-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.aci.net/kalliste/crypto-free.htm
<A HREF="http://www.aci.net/kalliste/crypto-free.htm">International
Cryptography Freedom</A>
-----
All links are 'hot' at site.
Om
K
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INTERNATIONAL CRYPTOGRAPHY FREEDOM

See John Gilmore's call for mirroring the contents of these sites. See
Note 1 on what to mirror.

This a growing list. Contributions welcome: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Please mirror this page, or scavenge it to make your own. Let us know
about additional sites or your page and we'll make a link.

See also:
Dec. 3 Wassenaar Arrangement Lists in original DOC format and HTML
 format
Encryption and Security Tutorial
Call for Crypto Strike on Dec. 14
Free Crypto Logos
Free Crypto Org
Electronic Civil Disobedience (ECD) <- look to last section

MIRROR SITESCountryURLNotesAustralia 1ftp.psy.uq.oz.au:/pub/Crypto
Australia 2http://vicraves.i-o.net.au/crypto.htmlNo access logging
Austria 1ftp://ftp.giga.or.at/pub/hacker/cryptStuff related to crypto
Austria 2ftp://ftp.giga.or.at/pub/hacker/stegoStuff related to
steganographyAustria 3ftp://ftp.giga.or.at/pub/hacker/IncomingFor very
welcome contributions of all sorts: binaries, texts, sources, etc.
related to cryptography, cryptanalysis, steganography, information
hiding, etc.Brazil 1http://www.nw.com.br/users/pbarreto/crypto_page.html
Selected links, public domain crypto software, mostly related to
elliptic curves and block ciphersCanada 1ftp.wimsey.bc.ca Canada 2
ftp://ftp.privacy.nb.ca/pub/crypto/233MB; Apache-SSL, SSLeay, cryptlib,
freeswan, gnupg, mozilla-crypto, pgpi, sshCanada 3
ftp://gwynne.cs.ualberta.ca/pub/Crypto/ Canada 4
ftp://ftp.mindlink.net/pub/crypto/Croatia 1pgp.rasip.fer.hr:/pub/crypt
Denmark 1http://www.datashopper.dk/~boo/index.htmlAssorted PGP Freeware
Finland 1http://www.ssh.fi/tech/crypto/sites.htmlMultiple SourcesFinland
2ftp.funet.fi:/pub/cryptPGP, symmetric and asymmetric encryption, crypto
libraries, papers Finland 3http://www.pgpi.org/International PGP Home
PageFinland 4ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/crypt France 1
http://web.cnam.fr/reseau/Crypto/ L'utilisation du chiffrement en France
France 2ftp://ftp.lip6.fr/pub2/linux/networking/net-source/mail/pgp/PGP
Sendmail v1.4
Auto PGP 1.04
PGP 2.6.3is
PGP 5.0-b8Germany 1ftp.darmstadt.gmd.de:/pub/crypto Germany 2
ftp.informatik.uni-hildesheim.de:/pub/security Germany 3
ftp://ftp.pca.dfn.de/pub/tools/crypt/ Germany 4
ftp://ftp.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/pub/virus/crypt/Disk and file
encryption, PGP, stego, voice encryptionGermany 5
ftp://ftp.uni-mainz.de/pub/internet/security/SSL/SSL siteHungary 1
ftp.kfki.hu:/pub/packages/security
Full description:

http://www.kfki.hu/ftp.html#Security
SSH, SSL, SSL applications, libdes, OPIE, PGP, SRP and other
non-cryptographical-security tools.Italy 1
idea.sec.dsi.unimi.it:/pub/security/crypt Kyrgyzstan 1
http://www.underground.org.kg/crypto/ Netherlands 1
utopia.hacktic.nl:/pub/replay/pub/diskApache, Applied Crypto files,
encryption, Java, PGP, remailers, security, voice encryption files
Netherlands 2http://www.replay.com New Zealand 1
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/links.htmlA Comprehensive List of
Worldwide SourcesNew Zealand 2
http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/archive.html
(Not yet active; meanwhile see NZ 1 above)
Peter Guttman: This currently contains a mostly blank page because it'll
take a few days to get things set up, but I thought I'd get the ball
rolling. Once it's ready I'll use it to make all sorts of crypto
available to anyone anywhere until ordered by a NZ court to stop doing
so (this is a long way removed from being ordered by the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs and Trade to stop doing so), or alternatively until the
machine sh*ts itself and dies, which may happen somewhat sooner :-).
The archives (when ready) will be stored on a machine for which accesses
are not logged. It may also allow SSL access (with strong encryption,
obviously), which will include making available dummy files of various
sizes so that it's not possible to prove (based on traffic analysis)
exactly what was downloaded ("Crypto? Certainly not, I was downloading
this paper on the history of Ethiopian pottery in 4000BC").
Norway 1ftp.unit.no:/pub/unix/security Norway 2
ftp://ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/gnu/Main distribution site for crypt() in glibc
Norway 3ftp://ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/pgp/ (the same as ftp.no.pgpi.com)Main
distribution site for pgpiNorway 4ftp://ftp.at.pgpi.com/pub/pgpi/
ftp://ftp.au.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.ch.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.cz.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.de.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.dk.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.es.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.fi.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.jp.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.kr.pgpi.com/pub/security/pgp/
ftp://ftp.nl.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.pl.pgpi.com/pub/pgpi/
ftp://ftp.ru.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
ftp://ftp.se.pgpi.com/pub/pgp/
PGP International MirrorsNorway 5
ftp://ftp.kerneli.org/pub/linux/kerneli/v2.1/
( which is verden.pvv.org which is verden.pvv.ntnu.no )Main distribution
site for the international kernel patch for Linux
(collection of crypto-patches for the linux kernel)Russia 1
ftp.kiae.su:/unix/crypto Spain 1
http://www.kriptopolis.com/software/prog.html Sweden 1
ftp.sunet.se:/pub/security/tools/cryptSwedish Univeristy Network
Security ArchivesSwitzerland 1
http://www.semper.org/sirene/outsideworld/security.htmlIBM Zurich
Security and Cryptography SourcesSwitzerland 2
http://www.semper.org/sirene/people/gerrit/secprod/
secprod.htmlGerrit Bleumer's Cryptography Enhanced ProductsUnited
Kingdom 1ftp.ox.ac.uk:/pub/cryptoDES, SSL, cryptanalysis, documentation,
PGP, miscellaneous United Kingdom 2http://www.homeport.org/~adam/crypto/
Adam Back's Cryptographic LibrariesUnited Kindom 3
ftp://ftp.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/rja14/Ross Anderson's FTP SourcesUnited
Kingodm 4http://www.notatla.demon.co.uk/CRYPTO/crypto.htmlpgutlinks.html
245K
SSLeay-0.9.0b.tar.gz 1.3M
crypto-free.htm 21K
Fortify-README 2K
Fortify-1.3.1-unix-x86.tar.gz 372K
apache_1.3.3+ssl_1.29.tar.gz 37KUnited States 1
http://www.cryptography.org/North American Cryptography Archives.
Archive of crypto software, only available from the US and CanadaUnited
States 2http://cryptography.org/freecryp.htmCrypto Sites Outside North
AmericaUnited States 3http://www.austinlinks.com/Crypto/Quadralay
Cryptography ArchiveUnited States 4
http://theory.lcs.mit.edu/~rivest/crypto-security.htmlRon Rivest's Links
United States 5http://www.genocide2600.com/~tattooman/cryptography/
Maintainer: Ken Williams. Contents: Crypto Libraries, SecureOffice,
Source Code for all AES Candidates, Applied Crypto, Cryptanalysis,
GNUGP, Kerberos, PGP, Skip, Snow, Snuffle, SSH, Steganography, Voice
Encryption, source code, crypto papers, much more, and more on the
way. Size: 220+ MB, 1500+ files, and growing every day.United States 6
http://www.dis.org/erehwon/crypto.html United States 7
http://www.eskimo.com/~weidai/cryptlib.htmlUnited States 8
http://www.lila.com/nautilusNautilus, with links to non-US sites.United
States 9http://www.counterpane.com/sites.htmlBruce Schneier's Sources
for Software and Source CodeUnited States 10ftp://ftp.clark.net/pub/cme/
Carl Ellison's FTP SourcesUnited States 11
http://patriot.net/~johnson/html/neil/sec/crypto.htmNeil Johnson's
Cryptography and Encryption SourcesNOTESNote 1: John Gilmore's proposal
 is to mirror the contents of cryptography sites not just the URLs.
We've been asked what to mirror if it is not possible to mirror large
archives (200 MB and up), or you can't easily decide which programs are
most important.

John Gilmore recommends:
The top things I'd suggest for a mirror site are (see sources at sites
above):
PGP source code (various versions)
Matching PGP binaries (for easy downloading and use)
SSH source code and matching binaries
SSLEAY - Eric Young's crypto library from Australia
Kerberos source code (various versions)
IPSEC source code (various versions for BSD and Linux)
Crypto-Mozilla source code (web browser with good crypto)
DNS Security source code (domain name with good crypto)

My criterion for these things is: what building blocks will people be
able to use every day for to improve their privacy? And then, what
pieces of infrastructure will permit people to build secure networks
that protect their users?

At first, the archives will be "rough and ready", but as people
worldwide start writing documentation, e.g. "How to secure your
MS-Windows system using this archive", "How to secure your Linux
system", etc, it will become easier for the end users.

Jim Gillogly recommends:
One way to determine which programs are the best for this purpose would
be to study what various governments have taken some action on. Some
obvious ones (See US 5):
PGP (various versions, high level of government interest)
Snuffle (extended US litigation against Daniel Bernstein)
All the AES candidates (strictly-controlled dissemination from NIST)
SecureOffice (Charles Booher's program -- US government has taken
action)
Applied Cryptography disk (US export license denied Phil Karn)

It would also be nice to have an infrastructural component, such as
(when ready for mass distribution) the Linux/FreeSWAN IPSec release;
this doesn't have quite the cachet of programs on which the government
has already weighed in, though.

Jim Choate recommends that cryptography documentation be mirrored to
encourage understanding and creation of strong encryption -- the best
assurance that it will grow and spread.

Mirror whatever you can until better advice for selections comes along.
Prime need: many mirrors of the strongest cryptography, especially
anything allowing the use of key lengths above 40-bits, that is,
anything that requires a US export license for general public use (the
US standard appears to be the model for latest Wassenaar restrictions).
Next, mirror any program that appears to be a target for latest
Wassenaar restrictions as they may be implemented in your country.

For complaints about the restrictions on privacy to be implemented due
to US pressure, contact your government's cryptography control ministry:
http://www.wassenaar.org/docs/contacts.htm
Note 2: Please forward news and information on the recent Wassenaar
Arrangement restrictions in your country to John Young <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>. Anonymous and encrypted messages welcome. PGP public keys of John
Young.
Check Cryptome for news.



-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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