3.4, an Emacs/PGP interface iQCVAwUBMSb/fw9NARnYm1I1AQEz+gP/XWKkdOt0fAqj5YMqeME1c0dspXtxAVdx /2vaXbZORJmqN2gSfqrgQ58F936vd2dDbBHa7pzxOpZ3OzXu/JsrhWvOEpyZI+bg na0F2W4jjxvpS3h/2D6Aq92Q9zCsbQ0DC8Mz1N6auCk073M5oAvLcVeQFzMwEbWO 9dX/OuMwYjU= =jWbc -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
participants (3)
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Adam Shostack -
Bruce Schneier -
olmur@dwarf.bb.bawue.de