Presi wrote: > About this note in Mozilla.org: > > "This source code is subject to the U.S. Export Administration > Regulations and other U.S. law, and may not be exported or re-exported > to certain countries (currently Afghanistan (Taliban controlled > areas), Cuba, Iran, Iraq, Libya, North Korea, Sudan and Syria) or to > persons or entities prohibited from receiving U.S. exports (including > Denied Parties, entities on the Bureau of Export Administration Entity > List, and Specially Designated Nationals)." > > If Mozilla is a international free software project supported by > developers of many countries (not only from U.S.), why is under U.S. > export laws?? If any individual person from Iran, Iraq, Libya, etc. > want to use the software or collaborate in the project, is banned?? > > If the reason is that the server mozilla.org resides phisically in the > U.S. what about move this server to another country that don't have > these reestricticons? > > I think we need to preserve the free software right without political > reasons. And you would bypass patent restriction
Still have to solve the harware, administration and bandwith costs. Colin
