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Packet uses ax-25, not encryption.  That's like saying tcp/ip is
encryption.   Published standards are allowed, encryption is not on the
ham bands.  As for getting a license, it's pretty easy, just have to
pass a test.  They're dropping the code requirement early next year
also.   I've had a nocode ham license for 13 years.

Mark


Stewart Stremler wrote:
> begin  quoting Tracy R Reed as of Thu, Nov 17, 2005 at 03:11:31PM -0800:
> 
>>Lan Barnes wrote:
>>
>>>??? I can't bury the Gettysburg address in a photo of my dog? Since
>>>when?
>>
>>I am talking about over the ham radio freqs. Encryption, talking in
>>code, etc. are illegal. The theory is that the freqs are supposed to be
>>there for everyone to use and benefit from and that everyone should be
>>able to understand what is being said.
> 
> 
> Packet-radio is "talking in code".  It's computers-talking-to-computers
> already.
> 
> Steganography could piggy-back on 'normal' traffic -- all sorts of 
> interesting approaches comes to mind...
> 
> -Stewart "Okay, bob, that's a zero, then one, then zero, then zero..." 
> Stremler
> 
> 


- --
Mark Wolfe           Lakeside, Ca.           http://www.wolfenet.org
gpg fingerprint = 42B6 EFEB 5414 AA18 01B7  64AC EF46 F7E6 82F6 8C71
"On a normal ascii line, the only safe condition to detect is a 'BREAK'
- - everything else having been assigned functions by Gnu EMACS."
(By Tarl Neustaedter)
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