It depends on how the patent is defined. The patent might explicitly
say used for protecting data on stored media. If you can find a way
to say you're using it in a way not described by the patent then you 
have a good chance of getting away with it. Bottom line is you have
to read the patent to see what all are the circumstances it explicitly
covers. I doubt there is a general "decryption's OK" paradigm in 
relation to crypto patents.

Cheers
Ben Kavanagh


On Fri, Apr 30, 1999 at 12:10:15PM -0600, Mike Stay wrote:
> I think CAST-256 is the default symmetric encryption used in PGP 5.x,
> 6.x freeware; the openPGP draft supports a bunch of other algs including
> IDEA, which is patented.  Could we charge for a product that simply uses
> those algorithms to get the secret key from the keyring (we're not
> encrypting anything with symmetric keys) without paying royalties?
> -- 
> Mike Stay
> Cryptographer / Programmer
> AccessData Corp.
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 

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