On Monday 19 July 2010 18:26:15 Ted Unangst wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 11:14 AM, Yoshisato YANAGISAWA
>
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> Not to mention there are software patent claims againt camellia. That's
> >> a no go right there.
> >
> > OpenBSD has already included Camellia source code as a part of OpenSSL. 
> > It is disabled by default, though.
> > At the time OpenSSL included Camellia, NTT had shown following news
>
> release:
> > http://www.ntt.co.jp/news/news01e/0104/010417.html
> >
> > NTT also announced that their Camellia implementation also becomes open
> > source distributed under BSDL, GPL, and so on:
> > http://www.ntt.co.jp/news/news06e/0604/060413a.html
> >
> > Are there any problems?
>
> The first link says "Caution: This statement is valid only for
> implementing Camellia, EPOC, PSEC, and ESIGN, respectively, as is, and
> does not permit modification of said algorithms."
>
> The second link says you no longer need to apply to get a license, but
> still restricts it to only people using Camellia.
>
> Free software you can't modify is not free software.

That's especially galling for software where there are real security
considerations: suppose you find a flaw in the algorithm--you can't
fix it?

Gag.

-- 
STeve Andre'
Disease Control Warden
Dept. of Political Science
Michigan State University

A day without Windows is like a day without a nuclear incident.

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