>explicit. You can find them at
>http://www.bxa.doc.gov/Regulations/encreg.pdf
>which is
> _Federal_Register_
> Vol 61 #251
> Monday Dec 30 1996
> Page 68573
Ah, yes... for more "current" info see
http://www.bxa.doc.gov/Regulations/EARCla
own "howitzer" with only 10 lines of C code, but it was
threatened by you building it for him... regardless of whether or not
he could download a pre-built howitzer for free over the Internet. )
Let's hope that the new set of regulations that are to emerge in the
next few months
t;non-discriminatory" nature of their licensing
practices is still a matter of debate... even among corporations
with lots of money and a (limited) license. How many CAs have
been licensed? Hmmm. Given the potential demand, you'd think the
number would be much larger. Discrimination?
ROTECTED]
Only the raw crypto primitives are provided, but the work required to
integrate them into OpenSSL or something similar should be minimal.
An alternative is to license the whole enchilada from Certicom --
certain of our CDKs are now bundled with Consensus' SSLPlus:
http://www.co
e not widely deployed... yet. You will be seeing
more support in the future however... despite the fact that the
RSA patent is expiring next year.
Of course, EC-based systems (e.g., ECDSA) are even more efficient
and secure, but I don't want to get into that debate.
-mjm
==
Micha
-mjm
==
Michael J. Markowitz, Ph.D.Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vice President R&D Voice: 847-405-0500
Information Security Corporation 708-445-1704
1011 Lake Street, Suite 212Fax: 847-405-0506
Oak Park, IL 60301WWW: http://www.infos
to find such a cheap
RSA license available for any platform!
-mjm
==
Michael J. Markowitz, Ph.D.Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Vice President R&D Voice: 847-405-0500
Information Security Corporation 708-445-1704
1011 Lake Street, Suite 212Fax: