CINCINNATI (AP) - Computer programs used to scramble electronic
messages are protected by the First Amendment because those codes are a
means of communication among programmers, a federal appeals court ruled
Tuesday.

Raymond Vasvari, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union
of Ohio, said the ruling was the first time a federal appellate court
has decided that computer programming languages are protected by the
First Amendment.

``This is a great day for programmers, computer scientists and all
Americans who believe that privacy and intellectual freedom should be
free from government control,'' he said.

The 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruling means a lawsuit filed by a
Cleveland law professor will be reconsidered in federal court. Peter D.
Junger's lawsuit claims the government violated his free-speech rights
by requiring licenses to export programs that scramble electronic
messages.

The encryption programs allow the scrambling of a message from its
original, plain text form to protect the contents when the message is
sent through an accessible forum like the Internet.

Encryption can be used, among other things, for securing information
such as consumers' credit card numbers.

Junger, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University, wanted to
put the encryption codes on his Web site to help his computer-law
students understand the function and purpose of computer programs, said
his lawyer, Gino Scarselli. The government told him he had to have a
license first.

Appeals judges Boyce Martin Jr., Eric Clay and Herman Weber reversed a
lower court's 1998 ruling that the government's license requirement did
not violate the First Amendment.

The appeals judges noted that the U.S. Supreme Court has said that the
First Amendment protects the Jabberwocky verse of Lewis Carroll and the
work of artists and musicians. Those are not traditional speech, nor is
computer source code, the judges wrote.

Justice Department lawyer Scott McIntosh said he had not seen the
decision Tuesday and could not comment on it.

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