--- "Spruell, Darren-Perot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: [snip] > Please support your statement that documentation falls under export > regulations. Documentation and specifications != hardware. [snip]
WARNING: NEWBIE ALERT, NEWBIE COMMENTS FOLLOW. I have no dog in this fight but it only took me three minutes to find "The Bureau of Industry and Security, U.S. Department of Commerce:" What Is an Export? Any item that is sent from the United States to a foreign destination is an export. "Items" include commodities, software or technology, such as clothing, building materials, circuit boards, automotive parts, blue prints, design plans, retail software packages and technical information. ^ | Interesting --------------------------+ How an item is transported outside of the United States does not matter in determining export license requirements. For example, an item can be sent by regular mail or hand-carried on an airplane. A set of schematics can be sent via facsimile to a foreign destination, software can be uploaded to or downloaded from an Internet site, or technology can be transmitted via e-mail or during a telephone conversation. Regardless of the method used for the transfer, the transaction is considered an export for export control purposes. An item is also considered an export even if it is leaving the United States temporarily, if it is leaving the United State but is not for sale, (e.g. a gift) or if it is going to a wholly-owned U.S. subsidiary in a foreign country. Do data sheets qualify as "technical information" for purposes of exporting? Beats the hell out of me. I'm sure there is U.S. case law somewhere that spells it out. We can't disagree on interpreting the facts if we can't agree on the facts. Kind Reagrds, Allen Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com