Hello! On Wed, Jul 24, 2002 at 10:48:11AM -0500, cmonico wrote: > Hi Robert, > Thanks for the interest. I think a Debian client would be very worthwile > and > helpful to the project. The only potential caveat is the timeline - we expect > to have the challenge solved in about 3 months, after which the client will > be > completely useless.
That sounds like a show stopper. We generaly only package software that we expect to be useful in a long-term. Do you know if certicom is going to set more challenges in the future? > 2) The code was loosely GPL'd in the beginning, butit seems to have fallen > apart. I can easily enough add a LICENSE file and fix the headers. There are > patents that cover elliptic curve cryptography (held mostly by Certicom), but Patent issues are very delicate. I'm afraid that maybe we can't include this in Debian. > this client itself is purely mathematical - there's no crypto going on in it > at all. It is essentially just doing arithmetic in a particular group. Could you clarify this? If the client does not use patented algorithms i guess it should be ok. > Also, > by the nature of the challenge issued by Certicom, they could not have any > problem with the code (they are already quite aware of it, and of the fact > that we're working to solve their challenge, and they have not complained). In that case, depending on wether the patents affect your program, it might be a good idea to ask them for a formal permission to license an implementation of their algorithms under the GPL (and to extend the GPL license to all its users) > I'll try to fix the source and have the new one up by the end of the week. > I'll note on the web page that the only change is the licensing, so you can > see when the source has been updated. Thanks for your help. -- Robert Millan "5 years from now everyone will be running free GNU on their 200 MIPS, 64M SPARCstation-5" Andrew S. Tanenbaum, 30 Jan 1992 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]