NSS and PSM (crypto library, and ssl support in mozilla) are dual licensed
under the MPL and GNU GPL.

On the NSS/PSM home page at iPlanet, the following clause can be found
-----
PSM software contains encryption technology that is subject to the U.S. Export 
Administration Regulations and other U.S. law, and may not be exported or 
re-exported to ineligible countries or to persons or entities prohibited from 
receiving U.S. exports. Ineligible countries are currently Afghanistan 
(Taliban-controlled areas), Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Serbia 
(except Kosovo), Sudan, and Syria. Persons or entities prohibited from 
receiving U.S. exports include Denied Parties, entities on the Bureau of Export 
Administration Entity List, and Specially Designated Nationals. For more 
information on the U.S. Export Administration Regulations ("EAR"), 15 C.F.R. 
Parts 730-774, and the Bureau of Export Administration ("BXA"), please see the 
BXA home page.

PSM software may also be subject to import and/or use regulations in other 
countries.
-----


is all of this DFSG free, and able to be put in main by a US citizen?


PS: I don't subscribe to -legal, CC me
-- 
Frank aka Myth

The unix learning curve may be steep, but at leas you only have to climb
it once -- unknown

Attachment: pgpfaF0OQQUT4.pgp
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to