"Steven M. Bellovin" wrote:
> > I was about to make a snide comment that they're just endorsing open source
> software -- but is there any definition of "other restriction"?  Does the GPL
> count?  Are they trying to ban any publication of anything that isn't flat-out
> public domain?  And if something is flat-out public domain, how can the
> "exporter" impose the viral restrictions?  For that matter, what is "export"?
> Posting something to Usenet?  Putting it up on a Web page or FTP server?  The
> act of downloading it?
> 
These are excellent questions.

I think the GPL counts.  I think that BSD counts.  I have no idea how 
the exporter imposes the viral restrictions, but I suspect that it 
could result in prosecution -- "a compare shows this line of code is 
identical to that line of US origin code, guilty as charged."


"Salz, Rich" wrote:
> I think they want to make sure that if some non-US package
> (openssl being the example most obvious to me) picks it up
> that it doesn't suddenly become "free."  So it's not the GPL,
> really, but more like the old BSD license.
>         /r$
What I meant is, I'd like to contribute code to FreeSWAN, or OpenSSL, 
or whatever, but the inclusion of a single line of my code will make 
the entire thing subject to EAR regulation.  Worse, a single line of 
code that "looks" like a line I published will subject the whole thing 
to regulation.  Means we cannot publish _anything_ for fear of damaging 
the efforts of our freinds.  Not good.

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